
Mattel releases 'Clueless' Barbie dolls for movie's 30th anniversary. How to buy.
Mattel launched Cher and Dionne Barbie dolls last week, sporting iconic plaid skirts and blazers, with '90 cellphones, antennas and all, in hand. The Barbie dolls are just two of Mattel's new collector toys for the "Clueless" anniversary, which also include American Girl doll outfits, a Polly Pocket compact and an Uno deck.
Released on July 19, 1995, "Clueless" follows Cher (Alicia Silverstone) and Dionne (Stacey Dash), shallow and socially successful teenagers at Beverley Hills High School. When Cher, who sees herself as a matchmaker, tries to give the new girl Tai (Brittany Murphy) a makeover, she is stunned when she becomes more popular than she is. But under all the sass and plaid, Cher struggles to find her own perfect boyfriend, which may or may not be found in her ex-stepbrother Josh (Paul Rudd).
As Saturday's anniversary nears, here's what to know about Mattel's limited-edition "Clueless" collection.
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The Cher Barbie Doll features a sunshine yellow plaid suit with a pleated skirt, matching blazer and over-the-knee white socks. The doll can carry a mini white backpack, cellphone and learner's driving permit.
The Dionne Barbie Doll wears a black-and-white plaid suit with a ribbon and rose donned top hat. The doll carries a cellphone, too.
The Cher and Dionne Barbie Dolls are $59.40 each on the Walmart website and Amazon and $55.99 on the Target website.
Barbie dolls aren't the only toys Mattel is releasing for the "Clueless" anniversary. Take a look at the others:
Mattel has released two American Girl Collector Series outfits, one that embodies Cher and the other Dionne. The outfits do not include an American Girl doll.
The Cher outfit features the character's yellow plaid skirt and blazer, a yellow sweater, white t-shirt, white over-the-knee socks, white Mary Jane heels, a white, fluffy backpack, and cellphone.
The Dionne outfit includes a black-and-white plaid skirt and blazer, red sweater, white t-shirt, black ankle socks, black Mary Janes, black and white top hat with a red rose, and cellphone.
Both outfits are $75 each and available on the American Girl website. No more than 7,000 of Cher's American Girl outfit and no more than 5,000 of Dionne's outfit were manufactured, according to Mattel.
Fisher-Price's Little People Collector set includes Cher, Dionne and Tai dolls and a collectors box that features the famous staircase from Cher's house. The set is available on the Mattel Creations website for $27 and Amazon for $26.99.
The heart-shaped Polly Pocket Clueless Compact features Cher, Dionne and Tai dolls. Each doll comes with her own accessory. Behind a facade of Cher's staircase is her home, including her bedroom and living room. The compact also comes with Cher's white Jeep Wrangler. The toy is available on the Walmart website for $29.97, Target website for $30.99 and Amazon for $32.40.
Uno's fandom "Clueless" deck features 112 cards that sport characters from the movie, one "Ugh, As If" Wild Card, which can be played to reject any of the other player's cards, and a collectors box. The deck is $12 on the Mattel Creations website.
"Clueless" is available for streaming on Paramount+ with a paid subscription ($12.99 per month) and for free on Pluto TV. The movie can also be rented ($3.79) or purchased ($14.99) on Amazon Prime Video.
