Ruth Handler
Ruth Handler (1916–2002) was an American businesswoman and inventor who co-founded the toy manufacturer Mattel and created the Barbie doll, transforming the industry by introducing a three-dimensional adult-figured doll for children's role-playing fantasies.[1][2]
Born the youngest of ten children to Polish Jewish immigrants in Denver, Colorado, Handler developed an early interest in business while working at her brother's drugstore; she married Elliot Handler in 1938, and the couple relocated to Los Angeles where they started Mattel in their garage with partner Harold Matson, initially producing picture frames before pivoting to toys like the Uke-A-Doodle ukulele.[1]
Observing her daughter Barbara's preference for paper cutouts of adult women over baby dolls during a 1956 trip to Europe—where she encountered the adult-proportioned German Bild Lilli doll—Handler conceived Barbie as a means for girls to envision adult careers and lifestyles, launching it at the 1959 American Toy Fair with immediate sales of over 350,000 units in the first year.[2][1]
Under her leadership as president, Mattel pioneered television advertising targeted at children rather than parents, propelling the company to $14 million in sales by 1958 and billions cumulatively from Barbie by the late 20th century, though the doll faced feminist critiques for its exaggerated physique perceived as reinforcing sexist stereotypes.[1][2]
Diagnosed with breast cancer in 1970, Handler underwent a mastectomy and subsequently established Nearly Me, Inc., to develop silicone breast prosthetics that restored natural contours for post-surgical women, earning recognition including induction into the Toy Industry Hall of Fame; she was ousted from Mattel in 1975 following SEC probes into financial discrepancies during her health-related absence.[1]