Skip navigation

Achtung, Ken! Barbie is now chancellor of Germany

Mattel debuts doll modeled on nation’s first female head of state at toy fair

Image: Angela-Merkel-Barbie
Daniel Karmann / EPA
"She's a role model for other women worldwide," said Mattel spokeswoman Stephanie Wegener. "She represents what we can achieve."
Slideshow
Image: Michelle Obama
  Michelle Obama's effortless style
The first lady looks as sophisticated in designer dresses as she does in outfits from J. Crew.

more photos

Slideshow
  Victoria’s Secret fashions ‘09
From Heidi Klum to Selita Eubanks, models walk the runway in a feisty lingerie fashion show.

more photos

Slideshow
Image: Ambush makeover
Check out these Ambush Makeovers
TODAY fashion and beauty experts provide new looks and styles to lucky viewers.
updated 11:18 a.m. ET Feb. 10, 2009

BERLIN - Barbie can add another dream job to her list — Germany's first female head of state.

Toy company Mattel debuted the Chancellor Angela Merkel Barbie last week at an international toy fair in the southern city of Nuremberg. It sports Merkel's signature strawberry-blond bob, an elegant black pantsuit and low-heeled shoes.

“She's a role model for other women worldwide,” said Mattel spokeswoman Stephanie Wegener. “She represents what we can achieve.”

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Merkel attended the fair's opening Wednesday and Wegener said she approved of her miniature doppelganger — even though Barbie's familiar face and figure do not exactly replicate her real-life appearance.

“Creating a copy of someone is not the intention — we're not Madame Tussauds,” Wegener said. “It's just a lookalike doll created to honor her.”

The special-edition Barbie, part of Mattel's celebrations of the ubiquitous doll's 50th birthday, is not for sale and will not go into production. The company said it has not yet decided what to do with it after the trade fair closes on Tuesday.

Merkel, 54, is up for re-election this year. The former physicist topped Forbes magazine's 2008 list of the world's 100 most powerful women for the third consecutive year. Merkel also made headlines last week for publicly chastising Pope Benedict XVI over the rehabilitation of a bishop that sparked outrage because of his denials of the Holocaust .

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide