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Toy of the Century
The official BATR shortlist sponsored by Intertek
Testing Services
TOYS, GAMES & CRAZES OF THE CENTURY
(These are the nominations by the British association in
alphabetic order only)
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TOYS
ACTION MAN
In 1965 Stanley Weston created a doll for boys. It went
on sale in the USA as GI Joe, but came to Britain and was
renamed Action Man. This was, and still is, the world's
first and most successful male doll. In recent years the
militaristic figure has developed into a more adventurous
character.
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| BARBIE
Founders of US toy company, Mattel, Elliot and Ruth
Handler created Barbie and boy friend Ken in 1959.
Forty years later, it still dominates the fashion
doll market worldwide. There are also ethnic Barbie's
and friends. Barbie's controversial figure was changed
for some models to allow her to wear more casual clothes,
and she has also developed into a more interesting
role model encouraging careers into vetinerary medicine
and teaching amongst others!
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| LEGO Ole Kirk
Christiansen started his Lego toy company in Denmark in
1932. Lego means 'play well' in Danish. (leg godt). Later
he discovered Lego in Latin means 'to put together'. Lego
bricks went on sale in the UK in 1955. The international
success of Lego is now the stuff of legends. Besides the
simple Duplo bricks for youngsters, the range extends to
Mindstorms, where dedicated bricks have imbedded microchips
to create robots which can be controlled over the Internet!
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| TEDDY BEAR In
the USA, the 'teddy' bear was created by a Russian emigrant,
Morris Michtom in 1902 after he had seen a report of US
President Teddy Roosevelt who declined to shoot a bear cub
while out hunting. Clifford Berryman's celebrated newspaper
cartoon captured this moment and Mitchcom launched his range
of "Teddy" bears in his Brooklyn shop. German
toymaker, Margarete Steiff began making jointed toy animals
including bears, and they were also able to cash in on the
teddy bear craze in the USA, which spread worldwide.
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DON'T FOGET:
Meccano (1901), Frank Hornby's first great toy and Hornby
trains, the first electric train sets: Scalextric, invented
in the UK in 1952 but not too successful until the clockwork
engines became electric powered in the mid-fifties, James
Bond Aston Martin made by Corgi and winner of the first
BATR Toy of the Year in 1965, Spirograph from English inventor,
Denys Fisher (1965), Tiny Tears here in 1966, Etch-a-Sketch
in 1967, Nintendo Game Boy (1987)......
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GAMES
MASTERMIND
An Israeli telecommunications expert, Mordecai Meirowitz
invented this game in the early 70's as an educational tool.
He later tried to interest all the leading games companies,
but they rejected his idea. A small Leicester-based educational
toys and aids company, Invicta Plastics restyled the game
and the rest is history. Without any advertising, it sold
millions and is still made by the company and sold around
the world under license to Hasbro.
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| MONOPOLY In
the USA in 1933, Charles Darrow devised Monopoly. The patent
was filed 31st August 1935 while the game was on sale in
America. Based on an earlier game, The Landlord's Game,
it was at first rejected by Parker Bros., as being too complicated
to be a success. How wrong could they be! It came to the
UK in 1936, made under licence by Waddingtons. Darrow died
in 1967 having realised he had developed one of the most
successful board games of all times.
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| SCRABBLE
What's in a name? Alfred Butt, an unemployed New
York architect began work on a word game called Criss
Cross Words in 1931. Not a success, he renamed it
Lexico, but an entrepreneur James Bruinot eventually
bought the rights and trade marked the game as Scrabble
in 1948. In the next years to 1953, sales average
just 8,000. From 1953 -55 it suddenly took off and
became recognised as the world's most popular word
board game.
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| TRIVIAL PURSUIT
On the evening of the 15th September 1979, two 30-year
old Canadians, Chris Haney, picture editor of the Montreal
Gazette, and sports writer, Scott Abbott came up with an
idea for a game which was eventually manufactured in 1982.
Trivial Pursuit sold 45 million copies worldwide in its
first five years and spawned umpteen imitations.
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DON'T FORGET:
Cluedo, introduced exactly 40 years ago in 1959, the revolutionary
Dungeons & Dragons in 1973, Pictionary (1986), Othello
(1977).........
