- Gene Marshall
Gene Marshall is a 15.5 inches tall
collectible fashion doll inspired byHollywood 's Golden Age. It was created by the illustrator Mel Odom. Each doll features an intricate movie-styled theme based upon fashions from the 1930s, 40s and 50s as well as Hollywood's version of historical costuming.When the Gene Marshall doll appeared on the market in 1995, it was the first item of its type and size: a large fashion doll primarily intended for display by adult collectors. Until then, the standard fashion doll had been the 11.5"
Barbie , which is still primarily sold as a children's plaything; while some collectors were attracted to limited-edition specialty Barbies, most collectible dolls at the time were constructed withneotenous baby-doll proportions instead of with mature, nubile ones. The popular success of Gene Marshall sparked the invention of an entire genre of similar collectible large fashion dolls from other companies, such asTyler Wentworth (Tonner Doll Company), "Alexandra Fairchild Ford" (Madame Alexander) and Clea Bella (Bella! Productions).cite web|url=http://collectdolls.about.com/od/dollprofiles/p/genedolls.htm|title=Gene Dolls|publisher=About.com |accessdate=2008-01-09]History
The dolls debuted in 1995 and to 2005 they were manufactured by the
Ashton-Drake Galleries . The dolls are now produced by Jason Wu and made byIntegrity Toys . They have a dedicated following and have inspired other characters in the line: Madra Lord, Violet Waters, Ivy Jordan and Trent Osborn.Three years after their introduction, over half a million had been sold, and a Gene subculture had sprung up including collectibles clubs, magazines, and conventions.cite news
url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E07EFDA113FF931A15751C0A96E958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all
title=A Star is Born, and She's a Doll
author=Frank Decaro
date=February 22 1998
publisher=the New York Times
accessdate=2007-12-17] Her design is "an amalgam of all the larger-than-life actresses of Hollywood's Golden Era", and costumes that evoke the work ofEdith Head are supposed to represent her appearances in specific but fictional films.Odom's illustration work has been compared to dolls, and though his career progressed beyond the men's magazines for which he is still best known (he has done book and magazine covers including
TIME magazine ), he believes that Gene is the "something significant" he has felt bound to do after watching 2/3 of his friends die during the AIDS epidemic. After a fanfare-surrounded debut at the 1995 Toy Fair, Gene became a hit among adult collectors, among them actressDemi Moore ("the world's most high-profile doll collector", according to the "New York Times ").These dolls are also popular for artists' one of a kind (
OOAK ) repaints.Backstory
The doll comes with a detailed backstory, eventually expressed in the novelization "Gene Marshall, Girl Star". The character Gene Marshall was born in
Cos Cob, Connecticut in 1923, and was discovered by the filmmaker Eric von Sternberg while working in New York City as an usherette. Cast in his next film, she was thrust into a major role when the star fell through a trapdoor during a musical number called "You Floor Me". By the 1950s she was a Hollywood "powerhouse". [cite book
title=Here Come the Bride Dolls
author=Louise Fetcher
year=2001
publisher=Reverie Publishing
isbn=0942620496]Further reading
* - Fictional backstory
* - Doll's history and accessorization optionsReferences
External links
* [http://www.genemarshalldoll.com/ Mel Odom's Gene produced by Jason Wu]
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