Current:Home > ScamsShonda Rhimes on first Black Barbie, star of Netflix documentary: 'She was amazing' -NextFrontier Finance
Shonda Rhimes on first Black Barbie, star of Netflix documentary: 'She was amazing'
View
Date:2025-04-17 00:40:41
As a young girl in segregated Spartanburg, South Carolina, Kitty Black Perkins took a brown crayon to white paper dolls so their skin would match hers.
“I seldom saw white people, and so it was all I knew,” says the 76-year-old. “So my instinct when I got a paper doll was to make her look like me.”
Years later, as a chief designer of Mattel’s iconic Barbie doll line, Black Perkins created the first Black Barbie so other children could see themselves in the toy introduced in 1959.
Mattel began offering Christie, a Black friend of Barbie’s, in 1968, but an official Black Barbie didn’t arrive until 1980. The doll's origin story is chronicled in the documentary “Black Barbie” (streaming now on Netflix), which examines the far-reaching impact of representation.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
“If you don't see yourself in what is presented to you all the time as being, ‘This is what is good, this is what is pretty, this is what is smart, this is what is usual,’ and you never see any representations of yourself, what does that mean you are?” executive producer Shonda Rhimes says. “I think it can be very damaging.”
The film focuses on the contributions of Black Perkins and doll designer Stacey McBride Irby, as well as Mattel employee Beulah Mae Mitchell, who began her 44-year career at Mattel on the production line in 1955. She asked Barbie inventor Ruth Handler about a Black Barbie in the early '60s.
Barbie's evolution:An illustrated look
Rhimes, the inspiration for two Barbies, says her mother had a rule that they wouldn’t have white dolls in their home.
“I was really fortunate that I grew up with Black dolls, and I grew up playing with those dolls,” says Rhimes, 54. “My dolls did everything I ever wanted to do. They skied all over the world, and they had amazing jobs" as doctors, lawyers and government officials. "I always wanted my Barbie to have a plane because I wanted her to fly someplace. The dolls could do anything, and that was exciting.”
Rhimes sees the influence of her childhood play in her trailblazing TV career. She says in “Black Barbie,” “If Kerry Washington in ‘Scandal’ is not a Black Barbie, down to the outfits and the dress-up and the clothes, I don’t know what is really.”
Rhimes remembers being in awe of Black Barbie's style.
“I thought she was amazing, and she had this great outfit on with a slit up the side,” Rhimes says. “She was very glamorous to me.”
The first Black Barbie was meant to be the opposite of the original Barbie in every way, Black Perkins says. She and team members from hair design, sculpting, face painting and engineering discussed the doll’s skin tone and decided to give Black Barbie more voluptuous lips, a fuller nose and a curvier form than her white counterpart.
Shania Twain:Her iconic 'Man, I Feel Like a Woman' look becomes a Barbie
Black Perkins took inspiration from Diana Ross and fashion designer Bob Mackie’s avant-garde creations and considered her own preferences. Black Perkins liked red, the color of Black Barbie’s gown, and sported a short, natural hairstyle at the time.
While designing, Black Perkins felt pressure to satisfy the market and the young girl she carried inside of herself who grew up yearning for a Black doll.
“I wanted her to be beautiful,” Black Perkins says. “I wanted her to be someone that the child would really want to play with, or that they would want to even collect.”
Spoilers!Does this big 'Bridgerton' twist signal queer romance to come?
A focus group of kids who tested a prototype let Black Perkins know quickly that she’d accomplished her mission.
“The first thing they said was that she looked like them, and they were real excited,” Black Perkins recalls. “They wanted just to play with her.”
Once the doll hit the market, Black children could be the stars of their own Barbie stories.
“Barbie had accessories to her, and Christie was an accessory, just like Ken is an accessory,” says Black Perkins. “These were dolls that were developed so that Barbie could play out a lifestyle. The reason it was important to give Black Barbie the Barbie name is because it elevated the doll to the point where she stood on her own.”
veryGood! (7361)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- You may want to eat more cantaloupe this summer. Here's why.
- No TikTok? No problem. Here's why you shouldn't rush to buy your child a phone.
- Pro-Palestinian protesters at Drexel ignore call to disband as arrests nationwide approach 3,000
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Report: MLB investigating David Fletcher, former Shohei Ohtani teammate, for placing illegal bets
- Erin Foster Gives Birth, Welcomes First Baby With Husband Simon Tikhman
- California county’s farm bureau sues over state monitoring of groundwater
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- New York-Dublin video link is back up after shutdown for bad behavior
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Family of Black teen wrongly executed in 1931 seeks damages after 2022 exoneration
- Will Jennifer Love Hewitt’s Kids Follow in Her Acting Footsteps? She Says…
- Dali refloated weeks after collapse of Key Bridge, a milestone in reopening access to the Port of Baltimore. Here's what happens next
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Over $450K recovered for workers of California mushroom farms that were sites of fatal shootings
- Red Lobster files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
- California county’s farm bureau sues over state monitoring of groundwater
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
Push to enforce occupancy rule in College Station highlights Texas A&M students’ housing woes
Videos show NASCAR stars Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Kyle Busch — and their crews — getting into fight at All-Star Race
Kristin Chenoweth Shares She Was Severely Abused By an Ex While Reacting to Sean Diddy Combs Video
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
Supreme Court declines to hear challenge to Maryland ban on rifles known as assault weapons
Off-duty police officer injured in shooting in Washington, DC
Primary ballots give Montana voters a chance to re-think their local government structures