太子探花

‘Astro-fabulous’: 2 Barbie Dolls that blasted into space now on display at Smithsonian museum

Barbie dolls from 1965, 1985 and 1994 are on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. (Courtesy Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum)
These Barbie dolls that came back from space are on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. They are the first two Barbie dolls to fly to space. Before their trip to the International Space Station, the dolls underwent preparation to make sure none of their accessories, including their hair, floated off in the absence of gravity. (Courtesy Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum)
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Why Barbie has a place at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum

Since dropping on the scene in 1959, Barbie has been a fashion designer, a nurse, a ballerina, a flight attendant, a fashion model, lead singer of The Rockers, a veterinarian, a pilot, an executive and a host of other professions.

Last year, she came back from space during her most recent stint as astronaut, and you can learn more about her trip to the International Space Station at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum鈥檚 Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia.

Part of the museum鈥檚 new Space Discovery series, the first two Barbie dolls that have flown to space are on display in the James S. McDonnell Space Hangar. It’s just in time for the movie 鈥淏arbie,鈥 which premieres this week.

鈥淭hey went to the International Space Station thanks to a ,鈥 said Margaret Weitekamp, chair of the Space History Department of the museum.

 

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The two dolls join three other Barbies in the museum 鈥 a Barbie in a Miss Astronaut outfit from 1965, an African American Barbie from 1986 in a silver and purple space outfit and a 1994 Astronaut Barbie commemorating the 25th Anniversary of Apollo 11. Weitekamp said the new dolls were a way to bring the display to the present.


It鈥檚 not the first time the museum has highlighted Barbie鈥檚 careers in aviation and space exploration. In 1995, in an exhibit that traced her career in space and aviation.

Barbie has long been an innovator.

Before Mattel released the first Barbie, dolls typically came in the form of babies and taught children how to parent a baby. But Barbie allowed the child, presumably a girl, to imagine herself as a young adult, Weitekamp said.

鈥淭he expression at the time is Barbie was a single, career girl. And so through those careers, you could imagine yourself doing other things,鈥 including professions that 鈥渁 lot of women didn鈥檛 have access to,鈥 Weitekamp said.

In 1965, nearly two decades before Sally Ride became the first American woman in space, Mattel created an astronaut outfit for the Barbie doll, as NASA was in the middle of the . The program was the space agency’s early human spaceflight program and a precursor to the Apollo missions.

鈥淭hat’s at a time when the U.S. astronaut corps is entirely white men. And there was not any space for women to participate as an astronaut,鈥 Weitekamp said.

When Barbie first came out, you bought the doll and outfits separately. By the 1980s, Mattel started selling the dolls that included different outfits and accessories, which Weitekamp said was part of the 鈥渇un of the play.鈥

The 1986 Astronaut Barbie outfit 鈥 purple jumpsuit, puffy sleeves, a pleated skirt known as a聽 peplum and sparkly silver leggings 鈥 was emblematic of the decade, which Weitekamp described as 鈥渟cience fictiony鈥 and reminiscent of the outfit singer Olivia Newton-John wore in the 鈥淧hysical鈥 video or what actress Jane Fonda wore in her workout videos.

鈥淣ot in any way a functional astronaut outfit 鈥 has very high knee-high boots. It is kind of an astro-fabulous look for Barbie,鈥 Weitekamp said.

Recent astronaut Barbie dolls are dressed more practically, and they also go through their own version of astronaut training to get ready for their trip to space. This includes making sure that there aren鈥檛 any small accessories, such as a tiny shoe, or a strand of Barbie鈥檚 hair, that could float around in the absence of gravity.

鈥淢attel did extensive work with NASA to make sure that these dolls were ready to fly. And getting them back then allows us to tell a little bit of that story,鈥 Weitekamp said.

Barbie undergoes her own astronaut training before going to space

Barbie: Shaping the world through play

Barbie鈥檚 place in the Air and Space Museum illustrates the myriad ways everyday people get to intersect with spaceflight.

While most people probably won鈥檛 become astronauts or build or fly a spacecraft, Weitekamp said that toys 鈥 whether that鈥檚 action figures or Barbie dolls 鈥 are one of the ways that people have been able to imagine and get excited about spaceflight.

鈥淏arbie is an important way that people have imagined, not just going into space, but being a professional in the airlines or being a military pilot,鈥 Weitekamp said. 鈥淗aving Barbies in the collection has been an important part of that broad appeal of thinking about all of the ways that aviation and space flight have been in your world.鈥

One of the critiques against the Barbie doll has been that 鈥渢all, statuesque blondness is universal,鈥 Weitekamp said, adding that it was only in the 1980s that an African American Barbie debuted that was Barbie and not Barbie鈥檚 friend who was Black.

In recent years, Barbie鈥檚 broad appeal has broadened even further to include . Earlier this year, Mattel introduced the first Barbie representing a person with Down syndrome. And to celebrate this year鈥檚 International Women鈥檚 Day, Mattel introduced one-of-a-kind dolls in the .

Power to change the world through play

Weitekamp said that what Barbie has been able to do 鈥 with all the different outfits that illustrate the different ways of working and being in the world 鈥 is to enable girls to imagine all kinds of things by playing with the costumes as intended and by “working against type” to play with them as they want to.

鈥淚 have a lot of faith in girls and their power to shape the world as they want to through their play,鈥 Weitekamp said, adding, “Barbie has pride of place” at the museum.

Abigail Constantino

Abigail Constantino started her journalism career writing for a local newspaper in Fairfax County, Virginia. She is a graduate of American University and The George Washington University.

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