The Star Malaysia

Barbie turns 60 with career dolls and role models

-

SINGAPORE: Barbie is turning 60, and in an effort to keep up with the times a new range of dolls are being released, including career women and role models to inspire young girls.

An astronaut, a football player and a news anchor were among the new-look, high-achieving Barbies unveiled by toy company Mattel at an anniversar­y event in Singapore.

A series of successful women have also had dolls made in their image to mark six decades of Barbie.

These include world number one tennis player Naomi Osaka, American actress Yara Shahidi, and the first-ever Maori Barbie, modelled after New Zealand sports journalist Melodie Robinson.

“Barbie has come a long way as a role model to show girls that they have choices and can achieve any careers,” said Mattel South-East Asia marketing chief Chris Chan.

Mattel has marked the anniversar­y by partnering with the Singapore Flyer – a giant ferris wheel in the city-state – to temporaril­y turn one of the ride’s cabins Barbie-themed.

Barbie has attracted her fair share of controvers­y, not least her pin-up measuremen­ts put her at odds with a women’s rights movement fighting against unattainab­le beauty standards.

Mattel has made many changes in the years since, introducin­g multiple body types and skin tones.

These days more than half of the Barbie dolls sold around the world have neither blonde hair nor blue eyes, according to the company.

More than one billion Barbies have been sold since her debut at the American Toy Fair in New York on March 9, 1959.

 ?? — AFP ?? Representa­tion for all women: Mattel has made many changes over the years by introducin­g different career women multiple body types and skin tones.
— AFP Representa­tion for all women: Mattel has made many changes over the years by introducin­g different career women multiple body types and skin tones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia