Morojo


Myrtle Rebecca Douglas Smith Gray Nolan, known to science fiction history as Morojo or sometimes Myrtle R. Douglas, was a science fiction fan, fanzine publisher, and cosplay pioneer from Los Angeles, California.

Fandom and fanzines

Morojo, along with Forrest J Ackerman, was heavily involved in the production of Voice of the Imagi-Nation and Novacious, as well as Jack Speer's Fancyclopedia. She contributed to fanzines by Ackerman and others, and published her own fanzine Guteto from 1941-1958 for the Fantasy Amateur Press Association. Her niece and fellow fan Patti Gray, known by the Esperanto nickname of "Pogo", in 1940 edited what is credited as "what appears to be the first all-female zine, Pogo's STF-ETTE", whose contributors included Morojo and Leigh Brackett. She served as treasurer and in other roles for the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society for many years. Like Ackerman, she was an avid Esperantist, and the name by which she was known in fandom is a variation of her initials as spelled out in Esperanto, plus Ackerman's middle initial "J."

Costuming

Together with then-boyfriend Ackerman, she attended the 1939 1st World Science Fiction Convention in New York City dressed in "futuristicostumes", including green cape and breeches, based on the pulp magazine artwork of Frank R. Paul and the 1936 film Things to Come, which were designed, created and sewn by Douglas. Ackerman later stated that he thought everyone was supposed to wear a costume at a science fiction convention, although only he and Douglas did. Fans liked the concept, and the 2nd Worldcon, in Chicago in 1940, had both an unofficial masquerade held in Morojo's room and an official masquerade as part of the program, with participants including E. E. Smith, Cyril M. Kornbluth, Jack Speer, Wilson Tucker, Robert Lowndes and David Kyle. In 1941, at the Denvention she wore a frog-faced mask devised for her by a young costume maker named Ray Harryhausen.
In 2016, the International Costumers' Guild recognized Morojo as the “Mother of Convention Costuming” with a video award presentation at MidAmeriCon II, the 74th Worldcon.

Personal life

Douglas was born June 20, 1904, in Phoenix, Arizona. She and Ackerman broke up in the early 1940s over her continuing to smoke, and remained estranged until her death. She was married several times, the last time to John Nolan. She had a son, Virgil Douglas Smith. She died November 30, 1964, in Patton, California.