Zitat des Tages über Barbie:
My Barbie doll is definitely a reflection of me and my personality. My doll is so detailed, she even has my same beauty marks.
If I could have a Barbie body, which has no cellulite, I totally would. I would like to have a flatter stomach, but that won't happen either. That is never going to happen. No matter how much weight I lose, my stomach, below the belly button, always pooches out.
I think Barbie and I are very similar in many respects. That's why she made such a great muse for the summer Moschino collection.
When I was really young. My sister and I would create different characters with our Barbie dolls - I'd be the crazy diva Barbie and she'd be the homeless Barbie.
I enjoy getting dressed as a Barbie doll.
I was big time into Barbie.
People are obsessed with actresses being hairless, fatless Barbie dolls.
I'm definitely attracted to other Australians; I have a laid-back attitude to life that I feel is very Australian; I love a good barbie.
Barbie is just a doll.
I used to be obsessed with Pearl Jam, but I love having pink hair and kind of looking like a Barbie.
I often feel like a character actress trapped inside the mean, aging Barbie's body.
It was my first scene. My first day. We could have started with me drinking a beer, something a little less than having Barbies touching each other. But they started with that.
Growing up with two sisters, you either play by yourself or play Barbie with them. I played by myself.
I remember when John Lasseter called me back in the late 1990s to personally invite me to come be the voice of Barbie in 'Toy Story 2.'
I grew up in the Alps and France, and Barbie was my first exposure to the American woman. For me she was blonde, she was free and she was fun.
I was into Barbie and designer jeans.
I am so saddened and grossed out by young women who look like creepy, old aliens because of their new Barbie noses and lips. Is that a smile or a grimace?
You know you've made it when you've been moulded in miniature plastic. But you know what children do with Barbie dolls - it's a bit scary, actually.
'America's Next Top Model' is not a bunch of Barbies - it's a lot of girls that are atypically beautiful.
I am not interested in being a Barbie doll and turning myself into a sausage for the next 20 years. I want to follow actresses like Helen Mirren and Judi Dench who have lines on their faces and aren't afraid of playing their age.
And after every audition I booked, my parents would buy me a Barbie, so that was it for me: You got a Barbie, and you got to hang out with friends. And I thought it was just the best thing ever.
I wasn't Barbie-obsessed. I think my mother might have been my Barbie.
I was big time into Barbie. I also had Wonder Woman Underoos that I really liked. I actually wore them as an outfit to school. As I said, I was a strange child.
They probably do have an Asian Barbie.
The very first job I did, a Barbie commercial when I was eight or nine, that was like 'Oh my God.' Because when you're watching things on TV, you think it's like a fantasy. But then to actually do it and then see yourself, it's like 'Oh my God.'
It would have been very easy for me to put on a little tight skirt and go out and try what I always call the 'Barbie doll' roles.
Sometimes I'll post goofy photos of myself on Instagram without make-up or making silly faces. I don't always look like a little Barbie doll.
As long as I was well fed, I was a very, very nice child. I just used my imagination and played with Barbies. I was pretty easy.
I think they should have a Barbie with a buzz cut.
I did a picture for the First Barbie doll box.
My first modeling job was Gap, and my first time in front of the camera was for a Soda Pop Girls commercial - it's one of those Bratz dolls, Barbie dolls... one of those.
Half of my closet is Barbie clothes - PVC skirts, cropped fuzzy sweaters, and velvet minis.
Dolls fire our collective imagination, for better and - too often - for worse. From life-size dolls the same height as the little girls who carry them, to dolls whose long hair can 'grow' longer, to Barbie and her fashionable sisters, dolls do double duty as child's play and the focus of adult art and adult fear.
I was obsessed with X-Men as a kid, and I would have to go and play every last one of them. My sister was obsessed with Barbies. So we would create these X-Men-Barbie combos and perform weird musicals where they interacted with each other.
I really don't see little girls growing up and thinking, 'Oh, I'm going to morph myself so I look like Barbie.'
I'll never be like a Barbie girl, that's for sure.