Santa Claus embodies mystery and wonder for children, and Randy Campbell wants to keep that alive.
Campbell, a zone manager for the University of Virginia’s Facilities Management, has portrayed Santa Claus since 2012, appearing at an annual Breakfast with Santa event at Rockfish Elementary School, after-school story times and a few home visits.
Campbell started as a last-minute substitute Santa at Rockfish Elementary, where his wife is a behavioral specialist. For his first gig, he wore a synthetic beard over his own patch.
Campbell, who has lost weight in his 13 years portraying Santa Claus, says he does not think the children are concerned if Santa is fat or thin. (Photo by Lathan Goumas, University Communications)
“It was just a Saturday morning, for an hour or two, and they gave me a fake beard that I wore over my own beard,” Campbell said. “With about 100 kids, I was there for a couple hours. I got lethargic because I was asphyxiating myself trying to breathe through that thing.”
The next year, he tried a different synthetic beard, with similar results. Then his daughter suggested bleaching his existing beard, which worked, but was tough on his hair.
“After I did several events, I shaved completely bare to get rid of that old, broken, damaged hair, and I usually keep it shaved pretty close or just barely a beard all year until August, and then I start growing it out, and I don’t get a haircut.”
But as his face began to look more authentic with his own beard, he was also dropping weight.
“I’ve lost 140 pounds,” he said. “I weigh 190 pounds now. I’ve got four suits because as I have dropped weight. I’ve had to fit into smaller suits. I haven’t put any padding in yet, though people have requested me to, but I’ve bought a suit again this year that’s slim. I don’t know that kids really worry about whether Santa’s fat or not.”
Of his several Santa suits, the most popular is fashioned after the Haddon Sundblom paintings Coca-Cola commissioned for its Christmas advertisements, starting in 1931.
“They all want that,” Campbell laughed. “I still have that suit, but it hangs on me like a tent. I would have to put padding on.”
As a father of four and grandfather of eight, maintaining secrecy is difficult.