Quintuplet collectibles

Published Friday July 18th, 2008
A14

Nowadays we take multiple births for granted, but when a poor, 25-year-old French-Canadian farmer's wife named Elzire Dionne - already the mother of five other children - gave birth to a set of quintuplets on May 28, 1934, it caused an international sensation, though most people today under the age of 50 have probably never heard of them.

They were, after all, the world's first known surviving quints, certainly the only identical ones, making them truly unique. The girls became little media darlings, the subject of much collectible memorabilia, from dolls to books to handkerchiefs to ads for soap.

For the collector, there is no question as to what the No. 1 Dionne Quintuplets item is: the sets of dolls made by the Madame Alexander Doll Co. The top of the line were the 20-inch composition dolls dressed in silk party dresses and bonnets, each quint identified by name, which are much rarer than the 8-inch variety.

Also in great demand are the 1935 8-inch layette set, with the girls as babies, valued upward of $3,600 in mint condition, and another in that same size with each quint in a different colored organdy dress and hat: Annette in yellow, Yvonne in pink, Cecile in green, Emilie in lavender and Marie in blue. Some of the doll sets included a Dr. Dafoe or nurse Louise De Kirilene doll, or special furniture like swings or a Ferris wheel.

These dolls were a key element in the history of the Madame Alexander Doll Co. Beatrice Alexander had a stepfather who operated a doll hospital and also sold high-end dolls, most of them hand made in Germany. When there was an embargo on German goods during World War I, Beatrice and her sisters began making dolls themselves to save the family business.

After the war, she continued manufacturing dolls, soon setting up her own company. When the Dionne quintuplets were born in 1934, "Madame" Alexnder moved quickly to set up a licensing agreement, and the public's continuing fascination with the girls in the dark years of the Depression went a long way toward securing Alexander's position in the doll world.

(© Copley News Service)

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