Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #53: Miniature Girl

   First of all, don't forget to check out today's Doll Book of the Month Club post. 

  Now. Today's doll. She's a tiny little girl.

Pardon my dry fingers, Between washing rescued things from the house and washing my hands because I'm handling a lot of second hand stuff, my skin is as dry as paper.

I bought this doll at the doll show Sunday. She's cute enough, but her two tiny dolls made the decision to buy her easy!




She's about 3 inches tall herself, so you can imagine how tiny her dolls are.





  There's a tiny rag doll.



And there's a jointed wooden doll.


And her arms really move!




  The rag doll is about an inch tall, so figure how tiny the wooden doll is.


  The little girl has great hair. I think it's made of bunka.

She has tiny hair ribbons, I could never have tied those.

She's wearing bloomers. Her shoes are made of polymer clay. I'm not sure what her socks/legs are made of.


Her legs have wire in them so they are bendable.










She can even sit down, although her legs don't seem to bend at the hips. They bend a little lower down.




Her head is wooden. 


She has a cotton dress and apron.


  On the back of her dress there is a little...sticker?


It's the initials of her maker I think. It's 'CS'. Does anybody know who that is?


I was a little surprised to see that the little rag doll was marked too,



And even more surprised that even the tiny wooden doll  was marked.

Notice her cloth hands.


  That's todays doll. See you again tomorrow,

The Doll Book of the Month Club: D is for Different

   This month's Doll Book of the Month Club book is "D is for Different".


  As you can see, this book is a Barbie book. Emma used to be in the Barbie and Friends book club to get these when she was a kid. She always loved these books, and recently bought this one, because it was one she didn't have from childhood.

  The book concerns a girl named Danni, and her annoying bully classmate Alice, who is constantly making fun of Danni. Danni is having trouble with her spelling but she's a whiz at playing the piano.


  Danni is, in fact, having so much trouble with her spelling and other subjects that it's becoming a problem. But, this is a Barbie book, so guess who saves the day? Danni's teacher has a big surprise for the class. A famous author is coming to their classroom. It turns out to be Barbie Roberts. Who knew Barbie was a writer too? When Barbie visits the class, and sees Danni being teased for her bad spelling, she comforts her. Barbie thinks that maybe Danni has a learning disorder involving her short term memory. Barbie offers to help Danni by giving her some 'tricks' to help her remember things.

  Alice, who is a great speller, turns out to be lousy at the thing Danni excels in: paying the piano. Will Danni help her tormentor? Will Alice stop being such a creep? Will Barbie straighten out Danni's learning problems? Well I think you can guess the answer to all these questions. This is a Barbie book Come on!

  The book does talk about some learning problems that kids might relate to, as well as showing how being a bully can backfire, when you realize that the kid you're making fun of, is better than you are at something. Everybody is bad at something, and it isn't right to be cruel to someone. There is a lot of bullying in school, and kids need to learn how it makes others feel. So, there are some lessons to be learned here. One thing they deal with, but don't talk about directly, and it's Barbie who has to come up with the idea. Danni's teacher is oblivious.), is how hard it is for some kids to talk in front of the class, or be the center of attention. Danni is seriously nervous about spelling in front of everyone, because she's so bad at spelling. No matter the reason, this sort of thing is hard on kids. It's tough being humiliated in front of your classmates. Danni's teacher has the class do a spelling bee, and awards a 'speller of the week' star to the winner. He thinks it will help kids get used to speaking in public. But some people just aren't made for that. And do they really have to be? When I was in middle school we had to give book reports in front of the class. One boy was so nervous that he couldn't speak at all. He stood there at his desk shaking and eventually broke down in tears. Luckily we had a sympathetic teacher, who told him to sit down, and told the class that there's no point n forcing somebody to do something that they find so upsetting. I have always respected her for that.

  The writing in the Barbie books was pretty good, compared to doll based books like the Only Hearts Club dolls book I posted recently. The very first page of this book describes April's ponytail as standing out behind her like a large question mark, (or was that an exclamation point?). When Alice, laughs at  Danni, it's said that her ponytail is shaking around like it is laughing at her too. There's a lot more description and care taken to actually write a decent story than there was in the Only Hearts Club book. 


