Those dolls are pretty common and not at all very old, so this shouldn't go for a very high price.
If this Derita had clothes on and was MIB (Mint In Box) it could fetch alot more coin.
One of many cheap products licensed by C3, this 1999 deal cranked out 35 different dolls... 5 Stooges (excl. Besser) @ 7 portrayals, e.g., doctor, soldier, etc. The manufacturer didn't go to any great lengths to create distinct molds for the Stooges, just slightly altering existing stock molds from other licensed characters. For example, the manufacturer used the same mold for its 'Shemp' and 'Dracula' dolls (a Universal Studios monster line of characters was marketed around the same time); the hair styling is about the only difference on these two dolls... package labeling took care of the rest.
A mass-marketed, low-quality product line.
These dolls are not considered highly collectible. More and more show up in bargain bins, clothed and in the original box packaging, i.e., typical Salvation Army toy store fare. I don't know what this nude DeRita doll went for, but if it went for more than $1 dollar, the buyer overpaid. (FYI - the nude DeRita doll is worth more than the Bush guy in the jpg.)
Posted on: April 28, 2006, 10:31:46 by: Wild Hyacinth
I was up in New Hampshire not long ago and stoped at a gas station. When I went inside I discovered Three Stooges scratch tickets by the N.H. state lottery.They have 4 or 5 different pictures on them ,with the usual match your number deal,butthen there is a bonus box with cartoon figures of Moe,Larry,and Curly. You scratch there faces off and if you revile a pie you win $5 if you get three pies you win $50.
Stooges lottery tickets have been common in the past ten years. Other states that used the Stooges for lottery programs include Oregon, Maryland, Illinois and Virginia.
I still don"t know what to think of this
IMO, the lottery ticket licensing of the Stooges' likenesses is basically harmless, unless someone is so anti-gambling to find it offensive. In most cases, lottery revenues go toward good causes like State education and public welfare funds (or, they're supposed to...).
C3's licensing/marketing activities have crossed other
good taste lines, much more deserving of an "
I don't know what to think of this" comment. Some examples...
- "
3 Stooges Hair Tonic"... dumb
- The Lamond branch of the Fine family marketed cigar products a couple years ago, and after C3's influence, the product line was dubbed "
DeRita Cigars." The cigars were promoted in C3's marketing catalog and online store, mailed/accessible to fans of all ages... under-aged, juveniles and impressionable children.
- "
Three Stooges Joke Toilet Paper"... not a demographic issue, just poor common sense & bad taste.
It all comes down to your personal point of view. If you approve, buy. If not, don't.