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In a panel appearance at New York Comic Con in 2019, he explained: "I left because my relationship with the showrunner and producer broke down, I left only because of those three individuals and the way they were running the show. I loved playing the character, and I loved the world... and I felt, 'I'm going to play the Doctor my way and I'm not going to get involved in these politics.' And that wasn't workable, so off I went." He also told Radio Times in 2018 that he couldn't in good conscience stay on the series because of the struggles he had behind the scenes: 'My relationship with my three immediate superiors – the showrunner, the producer and co-producer – broke down irreparably during the first block of filming and it never recovered. They lost trust in me, and I lost faith and trust and belief in them." In an interview with The Guardian in 2018 Eccleston revealed that he was blacklisted by the BBC as a result of leaving Doctor Who: "What happened around Doctor Who almost destroyed my career. I gave them a hit show, and I left with dignity, and then they put me on a blacklist. "I was carrying my own insecurities as it was something I had never done before and then I was abandoned, vilified in the tabloid press and blacklisted. I was told by my agent at the time: 'The BBC regime is against you. You're going to have to get out of the country and wait for regime change.'" Eccleston has been asked to return to the show, such as for the 50th anniversary special, but has declined. His animosity toward Davies and the show's producers continues, because as recently as 2023 he said at For The Love of Sci Fi convention that he would only return to the show on one condition: "Sack Russell T Davies. Sack Jane Tranter. Sack Phil Collinson. Sack Julie Gardner. And I'll come back. So can you arrange that?" He added: "I love being associated, just don't like being associated with those people and the politics that went on in the first series. The first series was a mess, and it wasn't to do with me or Billie [Piper], it was to do with the people who were supposed to make it, and it was a mess." Between the Classic and Modern Who eras on TV was a TV movie starring Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor, which aired in 1996. Doctor Who had been cancelled by the BBC due to dwindling ratings, and the TV movie was a bid to try and breathe new life into the franchise. Ultimately, it didn't work, and so McGann's appearance as the Doctor was a one-and-done occurrence. In 2013, McGann reprised the role for the show's 50th anniversary, appearing in an online-only min-episode called The Night of the Doctor. He also appeared briefly in 2022's The Power of the Doctor as one of the 'Guardians of the Edge'. The Classic Who era ended in 1989 with Sylvester McCoy as the Doctor, after he portrayed the character across three series. McCoy's departure from the show was not his own making; the BBC decided to cancel Doctor Who after audience numbers reduced to the point where it was no longer feasible to keep going. Ironically, the cancellation came after McCoy had agreed to make a fourth season of the show. "The plans were afoot [for a fourth season]," McCoy told RadioTimes. "We were going to carry on with the mystery, drop hints that the Doctor was more than just the Doctor, a more powerful kind of being - not a being, really, an alien, whatever he is! That was the kind of idea. We never achieved that because of what happened." Colin Baker took over the role of The Doctor in 1984, and he portrayed the character for almost three years as the sixth iteration of the character. The actor is an exception to his cohort because he didn't leave the role of The Doctor, he was fired. Baker was dropped from the series due to dwindling ratings. Baker refused to return to film a regeneration scene for incoming actor Sylvester McCoy, and in 2019 he said at a BFI screening that he regretted the decision because he forgot about the fans. Per Radio Times, he said: "I was being brutally selfish at the time and I just felt annoyed. Because I loved that part... and I thought I had more to offer." In a chat with the BBC in 2013, Fifth Doctor actor Peter Davison revealed that he was advised to only stay on the BBC show for three seasons by Patrick Troughton, who portrayed the Second Doctor. "I had to make the decision absurdly early," Davison explained. "It was at the end of my second season. The producer asked about staying beyond a third year, and I said I would call it a day because that had been my plan, as suggested by Patrick Troughton. 'Do three and get out,' he said. "I stuck with that. I had a chance to change my mind, but I thought that would be chickening out, and there were other things I wanted to do." The actor to have the longest stint as the Time Lord is Tom Baker, who portrayed the character for seven years and left the role in 1981. In an interview with Digital Spy, the actor revealed that his reason for leaving the show was ultimately because of the difficult relationship he had with John Nathan-Turner, the producer of his third and final era in the role. "I didn't like his approach to anything very much," Baker said. "His approach as a producer, to the scripts and to my managed somehow — how terrible — to diminish me. He made assumptions about how I should do things, or what lines meant, or how it should be shot, which diminished me, and I found that unbearable." Ultimately, Baker has since come to the conclusion that it was a good thing because the producer "nudged me toward the realisation [that Doctor Who] had run its course and I should go somewhere else. I think, in a way, when I said when I wanted to go, he was relieved, that he wouldn't have to have that fight". The third iteration of The Doctor was portrayed by Jon Pertwee, who played the character between 1970 and 1974. He ultimately left the role after his costar Roger Delgado, who played The Master, died in a car accident, and Pertwee didn't want to act with anyone else in that role. The departures of show producer Barry Letts and his onscreen companion Katy Manning also led him to that decision because it felt like the "end of an era". As mentioned, Troughton previously advised Davison that he should only stay in the role of The Doctor for three series, and this was something the actor did himself. He ultimately left because of the gruelling filming schedule for the show, and because he didn't want to be typecast after staying in the part for too long. The very first Doctor was portrayed by William Hartnell from November 1963 to October 1966, putting the character on the map and creating an icon for the BBC. Hartnell left the role after almost three years because of his deteriorating health, which made learning lines more difficult for him. It was decided during his tenure that, because the Doctor is an alien, he would be able to regenerate, thus allowing the lead role to be recast and the series to continue. Hartnell is the one who suggested his successor, Troughton. Doctor Who is available to watch on BBC iPlayer.