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ENTERTAINMENT

It’s fantastic: Movie boosts world’s top Barbie collection in Düsseldorf

With her whopping 18,000 Barbies, Bettina Dorfmann was already in the record books, but the release of the blockbuster about the blonde icon has thrown a spotlight on her historic collection.

Barbie dolls
Dorfmann pictured in 2020 holding one of her many Barbie dolls. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Rebecca Krizak

“As a child I always played with Barbies,” Dorfmann, 62, told AFP at her shrine to the plastic doll in the western German city of Düsseldorf.

“When I got out my dolls for my daughter, she wasn’t interested because they were too old-fashioned. That’s when I started collecting them myself.”

She’s been living the pink dream for 28 years, lending her bevy of Barbies — recognised by Guinness World Records as the globe’s biggest — to museums and shopping malls which put them on display for a few months.

“They usually draw between 5,000 and 20,000 visitors during the exhibitions but since the movie came out (last week), I heard the interest has really grown.”

Bettina Dorfmann

Dorfmann builds the exhibition ‘Busy girl: Barbie has a career’ in the Ostfriesisches Landesmuseum in Emden, North Rhine-Westphalia in December 2021. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Sina Schuldt

Demand for her catalogues, which list her lovingly preserved Barbies representing various eras, ethnicities and professions — as well as a few Ken dolls — has also soared over the past week, she said.

READ ALSO: German women football team star and coach get Barbie dolls

Dorfmann, who has already seen the US movie twice and thinks it’s “great”, also owns a Barbie “clinic”.

“Repairing a doll can cost anything from 10 to 500 or 600 if it’s a rare model,” she explained.

At the North American box office, “Barbie” turned in the best debut of 2023 with $155 million in takings over the weekend.

It also topped the German cinema charts with 732,000 tickets sold, according to industry figures.

READ ALSO: Barbie unveils Merkel doll at Nuremberg toy fair

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ENTERTAINMENT

Germany ‘drops sex assault probe’ into Rammstein frontman

Berlin prosecutors said Tuesday that they had closed an investigation against Till Lindemann, the frontman of German metal band Rammstein, following claims of women being drugged and sexually assaulted at concerts.

Germany 'drops sex assault probe' into Rammstein frontman

Initial investigations “did not provide any evidence” of the claims, the prosecutors said in a statement, and no charges will be filed.

READ ALSO: Who are Rammstein and why are they so big in Germany?

The investigation was opened in June after several women claimed on social media that they had been drugged and recruited to engage in sexual activity with Lindemann, 60, at Rammstein after-show parties.

Lindemann denied the allegations, with his lawyers calling them “without exception untrue”.

Berlin-based law firm Schertz Bergmann welcomed the closure of the investigation, saying it “proves that there was no basis for the very serious allegations against our client on social media and in the press”.

The firm added that legal action would be taken against “incorrect representations” of Lindemann.

The scandal erupted after a young Irish woman posted on social media that she had been drugged and propositioned by Lindemann at a backstage party in Vilnius, Lithuania.

A wave of similar stories then emerged on platforms including Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

The uproar around the allegations led to several after-show parties being cancelled at Rammstein concerts and also prompted the record label Universal Music to drop its marketing for the band.

Rammstein, an industrial metal band founded in 1994, is known for grinding guitar riffs, taboo-breaking antics and theatrical stage shows heavy on pyrotechnics.

Their songs have dealt with subjects from cannibalism to necrophilia, and the band name itself evokes the 1988 Ramstein air show disaster that killed 70 people and injured more than 1,000.

‘Row Zero’

The allegations threw a spotlight on Rammstein’s “Row Zero” system, a VIP concert experience for a select group of fans, including the chance to stand right in front of the stage and access to an after-show party.

Alena Makeeva, a Russian woman accused of recruiting young women to engage in sexual practices with Lindemann, was reportedly banned from Rammstein concerts after the allegations came to light.

Makeeva called herself Rammstein’s “casting director”. She had been working for the band since 2019, according to daily newspaper Die Welt.

Berlin prosecutors on Tuesday also said they had dropped a probe into an unnamed “tour manager”, against whom complaints had been filed over the “supply of young women at concerts to the backstage area”.

The uproar around the allegations led to several after-show parties being cancelled at Rammstein concerts and also prompted the record label Universal Music to drop its marketing for the band.

German Culture Minister Claudia Roth had welcomed the investigation, saying it underlined that the accusations were to be taken seriously.

The claims had also led Families Minister Lisa Paus to call for better protection for women at concerts.

But the prosecutors on Tuesday said there was no proof that Lindemann had “performed sexual acts on women against their will, administered substances that influenced their ability to consent… or exploited a power imbalance with regard to underage sexual partners”.

They also noted that Lithuanian prosecutors had declined to open a probe.

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