Barbie will soon be 60 – and is still going strong
She is turning 60 this year and still doesn't have a single wrinkle.
Blonde or brunette, slender or curvy, black or white, princess or president, Barbie is a forever favorite for young girls, even if she has caused controversy over the years.
The iconic doll has evolved to keep up with the times -- check out her Twitter feed.
And despite fierce competition in the toy industry, 58 million Barbies are sold each year in more than 150 countries.
"In an industry where success today is three to five years, 60 years is a huge deal!" said Nathan Baynard, director of global brand marketing for Barbie.
Around the world, Barbie is as universally known as Coca-Cola or McDonald's, Baynard said during a recent visit to Mattel's design studio in El Segundo, a suburb of Los Angeles.
In all, more than one billion Barbie dolls have been sold since she made her debut at the American Toy Fair in New York on March 9, 1959.
She was invented by Ruth Handler, the co-founder of Mattel, who was inspired by her own children to create the doll.
"Her daughter Barbara was limited in the choices of her toys -- the only ones were baby dolls," Baynard recounted.
"The only role she could imagine through that play was caregiver, mother," whereas Handler's son "could imagine being an astronaut, cowboy, pilot, surgeon."
Barbie is, of course, a shortened version of Barbara.
The doll was supposed to teach girls "that they had choices, that they could be anything. In 1959, it was a radical idea!" Baynard said.
Barbie was an instant success. In the first year, 300,000 dolls were sold, he added.
From the start, Barbie's pinup measurements didn't immediately seem all that feminist, and would spark criticism for decades to come.
"In 1959, her body structure was exaggerated to match the aesthetics of the time and the fabric available," said Barbie designer Carlyle Nuera.
Since the blonde beauty first hit stores, and after a torrent of complaints over what was seen as unrealistic proportions, Mattel has made many changes -- introducing multiple body types and dozens of skin tones.
MG Lord, author of "Forever Barbie," also argued that the original criticisms were unwarranted.
"She is what the child wants her to be. How a child sees the Barbie doll is often framed by how the mother of that child feels about the idea of femininity," Lord told AFP.
"The problem here is not an 11.5-inch plastic object. The problem is the larger culture and the idea of femininity."
In 1965, four years before Neil Armstrong walked on the Moon, Barbie became an astronaut. In 1968, the first black Barbie doll, a friend named Christie, hit store shelves.
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