Advertisement

Slightly more demure Bratz dolls reappear on store shelves

Share

The outfits are less sexy, the makeup and hair a bit more demure and the heels not as sky-high, but the saucy Bratz dolls are strutting their way back onto toy shelves.

During the last few years, a legal tug of war between Bratz maker MGA Entertainment Inc. and rival toy company Mattel Inc. over the ownership rights to the dolls left the brand crippled. After a trial jury ruled in Mattel’s favor, the wildly successful dolls all but disappeared from stores as MGA pulled back on manufacturing and retailers kept their distance.

But when a federal appeals court in July overturned the 2008 ruling and ordered a retrial, MGA’s outspoken Chief Executive Isaac Larian triumphantly declared that he would be releasing a new line of Bratz dolls for the fall.

Advertisement

Updated versions of Sasha, Cloe, Jade and other popular Bratz dolls began to reappear on toy shelves in recent weeks, and 10 new characters are scheduled to be released Oct. 10 to celebrate the brand’s 10-year anniversary.

Yet the road to recovery for financially and morale-weakened MGA, which built its toy empire on the Bratz dolls, is fraught with challenges.

In a recent interview at Larian’s Van Nuys office — where dolls were displayed on his desk, perched on the windowsills, lined up on the bookshelves and stacked in boxes on the floor — he spoke candidly about the difficulties of relaunching the dolls whose edgy style and sassy personalities shook up the toy market and once posed a major threat to Mattel’s Barbie empire.

“It’s going to take a long time for Bratz to become what it was before because of the damage that’s been done,” Larian said. “But it still resonates with kids.”

At their peak, annual U.S. wholesale sales of the Bratz dolls and related products were estimated to be more than $500 million. Meanwhile, U.S. wholesale sales of Barbie dolls and related products fell every year from 2001 to 2005, from $825 million to $470 million, according to estimates from Gerrick Johnson, a toy analyst at BMO Capital Markets.

Getting retailers back on board has been an arduous process, and Larian recalled his frustrations at having to re-pitch a line that had already proved to be a hit among young girls. With continued uncertainty surrounding the brand, privately held MGA is releasing a limited number of different Bratz products this year compared with hundreds in the past.

Advertisement

Those retailers he has persuaded to sell the dolls again — including Toys R Us, Target and Kmart — haven’t embraced the brand wholeheartedly, Larian said. Bratz orders for the fall were about 10% of the level they used to be at the height of the dolls’ popularity five years ago.

“Literally all of them were hesitant because of the legal issues,” he said. “Retailers don’t like to get involved with competitors’ disputes. I don’t blame them.”

Longtime fans might be surprised to see the Bratz characters a bit toned down from a few years ago.

Unlike the bare midriffs and tube tops that were popular during the “age of Britney Spears” when Bratz first hit the market, today’s styles are more modest and understated, Larian said. So MGA’s designers worked to make the new dolls “more preppy than sexy,” which meant downplaying some of the traits that had made them unique in the first place: skimpy outfits, pouty lips, dramatic makeup and bling jewelry.

For example, an earlier version of the Yasmin doll, named after Larian’s daughter Jasmin, sports a long, thick mane of Goldilocks-style curls, oversized pink sunglasses and a skimpy gold swimsuit with pink ribbons crisscrossing her slender waist.

In a 2010 version, Yasmin wears a pink baby-doll top over gray leggings, a fitted navy-blue cropped jacket and studded black boots. Her earrings are smaller, her lips less Angelina Jolie-like and she has almost no exposed skin.

Advertisement

Sean McGowan, a toy analyst at Needham & Co., said relaunches could be tricky, pointing to subsequent releases of Cabbage Patch Kids that weren’t as successful as the original dolls. Some retailers may have asked for “significant concessions” from Larian to make shelf space available for the line, he said.

“Sometimes brands can come back and sometimes they can’t,” he said. “I think that retailers would say it’s a safer bet that Bratz will sell better than something that’s unproven. But right now, there’s no shortage of proven dolls.”

That was the case at a Toys R Us in Culver City recently, where two aisles were dedicated to fashion dolls including Bratz, Barbie, Disney Princess, Wizards of Waverly Place, Monster High, Liv, Moxie Girlz, Best Friends Club Ink and iCarly.

Even with all the choices, Bratz made an impression on 9-year-old Jasmine Gutierrez, who has owned about a half-dozen of the brand’s dolls.

“They’re really cool and they’re really fun to play with,” the Culver City fourth-grader said. “With Barbie, it’s more for like younger kids, but for Bratz, they’re more for like kids my age. I’m more skinny jeans and skirts and stuff — and with Barbie, it’s more like dresses and pink.”

Executives at several major retailers declined to discuss the specifics of their Bratz orders.

Advertisement

“We evaluate each product on its merits and we believe the product and the brand has merit, so we definitely carry it,” Toys R Us CEO Jerry Storch said. “We test product, we watch the sales and we order appropriately.”

For Larian, seeing the hip dolls back on toy shelves instead of in the courtroom has been “like getting my kids back,” he said. But with a retrial set for January, Bratz still has some major hurdles ahead.

The bitter dispute with El Segundo-based Mattel is centered on whether the creator of the Bratz concept was in Mattel’s employ as a designer when he did early development of the brand. The designer, Carter Bryant, defected from Mattel in 2000 to MGA, which released the Bratz line shortly after.

Larian has characterized the multi-year saga — which he said has cost MGA an estimated $1 billion in company value — as a David-and-Goliath-like battle, pitting him against the world’s largest toy maker in a major fight that has included allegations of spying, anonymous warning letters and forensic experts. In recent weeks, the companies have filed new claims against each other.

Larian balked at analysts’ suggestions that the two sides settle by working out a profit-sharing agreement that would allow MGA to continue making the dolls while giving Mattel a cut of the profit.

“There’s too much bad blood,” Larian said. “I don’t think there’s ever going to be a situation like that. They’re not who I want to do business with.”

Advertisement

Mattel, which maintains that Bryant dreamt up the doll line while on its payroll, released a statement on the day of the appeals court ruling that said it was confident that the judicial system would “right the wrongs that Mattel has suffered.” It has declined to comment further on the dispute.

Bratz will be put to the test quickly with the all-important holiday season coming up, analysts said, which could set the tone for the company’s future plans for the dolls.

“I don’t predict it’ll soar to the top like it did 10 years ago or that it’ll flop. I think my prediction then is sales will be successful,” McGowan said. “And that’s not something that looked like it was in the cards a few months ago.”

andrea.chang@latimes.com

Advertisement