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CRAZES
BEANIES
In 1993 H.Ty Warner created a range of 12 bean bag toys
he called Beanie Babies. These collectibles were not immediately
successful until he began to 'retire' the first 11. The
phenomenal success of the product is due to the appeal of
the toys and the financial attractions associated with what
are, in fact, limited editions. On his birthday on 31st
August 1999, he announced that he would not be making any
further Beanie Babies in the year 2000.
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| HULA HOOP
This famous plaything - a hoop you can
twirl around the waist - goes back to ancient Egypt. Reborn
at the end of the 50s when Arthur Melin and Richard Knerr
began manufacturing having been told about Australian girls
playing with hoops made from bamboo. Millions were sold
and still sell every year.
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| RUBIK'S CUBE
Hungarian Erno Rubik created his
famous cube puzzle in 1974, but it was not manufactured
until 1977. The first puzzles reached the UK just before
Christmas 1980* and were an instant success. Rubik was lucky
to have a patent because an American, Larry Nichols actually
took out a patent for his cube first but could not persuade
any US manufacturer to take his invention. Rubik became
the first self-made millionaire from the communist block.
The world record for unscrambling the puzzle is 22.95 seconds
held by a Vietnamese high school student.
* Thanks to Andrew Brett for sending us the following information
by email:
"I thought that you might be interested in the history
of the Rubik's Cube. I was surprised at its inclusion in
the 'I Love 1979' programme, and the information in your
otherwise enjoyable 'Toy of The Century' website article.
The inaccurate information stems from the usually excellent
'Brewers Dictionary of 20th Century Phrase and fable'. I
have contacted the publishers, and they have agreed to revise
their Rubik entry. The following information has sources
listed beside each entry.
CUBE HISTORY:
1974, Erno Rubik of Hungary invents 'The Magic Cube'.
Source: Official Website, 'Mastering Rubiks Cube' by Don
Taylor (1981).
1977, towards the end of this year, the 'Magic Cube'
appears in Budapest toy shops. Source: Official website.
1979, September. A deal is made to bring 'Magic Cube'
to the West. Source: Website.
1980, 'Magic Cube' appears at toy trade fairs in
London, Paris, Nuremberg and New York in January/February.
Erno Rubik demonstrates his creation at the fairs. Orders
flood in, but Magic Cube does not conform to manufacturing
and packaging norms of the Western World. The Hungarian
manufacturing process has to be drastically altered. Ideal
Toys rename 'Magic cube'. The name chosen is 'Rubik's Cube',
and the first Cubes are exported from Hungary to America
in May 1980. The Cube reaches the UK in time for Christmas
1980.
1981: 13 year old Patrick Bossert of England is still
unable to obtain a cube early in the year, and orders one
from abroad. Soon, Britain is fully stocked, and goes cube
crazy! Patrick's book - 'You can do the cube' (June 1981),
is reprinted 14 times that year. Sources: Official Website,
'You Can do The Cube', Patrick Bossert (1981), 20th Century
Words (Oxford 1999).
1982, The craze continues with national and international
contests. School children succumb to a new form of wrist
strain known as 'Rubik's Wrist'. Sources: Official Website,
Memory!
1983, The craze is over, the cube becomes unavailable.
Source: Official Website.
1991, Cube revived as a classic toy. Source: Official
Website."
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| YO YO
Rediscovered by Frank Duncan in Los Angeles
in 1929 when he saw waiters originally from the Philippines
demonstrating their traditional toy. The Yo-Yo can be traced
back to ancient Greece - in the Philippines it was a weapon
(like a boomerang) for hunting and war until later it became
a sporting item and a plaything. To promote his product,
Duncan used celebrities such as Mary Pickford and Bing Crosby
(who sang 'My Little Yo-Yo). In 1930 Frank Duncan brought
over demonstrators to Europe to play the music halls. The
craze started to spread all over the world, and seems to
be frequently revived. Last year the UK toy retailers sold
yo-yos worth over £30m.
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DON'T FOGET:
Slinky, devised by Richard James in 1943, Frisbee - originally
pie tin tops made by the Frisbee Pie Company (1958), Clackers
or Klik-Klaks, played on all Spanish beaches during the
summer of 1971 and P.O.G.S - the fruit bottle tops craze
swept most of the world in 1995.
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