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One of the other members of the Crissy family of dolls was “Baby Crissy,” a large 24 inch (610 mm) doll with adjustable length hair controlled by a simple pull-string. "Baby Crissy" was the size of a nine-month-old which is why to this day, many of these "Baby Crissy" dolls can be found wearing real baby clothes.
Some of the company's most popular dolls during this period were Tammy (1962–1966), Flatsy dolls (1969–1973), Crissy (1969–1974), and Tressy (1970–1972). Popular Ideal toys in the 1970s included a full line of Evel Knievel toys, Snoopy toys, and the Tuesday Taylor and Wake-up Thumbelina dolls.
The Ideal Toy Company version of the Tressy doll was an 18" fashion doll introduced in the year 1970 as "Gorgeous Tressy" and in 1971 as "Posin' Tressy". The Ideal Tressy Doll was specially produced for and sold only by Sears, Roebuck & Company and is considered by some collectors to be part of the Crissy "family" of dolls.
Dressing and packing dolls at Paragon Manufacturing Company in Easthampton, Massachusetts (1937). The American Doll and Toy Corporation was established in 1919 by Russian Jewish immigrant brothers Jacob and Max Brock, and their partner Ed Schaefaer, with many of the Brock relatives occupying key positions at the company.
Crissy, an American fashion doll This page was last edited on 22 January 2025, at 03:21 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4 ...
Suzanne Marie Mahoney was born in San Bruno, California, on October 16, 1946 [2] [3] as the third [4] of four children in a working-class Irish-American Catholic family. [5] Her mother, Marion Elizabeth (née Turner), was a medical secretary, and her father, Francis "Frank" Mahoney, loaded cases of beer onto boxcars, [6] was a laborer and gardener. [7]
Brinkley was born Christie Lee Hudson in Monroe, Michigan, on February 2, 1954, [5] the daughter of Marjorie (née Bowling) and Herbert Hudson.. Her family moved to Canoga Park, Los Angeles, California, where her mother Marjorie later met and married television writer Donald Brinkley in Bel Air, Los Angeles.
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