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  2. Nutcracker doll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutcracker_doll

    An average handcrafted nutcracker doll is made out of about 60 separate pieces. [2] Nutcracker dolls traditionally resemble toy soldiers, and are often painted in bright colors. [1] Different designs proliferated early; by the early 19th century there were ones dressed as miners, policemen, royalty or soldiers from different armies. [2]

  3. How Nutcrackers Became a Classic Symbol of Christmas

    www.aol.com/nutcrackers-became-classic-symbol...

    Nutcracker dolls can trace their little wooden development back to the Ore Mountains of Germany in the late 17th century. Most often depicted as toy soldiers, they became gifts and symbols of good ...

  4. Nutcracker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutcracker

    Decorative nutcrackers became popular in the United States after the Second World War, following the first US production of The Nutcracker ballet in 1940 and the exposure of US soldiers to the dolls during the war. [12] In the United States, few of the decorative nutcrackers are now functional, though expensive working designs are still ...

  5. List of productions of The Nutcracker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_productions_of_The...

    Choreography: Alexander Gorsky (after Petipa) Company: Bolshoi Ballet, Moscow Premiere: 1919 Russian choreographer Alexander Gorsky, who staged a production of The Nutcracker in Moscow in 1919, is credited with the idea of combining Clara and the Sugar Plum Fairy's roles (i.e. giving the Fairy's dances to Clara), eliminating the Sugar Plum Fairy's Cavalier, giving the Cavalier's dances to the ...

  6. Doll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doll

    The doll has very black skin, eyes rimmed in white, clown lips, and frizzy hair, and has been described as an anti-black caricature. [42] Early mass-produced black dolls were typically dark versions of their white counterparts. The earliest American black dolls with realistic African facial features were made in the 1960s.

  7. How the Cabbage Patch Kids craze of 1983 helped create ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/cabbage-patch-kids...

    As shoppers line up for Black Friday, whether online or in person, be thankful that those lovable, squeezable Cabbage Patch Kids are not atop the wish lists of most kids, like they were this time ...

  8. Akuaba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akuaba

    These dolls are often used in similar ways, reflecting the importance of fertility and children in many West African cultures. Today, akua'ba dolls are more commonly seen as mass-produced works of art or souvenirs rather than as heirlooms in ritual use. However, traditional use of these dolls continues in some areas among the Fante and other ...

  9. Black doll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_doll

    The doll was a realistic Black doll, breaking the mammy doll stereotype. [ 3 ] Beatrice Wright Brewington , an African American entrepreneur, founded B. Wright's Toy Company, Inc . and mass-produced Black dolls with ethnically-correct features. [ 4 ]