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Barbie’s a bonafide movie star. Now she’s making a play for other Tinseltown jobs

New York (CNN) — Watch out Hollywood. Barbie isn’t done with her Tinseltown dreams.

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By
Parija Bhatnagar
, CNN
CNN — New York (CNN) — Watch out Hollywood. Barbie isn’t done with her Tinseltown dreams.

In fact, Mattel has even bigger show business aspirations for its bonafide movie star, who delivered a defining pop culture moment in 2023.

The “Barbie” movie made history, raking in an astounding $1.03 billion at the global box office, putting it in an elite category of movies in history that have crossed the $1 billion mark. Plus, “Barbie” just scored two Golden Globe wins.

But all that hoopla is in the past. In 2024, Mattel wants to show Barbie’s young fans that she is just as ambitious about conquering the less glamorous off-the-screen jobs in an industry with long-standing gender disparity in career opportunities.

Mattel on Wednesday unveiled its 2024 Barbie Career of the Year-themed dolls (priced at $50 each and available for purchase). The toymaker said her career choices this year honor women in the movie industry across a spectrum of roles.

They include studio executive Barbie, dressed in a blue blazer, leather skirt, black heels and smartphone equipped. Director Barbie dons a comfy denim jumpsuit and sneakers, a headset and script in hand, while cinematographer Barbie wears a “Chase Dreams’ T-shirt, sneakers and carries a professional camera.

Finally, there’s movie star Barbie, wearing a sequin floor-length gown with a beaded silver necklace, holding her award.

The toymaker said the four film career dolls are meant to encourage girls to be creative and imaginative and think about pursuing a future job in the movie industry.

Mattel has increasingly strived to have Barbie take on culturally relevant and aspirational roles in fields where women are underrepresented.

It’s part of an ongoing effort by the company to also embrace a more inclusive approach to its iconic 65-year-old Barbie brand after facing protracted criticism that Barbie wasn’t evolving fast enough with the times and continued to give girls an unrealistic role model of a female body type.

When Barbie first debuted in 1959, the doll was light-skinned, slender, blonde, with a narrow waist, ample bosom and teetering on impossibly high heels. That mold of the doll persisted for decades as Barbie’s popularity also grew.

But then the tide turned and, amid softening doll sales, Mattel changed its approach and crafted Barbie into a more realistic depiction by making newer dolls that were more inclusive and diverse in their appearance.

In 2016, Barbie was reintroduced in four body types and seven skin tones, with 22 eye colors and 24 hairstyles. Her evolution continued with Barbie Fashionistas, which came three years later.

The focus of the Barbie Fashionistas line, according to Mattel, is to provide kids more diverse representations of beauty and fight the stigma around physical disabilities.

Mattel introduced its first-ever version of the Barbie doll representing a person with Down syndrome in 2023.

Last year, Barbie career dolls spotlighted another industry where jobs are still largely dominated by men. The 2023 career dolls represented four sports-related jobs, including coach Barbie, referee Barbie and a General Manager Barbie doll.

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