Saturday Star

Barbie additions ‘better reflect the world girls see’

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LATESHIA BEACHUM

THE company that has introduced millions of Barbie dolls to children across generation­s has unveiled new versions that look more like the children who play with them.

Mattel is now claiming to be the most diverse doll line, with its recent launch of dolls that have vitiligo, a prosthetic leg and a bald head.

Even Ken, Barbie’s companion throughout the decades, has a new look with longer hair that stops just below his shoulders.

In the promotiona­l video for the new toys, a blonde and blue-eyed Barbie is displayed with text that reads, “This is Barbie”. The ad then shows a split screen of a brown-skinned Barbie with brunette hair and a prosthetic leg next to a black Barbie with textured hair and vitiligo. The camera pans across differentl­y painted Barbies.

The new era of Barbies is a far cry from the milky-coloured doll that made her first appearance at the American Toy Fair in New York City nearly 61 years ago. That’s intentiona­l, Lisa Mcknight, senior vice-president and global head of Barbie and the dolls portfolio at Mattel, said in a statement.

“We are proud that Barbie is the most diverse doll line on the market, that continues to evolve to better reflect the world girls see around them,” she said.

White people made up nearly 89% of the US population and the country recognised only male and female genders at the time Barbie was introduced, according to census data.

The non-white population today is nearly 24%, and more teens are identifyin­g as transgende­r or gender-nonconform­ing.

Mattel adapted its dolls to reflect the shift. It launched gender-inclusive dolls of various shades and hair types in September. The dolls met a growing need for gender-neutral toys, the company’s vice-president of global consumer rights, Monica Dreger, said. A spokespers­on for Mattel told CBS

News that its latest round of dolls was an attempt to show all forms of beauty.

The doll with vitiligo, a skin disease that causes loss of pigment in patches, was created with the help of dermatolog­ists to make the doll’s appearance more realistic, according to a company statement.vitiligo can affect a person with any skin colour, though it looks more significan­t for people with darker skin tones.

Barbie fans requested a doll with vitiligo, Mcknight told USA Today. The skin condition has been promoted and normalised by fashion models such as Winnie Harlow and Shahad Salman.

The doll with no hair is intended to encourage children who have experience­d hair loss of any kind, according to the company.

The different looks, which are part of the brand’s Fashionist­a line, were created to “better reflect the world girls see today”, according to Mattel’s website.

Over the years, Barbie has introduced a hijab-wearing doll in honour of Olympic fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad, Barbies in fields of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s, and Barbies representi­ng different races and ethnicitie­s.

There are more than 170 dolls with different skin tones and hairstyles for children to choose and see themselves in.

While trying to give children more options, the brand hasn’t always been successful.

A curvier, dark-skinned doll with purple hair received negative reviews on Mattel’s website and mixed reviews from consumers on the sites of other retailers for an appearance that many said was reminiscen­t of blackface.

Other Barbies, however, have fared well with consumers. A curvy black Barbie with an Afro and a Barbie who uses a wheelchair were top sellers for the brand last year, according to the company.

In the UK, one in four dolls sold are Barbies with a wheelchair.

“Our commitment to better reflect the world drives a powerful conversati­on, and we know our efforts are resonating with eight consecutiv­e quarters of growth and the (Barbie) Fashionist­as category up double digits in 2019,” Mcknight said. | The Washington Post

 ??  ?? MATTEL’S new line of Barbies.
| MATTEL handout photo
MATTEL’S new line of Barbies. | MATTEL handout photo

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