Charmin9; Chatty
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Charmin9; Chatty was a doll produced by the toy company Mattel in 1963 and 1964. The doll, introduced at the American Toy Fair in New York City in March 1963, belonged to a line of highly successful talking dolls introduced in 1960 (Chatty Cathy was the first of these dolls). Other chatty dolls in the line (and the year they were introduced) were Chatty Baby (1962), Tiny Chatty Baby (1963), Tiny Chatty Brother (1963) and Singin9; Chatty (1965). Mattel trademarked the word chatty in the 1960s, and packaging for its talking toys carried the tag line, 9;9;A Chatty doll by Mattel9;9; or 9;9;A Chatty toy by Mattel9;9;.
Charmin9; Chatty spoke different phrases when a pullstring attached to a 9;9;chatty ring9;9; protruding from its upper back was pulled. The ring was connected to a simple low fidelity phonograph record in the doll9;s abdomen. The record was driven by a metal coil wound by pulling the toy9;s string. Charmin9; Chatty was distinguished from Mattel9;s other talking dolls by having changeable records, all boxes for the doll, clothing and games have a symbol on them that says: 9;9;Changeable Record Doll9;9;. Three inch records were inserted and removed from a slot in the left side of the doll. The basic doll came with 5 double sided 9;9;chatty records9;9; with 12 phrases on each side of the record. Thus, with 10 sides total, the doll was able to speak 120 different phrases. By comparison, the original version of Chatty Cathy introduced in 1960 spoke only 11 phrases (that doll9;s repertoire was expanded to 18 phrases in 1963). Initially, the records were made of black vinyl which was vulnerable to warping and blistering, so they were quickly replaced by white nylon records.
Charmin9; Chatty9;s shoulder length hair was available in blonde and auburn. Standing 24 inches tall, the doll came with a sailor outfit (a white jacket with a red sailor collar, navy blue skirt, red knee socks, and blue and white saddle shoes). The doll, which wore eyeglass frames, was called 9;9;the educated doll9;9; because it was able to speak foreign languages when its records were changed. Eight different outfits were available separately for the doll; each came with a record with phrases related to that particular outfit.
Among the different costume sets and themes for Charmin9; Chatty were 9;9;Let9;s Play Together9;9;, 9;9;Let9;s Go Shopping9;9;, 9;9;Let9;s Play Nurse9;9;, 9;9;Let9;s Play Cinderella9;9;, 9;9;Let9;s Play Birthday Party9;9;, 9;9;Let9;s Play Pajama Party9;9;, and 9;9;Let9;s Play Tea Party9;9;. One outfit called 9;9;Let9;s Talk 9;n Travel in Foreign Lands9;9; came with 4 double sided records and allowed the doll to speak in English and 6 other languages. Sometimes referred to as Charmin9; Chatty9;s travel set, this is the most sought after outfit by collectors. It included a navy blue coat, red straw hat, and blue shoes for the doll, plus a flight bag and stewardess hat for the child to wear (the idea being Charmin9; Chatty was going on an around the world airplane trip and the child was the stewardess). Phrases included on the travel set records were, 9;9;The Queen lives in Buckingham Palace9;9;, 9;9;Garçon means boy in French9;9;, and 9;9;In German, Shule means school9;9;. Included in each set were props for the child to wear or use. One of the phrases on the record accompanying Charmin9; Chatty9;s shopping outfit was, 9;9;Shall we buy a Barbie doll?9;9; There were also four 9;9;Chatty Games9;9; available, packaged in sets of two games each, which came with a record that allowed the doll to call out game moves when its string was pulled. Because you never knew what phrase the doll would say, Charmin9; Chatty could call out a move, and using the specially designed game board... she could win the game herself! The game titles were, 9;9;Chatty at the Fair / Chatty Skate 9;N Slide9;9; and 9;9;Chatty Animal Round up / Chatty Animal Friends9;9;.
Charmin9; Chatty was included in World Book Encyclopedia9;s doll section, representing the quintessential modern doll of the era. The doll was also featured on the cover of the December 7, 1963 Saturday Evening Post.