<p>Los Angeles: At 65 years of age, Barbie shows no signs of retiring from her 250 different jobs as a plastic and fantastic doll whose small feet have left a big cultural mark on the human world.</p><p>The original Mattel Barbie with her iconic blonde hair, black and white bathing suit and eyes angled to the side, was inspired by creator Ruth Handler’s daughter, Barbara, in 1959.</p><p>However, in 2024, as Barbie celebrates her 65th anniversary, the dolls are produced in a diversity of colors, hair textures, body shapes and more.</p><p>“Barbie used to be a more singular reflection of beauty and more one-dimensional. Today, there are many Barbies, and we've got multiple views of the brand,” Executive Vice President and Global Head of Barbie & Dolls, Lisa McKnight, told <em>Reuters</em> at the Mattel Design Center in Los Angeles.</p><p>Barbies come in 35 skin tones, 97 hairstyles and nine body types, including dolls with wheelchairs, Down Syndrome, vitiligo and plus-sizes as well as gender neutral dolls.</p>.Barbie and Bella: Two different shades of female liberation.<p>The doll has also become the fashion icon recently inspiring Barbiecore and helping many renowned hair stylists and clothing designers, like Karl Lagerfeld, get their start.</p><p>Adding to the brand’s evolution, the commercial success of the 2023 8-time Oscar-nominated <em>Barbie</em> movie directed by Greta Gerwig, starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling added a new emotional depth to the doll.</p><p>However, these gains didn't come overnight.</p><p>"I'm so grateful I didn't grow up with Barbie," women's rights activist Gloria Steinem said in the 2018 Barbie documentary on Hulu <em>Tiny Shoulders: Rethinking Barbie</em>.</p><p>"Barbie was everything we didn't want to be, and were being told to be," she added, referring to her work as a second-wave feminist advocating for equality in the 60s and 70s.</p><p>To this day, the doll is still associated by some with unrealistic body proportions, gender roles and Eurocentric beauty standards.</p><p>While considering these concerns, Mattel keeps adding multifaceted dolls to be pretty in pink. The brand is open to different voices that go beyond that of its designers.</p><p>"What's most important for us is that we take on board consultation from all kinds of communities when we're designing,” said Kim Culmone, Mattel's vice president of Barbie Design.</p>.'Barbie' and 'Oppenheimer' score SAG award nominations on road to Oscars.<p>While expanding, however, some things remain true for the toy brand, including hand-painting Barbies and using the same sewing machines that have been around since 1959.</p><p>Whether it is hand-sculpting new dolls or operating advanced 3D-printers, the brand is open to change.</p><p>The 65th anniversary dolls created by Filipino lead designer for Barbie Signature, Carlyle Nuera, are a reimagining of the original Barbie’s bathing suit as a black and white gown accompanied by white cat-eye sunglasses.</p><p>Rather than just the classic white doll with blonde hair, there's also a Black doll with braids and laid edges, a popular style for Black women that includes soft and sleeked baby hairs.</p><p>"If we continued to do the same thing that we've done before, over and over again, Barbie would not be the success that she is today," Culmone said. </p>
<p>Los Angeles: At 65 years of age, Barbie shows no signs of retiring from her 250 different jobs as a plastic and fantastic doll whose small feet have left a big cultural mark on the human world.</p><p>The original Mattel Barbie with her iconic blonde hair, black and white bathing suit and eyes angled to the side, was inspired by creator Ruth Handler’s daughter, Barbara, in 1959.</p><p>However, in 2024, as Barbie celebrates her 65th anniversary, the dolls are produced in a diversity of colors, hair textures, body shapes and more.</p><p>“Barbie used to be a more singular reflection of beauty and more one-dimensional. Today, there are many Barbies, and we've got multiple views of the brand,” Executive Vice President and Global Head of Barbie & Dolls, Lisa McKnight, told <em>Reuters</em> at the Mattel Design Center in Los Angeles.</p><p>Barbies come in 35 skin tones, 97 hairstyles and nine body types, including dolls with wheelchairs, Down Syndrome, vitiligo and plus-sizes as well as gender neutral dolls.</p>.Barbie and Bella: Two different shades of female liberation.<p>The doll has also become the fashion icon recently inspiring Barbiecore and helping many renowned hair stylists and clothing designers, like Karl Lagerfeld, get their start.</p><p>Adding to the brand’s evolution, the commercial success of the 2023 8-time Oscar-nominated <em>Barbie</em> movie directed by Greta Gerwig, starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling added a new emotional depth to the doll.</p><p>However, these gains didn't come overnight.</p><p>"I'm so grateful I didn't grow up with Barbie," women's rights activist Gloria Steinem said in the 2018 Barbie documentary on Hulu <em>Tiny Shoulders: Rethinking Barbie</em>.</p><p>"Barbie was everything we didn't want to be, and were being told to be," she added, referring to her work as a second-wave feminist advocating for equality in the 60s and 70s.</p><p>To this day, the doll is still associated by some with unrealistic body proportions, gender roles and Eurocentric beauty standards.</p><p>While considering these concerns, Mattel keeps adding multifaceted dolls to be pretty in pink. The brand is open to different voices that go beyond that of its designers.</p><p>"What's most important for us is that we take on board consultation from all kinds of communities when we're designing,” said Kim Culmone, Mattel's vice president of Barbie Design.</p>.'Barbie' and 'Oppenheimer' score SAG award nominations on road to Oscars.<p>While expanding, however, some things remain true for the toy brand, including hand-painting Barbies and using the same sewing machines that have been around since 1959.</p><p>Whether it is hand-sculpting new dolls or operating advanced 3D-printers, the brand is open to change.</p><p>The 65th anniversary dolls created by Filipino lead designer for Barbie Signature, Carlyle Nuera, are a reimagining of the original Barbie’s bathing suit as a black and white gown accompanied by white cat-eye sunglasses.</p><p>Rather than just the classic white doll with blonde hair, there's also a Black doll with braids and laid edges, a popular style for Black women that includes soft and sleeked baby hairs.</p><p>"If we continued to do the same thing that we've done before, over and over again, Barbie would not be the success that she is today," Culmone said. </p>