Mall Santa
for a Day
The nylon beard was scratchy, the wig hanging over my eyes
made seeing through my daughter’s glasses more difficult. The red-and-white cap
needed sharp tugging to fit over my now padded skull. Impossibly shiny black
puttees covered most of my huge shoes, but the red knickers barely stretched
into them so I was forced to wear the waistline much lower than was usual for
my vestigial, middle-aged, sense of fashion; I imagined myself as a hip-hop Santa
and laughed my first natural laugh of the day.
The photographer, in her
Santa-esque jumpsuit, cocked her head from side to side, adjusted my cap and
wig, finger-combed my beard, pulled the too-short cuffs down past my bare
wrists to meet my white gloves and, nodding more to herself than to me, coolly
appraised the large package before her and said, “Okay, are you ready?, They’re
waiting.”
I
looked at her through the white strands that covered my black eyebrows, took in
the blue-grey cinderblock walls, conduits and ducts that hung suspended some
fifteen feet over our heads in the back corridors of the mall. Still off-stage,
I took the hand bell from her, shook it as loudly as I could to herald my
arrival, gave a hearty ‘Ho Ho Ho’ and strode out, past the guitar shop, around
the cordons and, waving regally, made eye contact with each of the
grinning, quivering children individually, some of whom took a step or two back from me, and
the smiling mothers needlessly pointing me out.
Mounting the low, foil-wrapped dais I magisterially lowered myself into
the shallow ornate throne and smiled at my awestruck petitioners.
Santa
was in session.
Showtime











One,
another girl, perhaps ten or eleven, whose father stood some way apart,
announced that some of her friends claimed I did not exist. When I told her
that I was clearly sitting before her and that I would exist as long as the
spirit of Christmas she smiled and recited her wish list, posed for her photos,
then walked off to her father and ascended the escalator without making eye
contact with me or inquiring about the pictures they had no interest in. Was
this done out of poverty or a get-what-I-can stance, and was this bright girl
desperate to convince herself that Santa yet existed despite her dawning vision
of the stark, less magic-filled life stretching before her?
There
was the trio of smirking street-wise fourteen or fifteen year old young women
who chose to stand around my vacant lap and only reluctantly followed the
photographer’s suggestion to hug Santa. Had they already crossed into that
stark life and were casting wistful glances over their
shoulders?
shoulders?
After our lunch break, a BLT and diet cola in the cinderblock corridor backstage, I readjusted my beard and wig, looked in the mirror and finished dressing. We started to use the props I’d brought to the show. Debra had taken a ten-pound coffee table book, covered it in shiny silvery paper and written across it in large Magic Marker block letters-
Santa’s List MMXI
I placed this huge book and a long quill on the stack of gifts to my left.
Leaning forward on my raised throne I loomed over each child in turn and asked
if they had been good in the time since last Christmas. All but one assured me
of their squeaky cleanliness and rectitude both at home and in school. The
photographer would then walk over and put the book in my lap, tilt it up, and
nudge them back to keep them from peering over the top of the book to the
pages. I would ask the child again for her first and last name and run my quill
down a series of pages until the name came up.





I was very aware of referring to Mothers exclusively for fear of hurting the child of a single parent. I took the chance that there would be few if any children of same-sex parenting. I hope I was right.
Wearing the costume created both distance and false intimacy. While hiding and thus separating me, it lent the outsiders, those observers being observed, a shorthand understanding of who and what I might be. This interaction was fairly new to me, for my own childhood family was not given to the other great American costume ritual-Halloween, and I didn’t don one until my mid-thirties when I took my young daughter to Brooklyn’s Fifth Avenue parade. I wore the hooded orange and black jalaba I’d bought in Morocco over my six-foot-four frame and put on a Death’s skull mask. A plastic scythe completed the transformation to what was a surprisingly powerful persona-while children reacted as one would expect, freezing in terror or backing away, adults, and especially older adults, chose to cross the threshold with me. I took to approaching seniors, both those along the parade route and other participants in costume, at a slow and gliding tread. After locking eyes with one, something quite easily accomplished, for their participation in this ritual required them to be observers, I would then look slowly at my wristwatch, slowly back at that person, and, as decided by whim and the degree of trepidation displayed, either slowly shake my head ‘no’ or beckon them to join me. The most effective of these impromptu glimpses into the magical took place when I planted myself, motionless, in the open doorway of a bar where the patrons, one by one, noticed the apparition. One man, shaking off his surprise, nudged his buddy whose back was to me, pointed his chin at the window and said, “Someone to see you.” When the drinker turned to look at me his mouth fell open and his beer dropped from his hand.
That Halloween night I learned the liberation of the costumed; how the taking on of a new identity frees one from social restraints and lends the privilege to interact with others on a heightened, distilled plane. Wearing the Santa costume did this and more by showing me how costume allows others to shape their actions and reactions to a Mythic being, one existing outside of time and age, for the Santa of one’s youth was old beyond young reckoning and, seen now through adult eyes, is of the same attenuated and undetermined age as before.
Santa, though a male figure, is so old, both in the then and in the now, and so mythic as to be beyond active gender. There was a young mother who came to the dais with her child and husband for a photo with Santa. When the photographer suggested she take her seat on my lap the mother’s only voiced concern was for my comfortably supporting her weight. She cast not so much as a glance at her husband for his approval of her sitting on a strange man’s lap, but instead chose to accept what she perceived as my age and magic neuter state; she was worried that the Old Elf’s leg would be injured by her medium frame.
As child followed child to an audience with Santa, it became increasingly clear that what I said and did might become a lasting and profound memory for each of them. One never knows what will adhere to a child’s mind, which fleeting glance or casual words will go into shaping what they become. Given the heightened, distilled plane on which we met in this dance of magic, I grew ever more aware of the responsibility implicit in my day’s work. This suspension of disbelief is delicate and must be treated withcare. As I walked through the Mall after changing into my street clothes I saw one of the girls who had solemnly handed me her wish list. My breath caught as she came near, but she and her mother walked past, no glimmer of recognition in the eyes of either one, and I hoped the mother’s purse still held the girl’s list I’d slipped to her.