Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Pioneering Black doll Baby Nancy enters Toy Hall of Fame

- Photos and text from The Associated Press

ROCHESTER, N.Y. » Baby Nancy, the first Black baby doll to have an Afro and other authentic features, was inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame on Thursday, along with sidewalk chalk and the wooden block game Jenga.

The 2020 honorees were recognized for their creativity and popularity over time.

They were chosen by a panel of experts from among 12 finalists that also included bingo, Breyer Horses, LiteBrite, Masters of the Universe, My Little Pony, Risk, Sorry!, Tamagotchi and Yahtzee.

Baby Nancy was the inaugural doll for Shindana Toys, a California company launched in 1968 by Operation Bootstrap Inc., the not-for-profit Black community self-help organizati­on that emerged in the aftermath of the Watts riots in Los Angeles.

By Thanksgivi­ng, Baby Nancy was the bestsellin­g Black doll in Los Angeles, and before Christmas, she was selling nationwide. The toy exposed a longstandi­ng demand for ethnically correct Black dolls, according to the National Toy Hall of Fame, located in The Strong museum in Rochester, N.Y.

Shindana Toys folded amid financial problems in 1983, but Baby Nancy “still stands as a landmark doll that made commercial and cultural breakthoug­hs,” curator Michelle Parnett-Dwyer said in a news release.

Another inductee, sidewalk chalk, traces its roots all the way back to Paleolithi­c cave art found throughout the world, hall officials said.

“There are few limits to what kids can do with chalk,” chief curator Christophe­r Bensch said. “Every sidewalk square, patio, and driveway holds the potential for a work of art, a winning game of strategy and cleverness, or a demonstrat­ion of physical agility, poise, and balance.”

Jenga, the creation of Englishwom­an Leslie Scott, was honored for its simplicity and ability to be played by almost anyone. Players take turns removing wooden blocks from a rectangula­r tower until it collapses. Its name comes from the Swahili verb “kujenga,” which means to build.

“It is one of the rare games that’s equally fun for two people or a bigger crowd,” curator Nicolas Ricketts said. “It’s perfect for a game party with a group or something more intimate, but either way, it’s always sure to make instant memories.”

 ??  ?? Baby Nancy, by Shindana Toys; Sidewalk Chalk, by Crayola; and Jenga, by Parker Brothers.
Baby Nancy, by Shindana Toys; Sidewalk Chalk, by Crayola; and Jenga, by Parker Brothers.

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