Alice, left, laughs at Danni, right, who is begging the bell to ring before it's her turn to spell a word.

  But let's get real here. The best thing about these Barbie books was always the pictures! Another thing they have over the Only Hearts Club books! I complained in that post about how little care they had taken in posing the dolls, and in 'dressing the sets', so to speak. In one picture the dance studio wall paper was obviously just notebook paper, and then they reused the notebook paper wall paper in the main character's bedroom too! And in those pictures, the 'wallpaper' didn't even cover the whole wall! You don't get shoddy decorating like that in the Barbie books! The detail in the pictures was always amazing. The rooms were decorated like real rooms, with every little nick nack and do dad accounted for. Of course, as I said in the Only Hearts Club book post, Barbie obviously is going to have a lot more money behind her. These books weren't even accompanying a doll, or available to the average consumer. To get these books you had to belong to the book club.



Emma and I were discussing the grass in this picture. It looks like real grass. Was it fake grass that was just very realistic? Was it photo trickery? Did they even have programs good enough to composite a picture like this using a photo of real real grass and dolls? Or is the grass just a photo? If it is, they did a really good job of making it look three dimensional and making it look like the bicycle and the dog are really on it. There is at least one bit of photo trickery in this picture. I'm pretty sure Danni has the legs with the jointed knees, and they have photoshopped the joint out.


The other thing we were talking about is something we also used to enjoy doing when Emma was a kid. We always like spotting which dolls and which clothes were used in the books. In the picture above we spotted Flashlight Fun Whitney's shoes on Danni's friend on the left, and Bowling Party Janet's socks and shoes on Danni's other friend. 


Danni's name is spelled with a 'y' on the board because April teased Danni so much about 'not even spelling your own name right', that Danni angrily changed it and asked April if that was good enough. I'd have made her eat the chalk too. I did not take to teasing, and as a red haired kid, I got plenty of it.
I loved seeing Mulan's Captain Li Shang as a modern guy! He's Danni's teacher, Mr. Lee.

You can see my post on this Captain Li Shang doll HERE.

I also caught another little goodie in the photo. At the far right edge you can see a lunchbox. I immediately recognized it as a Basic Fun keychain lunch box, but which one?



I figured it out. It's a "Gunsmoke" lunchbox, from the series of classic TV show lunchboxes! How many kids were carrying Gunsmoke lunchboxes in the 90's or early 2000's? I suppose they figured no one could tell what kind it was anyway.

  Another fun thing was, often special dolls were created just for the books That was a little aggravating, because some of them were ones we would have liked to have bought!  Danni's mom was an early 'curvy' doll. She has obviously wider hips and chunkier legs than standard Barbie dolls of the time. Danni herself is a doll specially made for the book, and not commercially available. Her face paint is definitely one of a kind, except maybe in the picture with the grass. That smiling face, (which was a mistake, because she's definitely not smiling in the part of the book.), look like the Stacie's that were sold. But there was never a brunette Stacie friend without bangs.



 They reused a lot of real clothes Mattel actually sold, in fashion packs or on dolls, (like the shoes and socks mentioned above.), but often the clothes were specially made too.

  So yes. These books are fun, and not badly written. These days you can buy them by the stack on Ebay. They turn up now and then at yard sales and thrift stores too.

  Don't forget to check out today's doll too!

Doll-A-Day 2023 #52: Miss Sunbeam

   Yesterday I showed you the Linda Williams doll, and her supposed twin, Miss Sunbeam. Today we're looking at Miss Sunbeam herself.



This Miss Sunbeam supposedly has the same head sculpt as Linda Williams, but obvious differences include Miss Sunbeam's dimples and her open mouth. Look at Linda for comparison.

No dimples and her teeth take up the whole opening of her mouth.


They are both about 14 inches tall.
Miss Sunbeam is obviously an advertising doll. Her sponsor, so to speak, was Sunbeam bread.




