Kewpie is a brand of dolls and figurines that were conceived as comic strip characters by cartoonist Rose O'Neill. The illustrated cartoons, appearing as baby cupid characters, began to gain popularity after the publication of O'Neill's comic strips in 1909, and O'Neill began to illustrate and sell paper doll versions of the Kewpies. The characters were first produced as bisque dolls in Waltershausen, Germany, beginning in 1912, and became extremely popular in the early 20th century.
The Kewpie dolls were initially made out of bisque exclusively, but composition versions were introduced in the 1920s, and celluloid versions were manufactured in the following decades. In 1949, Effanbee created the first hard plastic versions of the dolls, and soft rubber and vinyl versions were produced by Cameo Co. and Jesco between the 1960s and 1990s.
The earlier bisque and composition versions of Kewpie dolls are widely sought-after by antique and doll collectors, who especially want those hand-signed by O'Neill. Kewpies should not be confused with the baby-like Billiken figures that debuted in 1908.
Maps, Directions, and Place Reviews
Background and history
Rose O'Neill, a Midwest native who had worked as a writer and illustrator in New York City, initially conceptualized the Kewpie as a cartoon intended for a comic strip in 1909. According to O'Neill, the idea for the Kewpies came to her in a dream. The comic, featuring the cherub-faced characters, was first printed in Ladies' Home Journal in the December 1909 issue. O'Neill described the characters as "a sort of little round fairy whose one idea is to teach people to be merry and kind at the same time." Their name, often shortened to Kewpies, derives from Cupid, the Roman god of erotic love. After the characters gained popularity among both adults and children, O'Neill began illustrating paper dolls of them, called Kewpie Kutouts.
German Baby Toys Video
Production
German bisque: 1912-1915
As demand for the Kewpie characters increased, Geo. Borgfeldt & Co. in New York contacted O'Neill in 1912 about developing a line of dolls and figurines. O'Neill agreed, and J.D. Kestner, a German toy company located in Waltershausen, set forth to manufacture small bisque dolls of the Kewpies. After the company manufactured the first run of dolls, they sent samples to O'Neill, who disapproved of the design because she felt they "did not look like her characters."
O'Neill traveled to Germany and had the company destroy the moulds of the dolls, and oversaw the final redesign of them, working with a 17-year-old art student named Joseph Kallus. The dolls were then released in nine different sizes, ranging from 1 to 12 inches (25-305 mm) in height. These early Kewpies wore a heart-shaped decal on their chests, which read "Kewpie, Germany", and some had jointed arms. Many of these original German Kewpies were signed by O'Neill herself, and some were featured in various poses.
The small dolls became an international hit, and by 1914, O'Neill had become the highest-paid female illustrator in the country, garnering a small fortune from the wild popularity of the dolls. The Kewpie brand soon became a household name, and was used widely in product advertising, including promotion for Jell-O, Colgate, Kellogg's Corn Flakes, and Sears. The Kewpies also appeared as a brand on a multitude of household items and other memorabilia, such as dishware, rattles, soap, pepper shakers, coloring books, poetry collections, and stationery.
O'Neill also famously used the characters to promote the women's suffrage movement, using the illustrations in slogans and cartoons.
Composition and celluloid: 1916-1930s
After World War I began in Europe, production of the bisque Kewpie dolls moved from Germany to France and Belgium, due to rising tensions after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Around this time, the dolls also began to be produced in the United States, made of composition material rather than bisque, due to bisque's fragility. The manufacturers also began to increase the sizes of the dolls, producing 22-inch (560 mm) versions in addition to the 12-inch (300 mm) versions. The American composition dolls also had the distinctive heart-shaped decal on the chest, reading "Kewpies, des. & copyright by Rose O'Neill." Like the original bisque models, some of the composition Kewpies were also hand-signed by O'Neill, and they all included jointed arms.
In the mid-1920s, small-sized celluloid versions of Kewpies appeared, and were often given out as prizes at carnivals. Many of the celluloid versions were mainly manufactured in Japan, unlicensed, and were of a lower quality than other Kewpies. During this time, many Kewpies were sold with clothing, as well.
Later models: 1944-present
As photographs became more commonplace in advertising, the prominence of Kewpies in the marketing circuit began to wane. O'Neill returned to Missouri, where she died purportedly impoverished of complications from a series of strokes in 1944. Despite the lessening in popularity, Kewpies continued to be manufactured for the majority of the century, including hard plastic versions, as well as all-bisque replicas of the original Kewpies, produced by Jesco and Cameo Co. in the 1960s until the 1990s. These reproduction Kewpies lack the heart-shaped decal that distinguishes the original, older versions.
Collectibility
According to 200 Years of Dolls (fourth edition), a 10-inch Kewpie with a bisque head, composition body, and glass eyes today is worth $6,500, while a 20-inch (510 mm) doll is valued at $20,000. Many of the original, small-sized German-produced bisque Kewpies (circa 1912-1915) range from $200-$500 among collectors. Composition Kewpies range from $100-$300, while celluloid versions (especially unlicensed Japanese reproductions) are worth considerably less. Kewpies that were hand-signed by Rose O'Neill (most often etched on their arms or feet) are much rarer than unsigned Kewpies.
In popular culture
- To "win a kewpie doll" is a common English idiom in the US, meaning that one has won a modest prize. For example, in Get Smart, series 3 episode 20, agents 86 and 99 win a Kewpie doll at a carnival shooting gallery.
- In season 3 episode 5 of Seinfeld, "The Library (Seinfeld)", the Library Cop Bookman refers to the librarian Kramer is involved with as "Kewpie doll".
- The Kewpie doll is the mascot of Kewpee Hamburgers, a chain of fast-food restaurants founded in 1923 in Flint, Michigan, by Samuel V. Blair under the name Kewpee Hotel Hamburgs.
- Since 1927, it has also been the mascot of Hickman High School in Columbia, Missouri.
- A song titled "Kewpie Doll" was written by Sid Tepper and Roy C. Bennett in the 1950s. The song was recorded by Perry Como and Frankie Vaughan in 1958 and became a hit in both the United States and Europe.
- A song titled "Kewpie Doll" was written by Nick Cave and recorded by the Alternative Rock band The Birthday Party on their album Junkyard in 1982.
- Kewpie Corporation is a Japanese food manufacturer, famous for its popular brand of Japanese mayonnaise sold in plastic squeeze bottles with a Kewpie doll logo.
- Kewpie Fusion is a popular Japanese anime whose characters are based upon O'Neill's Kewpie dolls.
- The time capsule at the 1939 New York World's Fair contained a Kewpie doll.
- In the 1989 Japanese RPG MOTHER one of the first enemies is a possessed Kewpie doll.
- In Ray Lawler's acclaimed play Summer of the Seventeenth Doll two itinerant workers present Kewpie dolls to their girlfriends every year for 17 years.
- In Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Rourke taunts Milo Thatch and sarcastically informs him that he will win a "solid-gold kewpie doll".
- The song "Androgynous" by The Replacements includes the line "Kewpie dolls and urinal stalls will be laughed at the way you're laughed at now."
- In season 7 episode 15 of The Good Wife, Marissa says she sewed (things she founds like bullet shells and) Kewpie dolls into the purses that she made.
- The Joker has occasionally thrown exploding Kewpie dolls at his victims.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
EmoticonEmoticon