Raggedy
Ann/Raggedy Andy
Though Raggedy Ann is a perennial favourite for kids and
collectors, this wildly successful and well-loved doll wasn't dreamed
up in any toy company's R&D department. According to the lore that
surrounds her, Ann's modest and poignant beginnings took place on a
rainy day, when a little girl plucked her out of the damp cold in her
grandmother's attic, and then showed off her new toy to her cartoonist
father. Of course, lore tends to get soaked in melodrama and
stretches-of-the-truth - nowadays, the location of said attic is in
question, and even the identity of who really found the doll in
said attic is in question - but let's not get caught up in the
technicalities.
The cartoonist father was Johnny Gruelle, who had been a political
cartoonist and a freelance illustrator for other writers' cartoon
strips. When, as the story goes, his daughter Marcella burst into his
art studio carrying the soiled, faceless rag doll she had found,
Gruelle picked up a pen and drew in her facial features and suggested
that Marcella's grandma might be able to sew on buttons as eyes. Then,
he opened a nearby book of James Whitcomb Riley's poetry and concocted
the doll's name from two poems: The Raggedy Man and Little
Orphan Annie. Sadly, a few years later, Marcella died of an
infected smallpox vaccination. She was thirteen.
Gruelle, who was working on several versions of illustrated fairy
tales and playtime yarns already, now focused on his nascent
Raggedy Ann stories - the very stories that some say he told to
his little girl in the last days of her illness. When Gruelle's
stories were published as the Raggedy Ann Stories in 1918, the
book's protagonist was named after his late daughter, and she would be
a recurring character in the twenty-five books that followed. Gruelle
believed that children's books should contain nothing to cause fright,
suggest fear, glorify mischief, excuse malice or condone cruelty. The
folksy and wholesome Raggedy Ann, with her candy heart and her brother
named Andy, became a spokesdoll for trust and kindness, for always
doing the moral thing. Beloved Belindy, Camel with the Wrinkled Knees,
Quacky Doodles and Danny Doodles - characters just as cheerful and
kindly as Ann and Andy - later joined the rag doll duo.
Another part of Raggedy Ann legend is that Gruelle and his family
manufactured the first dolls to accompany the new book's release.
Whether the family actually made the doll's first prototypes or just
held (and continue to hold onto today) the first Raggedy Ann patent is
a detail that's up for grabs - to be determined by whoever is telling
the Raggedy Ann story. The first toy company, and now we're back to
fact, to make the dolls was called P.F. Volland.
Exposition Doll and Toy Manufacturing had a go in 1935, and then
Knickerbocker after that. Today, Simon and Schuster retain Raggedy Ann
and Andy literary rights, and Hasbro-Playskool and Applause Toy
Company hold the license to the characters for toys and merchandise.
The Knickerbocker dolls, which were introduced in the 1960s, were
dressed in nostalgic gingham and calico fabrics, had cloth bodies, red
and white striped legs, and an "I love you" message printed over their
hearts. The Applause Toy Company started as a division of
Knickerbocker in 1979, and the bulk of their dolls had embroidered
faces, though there was one version with button eyes - just like
Marcella's original doll.
The Ideal Company made a set of 18" porcelain dolls in 1978, to
coincide with the release of the animated Raggedy Ann and Andy
musical movie. This was the dolls' least soft and cuddly phase -
renowned, as they are, for their huggable, all-cloth bodies. Hug some
of the dolls hard enough, in fact, and you might be able to feel Ann's
magic pebble or Andy's wishing stick inside, which were both ornaments
from the duo's storybook days.
Raggedy Anns and Andys are widely, widely collected, and though
they're steeped in old-time Americana, they have legions of adoring
fans in other countries. Aside from the books and the dolls, Raggedy
products range from wallpaper to tea sets to comics to doll house
miniatures. There aren't many toy personalities this durable, and
there certainly aren't many toys with such a frequently retold and
refashioned legacy. |
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