As you can see, Sunbeam wanted you to know she represented them. 



Ellen Barbara Segner was commissioned by the makers of Sunbeam bread in 1942 to create the  marketing symbol for Sunbeam bread, based on a young child. After sketching characters for six months, Segner finally found a little girl in Indiana who was the perfect model. There have been several dolls based on the image Segner created. The one we're looking at today was produced by Eegee in the 1950's.

  That's today's doll. It was short and sweet, due to my having a lot of wet mildewing stuff to clean and dry out from the fire, today. See you tomorrow.


  

Sunday, February 26, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #51: Linda Williams

   Today's doll is Linda Williams.

The doll is very simple, only jointed at the neck, shoulders and hips. 

  I've had this post written ahead for ages, but couldn't locate my Linda Williams doll. I photographed this doll at the doll show today. She's not mine, but she is in better shape than mine, so, you're good.
  Linda stands about 14" tall. She has rooted hair and inset eyes with 'real' lashes, and molded and painted teeth.

This doll is wearing her original dress.

Linda is based on the character Linda Williams, from The Danny Thomas Show, (originally called "Make Room for Daddy"), which ran from 1953 to 1964. It starred Danny Thomas, perhaps best known these days as the father of actress Marlo Thomas and the founder of Saint Jude's Children's Hospital.        'Linda' was the stepdaughter of the Danny Thomas character, and first appeared in the fourth season of the show. In that season she was played by Lelani Sorenson.



The doll was advertised in 1960 catalogs and  available through a promotion on Post Toasties Corn Flakes cereal boxes. For $2.00 and two box tops from the cereal, you could have your own Linda Williams doll.

This ad, from the back of the Post Toasties cereal box shows Lelani Sorenson, and a doll that looks like her. I don't think this version of the doll was ever made. It looks like the doll's face is actually a drawing of Sorenson, and not a real doll. Notice the ad mentions the doll's 'big blue eyes'. It doesn't look like Lelani Sorenson had blue eyes, and the actress who replaced her as Linda Williams certainly doesn't. 

   The doll came with a fashion booklet that showed outfits that could be ordered for your Linda Williams doll.

1960 catalog.


  The dolls came in a few sizes, including the 14" doll by PMA (Plastic Molded Arts), and 20", and 30" dolls by The Natural Doll Company. The 30" doll was a walker.
  After the first season with the character, Linda was played by child actress Angela Cartwright.

The dolls came in several sizes. Neither of these dolls Angela Cartwright is posing with look like the dolls actually sold as the Linda Williams doll.

That's the right one. Although I don't think the big one had the same face.


I don't think the doll actually looks like either girl who played Linda Williams.



  I'm not sure if the PMA doll was also 'a natural doll'.






    Angela went on to greater fame, and screen immortality when she played Birgitta, one of the daughters of Captain Von Trapp in "The Sound of Music".

Angela front and center.

She's also well known as Penny Robinson, on the original "Lost in Space" TV series, which ran from 1965 to 1968.


Angela, far left.

  Her sister, Veronica Cartwright is also an actress, whose two most famous roles are as the child lead in Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds", and the wife of The Cigarette Smoking Man, on The X-Files.

Veronica on the left, Angela on the right. Why are those candelabrum so small?!

    During the run of the show there were a lot of products made in connection with the Linda Williams character and Angela Cartwright.

Here is Angela posing with just some of them.


   These days Angela Cartwright is a photographer and artist, with a studio in Los Angeles.

  Several other dolls were made from the same mold as the Linda Williams doll, including Dolly Ann, Pippi Longstocking, and a Sunbeam Bread advertising doll. The Sunbeam doll was made by EEGEE, so I'm not sure who owned the mold. This Sunbeam doll is close, but not the same sculpt as Linda Williams.


This picture is borrowed from the internet, and I will be glad to remove it if asked.

   
  There also was a doll called Kissin Kuzzins Dazee Mae, who was 'A Beautiful Virga doll made by Beehler Arts of Amityville, New York', who looked very like the Linda Williams doll.
Tomorrow we'll see another doll.