Dolls,
in one form or another, have been around a long time, but it wasn’t
until the early 20th century that dolls became collectible. And the
person who created their collectibility was Beatrice Alexander,
otherwise known as Madame Alexander.
Beatrice Alexander’s interest in quality doll workmanship began as a
child. The daughter of Russian Immigrants, she grew up over her father’s
doll hospital in New York, the first doll hospital in the country.
Playing with the dolls that needed repair and of watching her father
work instilled in her a love dolls and a desire to create sturdier ones
than the popular but fragile German porcelain that her father repaired.
With the U.S. embargo on German goods, German porcelain dolls comprised
the majority of her father’s repair and retail business. She and her
three sisters began to create unbreakable, cloth Red Cross dolls at
home.
An avid reader, she was able to convince her parents to create a “secret
garden” in their small backyard where Bertha would read the books that
would help inspire her dolls, including Alice in Wonderland, Little
Women, and books by Charles Dickens.
In 1923, at the age of 28, Beatrice obtained a loan for $1,600 to
establish the Alexander Doll Company. Hiring her sisters as makers, she
designed and sold cloth dolls which were, in a way, the antithesis of
the porcelain high-end dolls that she believed were not meant for play
but for admiration from afar.
Adding the moniker of “Madame” to her last name felt more in line with
how Beatrice wished to be known as both a business leader and doll
creator, and the term was added to her brand name. She founded her
company with the production of cloth dolls and soon moved to composition
creations. These figures offered a less breakable option than porcelain
and appeared in elegant fashions. Despite the high quality working of
the composition dolls, however, Madame Alexander remained unsatisfied.
Also
during the 1920s, Alexander obtained a trademark for Alice in
Wonderland, which allowed her to create Alice dolls. She also obtained
trademarks to create dolls that coincided with the release of the movie
version of Little Women in 1933 and Scarlett O’Hara after reading Gone
With the Wind in 1937. This became the first collectible doll based on a
licensed character. She was also one of the early creators of
mass-produced dolls of living people, with dolls of the Dionne
quintuplets in 1936 and a set of 36 Queen Elizabeth II dolls, including
the queen, maids of honor, archbishops, choir boys, royal relatives, and
honor guards dressed in great detail, right down to their undergarments,
to commemorate the 1953 coronation celebrations in Britain.
Madame
Alexander had a creative relationship with Disney starting in the 1930s.
Leading characters from classic Disney films and stories provided
inspiration for some of the most imaginative and best-loved Madame
Alexander dolls including Snow White, Cinderella, and even the Seven
Dwarfs.
In 1942, Alexander introduced the Jeannie doll, one of the very first
walking dolls. She “walked” thanks to a unique walking mechanism with
pullies and levers. Other walker dolls included Binnie and Winnie which
the company offered in a variety of different sizes.
Shortly
after World War II in 1947, Alexander asked the Dupont Company to
develop a plastic formula with which she could manufacture beautiful,
practically unbreakable playthings. These plastic dolls are the best
known and most popular of all her creations.
Alexander developed a durable, hard plastic doll that could be well
played with and not break. Thanks to newly developed technologies that
came from DuPont, she was able to manipulate the mold used for the face
of the doll to let it show more expression. This plastic face mold
fundamentally changed the doll industry.
Alexander believed hands-on doll play could encourage compassion,
empathy, and making meaningful relationships. She turned to lessons and
stories from classic literature and stories from a variety of cultures
as she created her dolls, determined to make each one more than just a
pretty face.
She
based her approach to developing a new doll on her knowledge of the
person or character she wanted to portray, and that required in-depth
research. The New York Public Library became her resource of choice for
learning about all aspects of a doll’s “life”—from era to lifestyle to
clothing and accessories, these dolls needed to reflect a true vision of
the subject from head to toe.
Not just for girls, Alexander intended her dolls to cut across gender,
bias, and age to encourage conversation, curiosity, and understanding
among doll lovers.
Not long after starting her company, Alexander built up staff by hiring
locals. She carefully trained her employees to have the intricate skills
needed to make dolls and the clothing and accessories that came with
them. The company had up to 650 employees in the 1960s and manufactured
all its dolls at the 131st Street building, with some parts made in The
Bronx and White Plains. But production shifted overseas in the 1990s.
One
of the most successful dolls created by Alexander was “Cissy,” a 10-inch
doll made of hard plastic that debuted in 1955. Cissy was jointed at the
neck, shoulders, hips, and knees, and had “high-heel feet.” Her costumes
covered a long list of trendy costume options for any character ranging
from debutantes to ballerinas, queens, socialites, Gibson Girls, brides,
and some that even wore pants.
The
company's introduced its most popular doll, the 8-inch Wendy doll, in
the 1950s. It was also its first fashion doll. Other Madame Alexander
dolls include Mary, Queen of Scots Portrait Doll, Heidi, the characters
from Little Women, as well as a series of international dolls dressed in
native costumes. Alexander also created many topical doll series, such
as "The First Ladies of the United States," depicting each in her
inaugural gown, as well as "The Opera Series", and "Fairy Tale Series."
For collectors, Madame Alexander dolls are divided into two groups,
those made from 1948 to 1965 and those made fro 1965 to the present.
Her
dolls had sleepy eyes set in beautifully painted faces, and all dressed
in detailed costumes. Though Alexander used the same range of faces on
her dolls, a doll’s uniqueness and value depends on its costume, wig and
face painting. Costuming dates the doll. The value of the same 1958
Cissy doll can fluctuate by $1,000 depending on if she wears a simple
dress or a detailed ball gown.
Madame Alexander’s exquisite doll clothes were also important for
collectors because they literally reflect the best of the world of
fashion. In 1951, the New York Fashion Academy, a gold medal for
clothing design, the first of four subsequent gold medals. The Academy
noted that Alexander’s dolls often dressed better than human models.
Doll clothes often reflect the excellent fashion sense and the attention
to detail that appeared in Alexander’s earlier creations. Doll clothes
often comprise more than 20 individual components and contain minute
detail such as ribbon and lace on pantalets or rhinestones on tiny
high-heeled shoes.
The variety of costumes allowed Alexander to create thematic dolls.
International dolls, storybook figures, literary figures, and historical
personages, movie characters, Collectors favor these thematic dolls
because they represented outside interests..
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