Dolly Pops
Knickerbocker introduced Dolly Pops in the late 70s. There were
blonde and a brunette dolls, three inches tall, with very long
hair and, in their natural state, nothing but white bloomers.
But each doll came with two snap-on outfits, thank goodness,
and that's where the fun began. There were four outfit groupings
to choose from: School Time, Party Time, Play Time and Country
Time. It was a concept steeped in paper doll tradition, but with
its three dimensions and plastic, you could really move these
girls around without the risk of paper cuts.
And to make that playtime mobile, there were plastic
mini-suitcases that opened up to create different scenes: a horse
ride, a dress show (with a backstage dressing room and stage that
really turned), a two-story Dolly Pop house, and so on. And if you
weren't feeling up to the rigors of costuming, you could snap
Dolly into a bike and push her right off into the sunset.
All of it was a snap-on delight, but Knickerbocker's
masterstroke was Pop Town. Toy company urban planners designed a
fold-out street, lined with a Dolly house, a dress shop and a toy
shop - pretty much all a girl could ask for. Not only did the two
dolls come in this set, but there were nine outfits and a Dolly
baby too, with a snap-on cradle if she got sleepy. If only
dressing ourselves was this easy.
|