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.
"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 Duesseldorf.
"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."
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.
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 euros ($11) to 500 or 600 euros 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.
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