March 08, 2009

Barbie doll turns the big 5-0  03/08/09 1:01 AM

Barbie doll turns the big 5-0

Barbie, the iconic fashion doll with the top-heavy figure and high-heel arches, turns 50 tomorrow, with no need for Botox and no threat of hot flashes. Mattel has kicked off global events to celebrate the middle-age status of the much-beloved and often controversial 11½-inch doll that has held the imagination of generations since 1959.

Barbie collectors clubs and Web sites  03/08/09 1:01 AM

Barbie fans hook up through clubs, collectors’ societies, online sites, newsletters and annual conventions to swap, sell, buy and reminisce.

  • Virginia Fashion Doll Collectors meets in Richmond every other month. The club’s focus is on vintage and newer collectible Barbies and a “Dolls for Charity” project. Members collect donated dolls and clothing, then clean them, restyle their hair and dress them in new outfits crafted at doll workshops.
  • The club has sent more than 800 dolls to children in El Salvador and Mexico, hurricane victims along the Gulf Coast and locally to St. Joseph’s Villa. To join the club, write Debbie Breeden, the club president, at .

    Barbie memories The little plastic lady was there for playtime, hard times  03/08/09 1:01 AM

    Barbie’s 50th birthday is being marked around the world with numerous pink-carpet events. But the most meaningful celebration of her milestone is in the stories shared by baby boomers who loved her as youngsters and collect her as adults.

    . . . Stephanie Shareck Werner’s Barbie family had an enviable life - a dream house, airplane, convertible and eternal youth. But those once-cherished playthings - like so many of their brethren - have been vanquished to a dull and dusty retirement in her mother’s attic.

    Readers share more Barbie memories  03/08/09 1:01 AM

    Everyone, it seems, has a Barbie memory. We asked readers to submit their favorite stories of the fashion doll as she celebrates her 50th year. In the 1970s, I had two nieces living in B.C., Canada. They lived out in the country on a ranch-type place—just the right age to love Barbie dolls. Their parents were not able to buy outfits for their dolls. I was asked to make them some outfits as they knew I love to sew.

    Barbie doll trivia  03/08/09 1:01 AM

    Mattel sold 300,000 Barbie dolls in 1959, her inaugural year.
    Barbie is from Willows, Wis., and attended Willows High School.
    Barbie has four sisters: Skipper (1964), Stacie (1992), Kelly (1995) and Krissy (1995).
    The first Barbie with the blond or brunette ponytail and black-and-white striped bathing suit sold for $3. A mint-condition 1959 Barbie is worth an estimated $27,450 today.

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