Internet-found picture of side-glancing Nancy by Bella, 1966 |
Nancy by Bella, copyright 1966 uses the American Character
Tressy body. After American Character
filed bankruptcy in 1968, the company was acquired by Ideal Toy Company and many
companies purchased their doll molds.
The French doll company, Bella, is one such company. Bella also continued to manufacture American
Character’s Tressy (the original grow-hair fashion doll) using molds acquired
from American Character. See the Tressy
Dolls by Bella link below.
I saw a headshot of Nancy in a Facebook doll Group. The only information provided was the doll’s
name. I asked for additional
information, but nothing was added. I
copied and saved the photo to my computer (like most doll enthusiasts are known
to do when they see a doll they covet).
I also pinned the doll to my Barbie Clones Pinterest board thinking that
Nancy was a clone of Barbie, which now I know she is not.
Michelle Obama gives some serious side-eye during the 2012 presidential handoff. |
After a few weeks of viewing the saved photo, I mustered the
nerve to post it to my doll Facebook group along with a photo of former First
Lady Michelle Obama with the caption, “I would love to own this doll! A Barbie
competitor that was probably made for the 1960s European doll market, her name
supposedly is Nancy. I have never seen a doll [from this era] with lips this
full and shaped as though she is slightly perturbed. (Reminds me of some of Michelle
Obama's expressions at the [person] in the WH's inauguration when she later
admitted she stopped trying to smile.) I initially thought the photo of ‘Nancy’
might have been photoshopped. I asked the poster [in the other group] to share
the manufacturer's name, but there was no reply.”
White and Black versions of Nancy by Bella are described and valued in Poupées Mannequins des Annéss 60 Guide du Collectionneur by Kathy Moreau which was published in 2005. |
After a few days, one of my group’s members, who goes by
Tammy Teej (of Curiositeej Dolls & Collectibles), shared the above image from the above-named title which provides
Nancy’s date of manufacture, the manufacturer’s name, and the country of origin
(1966, Bella, France). Woohoo! I had been given a jumpstart to commence further
research on Nancy. Translated from
French to English the text from the above scan reads:
Nancy (mid-length black hair version 1966) Very rare doll of 30 cm in black vinyl; head, arms and legs movable; non-folding legs; painted features; big mouth; black hair implants mid-length, without bangs and without wicks of hair that grows; straight legs.
Marks: Bella in a rectangle vertically on the neck.
Clothing of origin; a dress with multicolored triangles; pink, orange, yellow, blue and gray.
Value: 700 Euros and more in a box
500 Euros and more without box
Google searches for “Nancy doll by Bella of France 1966”
resulted in several images of Tressy.
This is how I discovered that Nancy is not a Barbie competitor. I briefly considered her next as a Tressy
competitor, but other than using American Character Tressy’s original body, Nancy
has her own head sculpt. Like Tressy and
Barbie, Nancy is 11-1/2-inches tall. There
are short-hair and long-hair versions of Nancy, first and second editions. At the previous link, the short-hair version
wears her original dress, which fits the description written in the French
publication.
Because of her beautiful head sculpt and fact that she reminds me of Former First Lady Michelle Obama, and because I owned the
original American Character (AC) Tressy
as a child (the white version) and now own a colorized version of AC’s Tressy, I
would love to add Bella’s Nancy to my collection. If you have one for sale or know someone who
does, please let me know. I am seriously
on the lookout for Nancy by Bella.
Related Links:
Tressy Dolls by American Character: http://www.tressydoll.com/page2.htm
Tressy Dolls by Bella: http://www.tressydoll.com/page3.htm
Curiositeej Dolls & Collectibles
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There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.
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There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.
Thank you for following, commenting, and sharing using the share button below.
Check out what I am selling here.
Check out my eBay listings here.
Please follow my sister blog Ebony-Essence of Dolls in Black.
Donate here to support this blog. Thank you!
Congratulations on discovering who your mystery doll is. I've never seen her before. I wish you luck finding her ;-)
ReplyDeleteThank you, D7ana. If I find one, hopefully she will be within my price range.
Delete:-)
dbg
Thanks for the information. I did not know this about the doll and doll company.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, MDW. I am sure there are countless other dolls made for the European market that are unknown to me. I enjoy learning about these treasures, too.
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