The Many Abodes of Barbie, Part VII: 1970

Box for Barbie Lively Livin' House. Text says, "NEW! REAL ENOUGH TO FEEL! Sculptured Walls and Patios!; Super Realistic!' 4 Colorful Fun Area With Dozens of Unique Molded and Textured Features Inside and Out!; Super Movin' Fun!; Swinging Chair - Exercise Bar - Shuffleboard Court - Full-Length Mirror! Put Living BARBIE through All Her Paces!; You'll Love Barbie's Own Groovy Interior Decorating - A Lively Mixture of Old & New!; BY MATTEL". Down the righthand side are additional pictures of the 4 areas, labeled, "LIVELY LIVING ROOM", "COOKIN' FUN KITCHEN", "TEEN DREAM BEDROOM", and the bottom, showing the house with its front patios and gardens folded up, is labeled "PLUS..." and goes on to list a Sun Deck, Patio with Swinging Chair, Shuffleboard Court and Fish Pond, and other items.
Source: slicksilver66 on eBay.

In 1970 the best Barbie house arrived. A controversial statement, to say the least: of vintage Barbie Dream House enthusiasts, the chipboard diehards clearly feel differently, and for many plastic aficionados the great, timeless houses came later in the decade. However, we’ll present compelling evidence that the Lively Living House (and the Surprise House, which is the same) represented the acme of Barbie’s domestic adventures.

In terms of furniture this house had the usual for 1970, glimpsed above: the couch and chair with game board, the circular dining table with two high-backed chairs, the solid molded shell of a bed; one novelty was a swing chair hanging from the second-story balcony, occupied by Christie in the image above. The ’72 version, the Surprise House, also added a planter with seeds for growing real plants and some gardening implements in keeping with the country emphasis of the time. The furniture was just fine.

But the Surprise House distinguishes itself in two key areas: the walls and floors.

Walls

Let’s take a closer look at that front room/living room, lower left in the box art that introduced this post:

Four panels showing living room walls and floor. Walls are pink. On one side of the room is a colorful stone fireplace with crackling fire; next to that are the bright red front doors with colorful stianed glass, and windows ot either side with orange-and-pink striped curtains; to the right, the wall shows a psychedelic poster, two white hanging lamps with spherical shades, and a low bookshelf of books and knickknacks. The floor is wood parquet look with a circular, flowery rug in pinks, reds, and purples.
Walls and floor of one room of the Lively Livin’ House, via grozalis on eBay.

Rich, colorful, detailed, midcentury-psychedelic. And here’s the kitchen next door:

3 panels showing kitchen walls. All show green appliances, yellow cabinets, and walls covered in swirls of yellow, green, and orange. L: Refrigerator and cake stand with pink cake. C: dishwasher and sink, plus pendant lamp with stained glass depicting fruit, and a pile of fresh produce directly on the counter. R: oven with teakettle atop and some sort of large bird cooking within. Smaller oven or microwave overhead has more items inside, and red brick spans the space between the two ovens. To the side of the oven is an unidentified furniture item in a terra cotta color, perhaps somewhat vase-shaped, with a vented wide belly--like an early space heater or something. A blue teapot sits atop.
Walls of the Lively Livin’ House kitchen, via raregold on eBay.

.That mad wallpaper! The avocado appliances! There is no more beautifully-styled interior in Barbie’s plastic dream home era.

And outside? We’ve noted that Barbie and her friends were illustrated on the exteriors of the Sixties mod houses. 1970 marked the end of that trend. Instead, the Lively Livin’ House walls are jam-packed with gorgeous furniture, plants, planters, etc. These panels enclose the living room and kitchen we surveyed above:

Four panels. L: window with green-and-yellow drapes inside; in the fore, a reddish-orange chair with tulip base, wide winged armrests, and purple seat cushion. Next: a fountain consisting of 3 wide, shallow plates at different heights, in blue, yellow and red, sits before the kitchen window. A stained glass pendant lamp can be discerned inside over a table and chair set that looks like the one included in the set; next: Red front door with rainbow stained glass, long windows to either side with printed curtains inside, a range of greenery, and a gold and teal stone lion. R: Exterior side of the fireplace panel shows colorful stone in a random-looking pattern, along with a purple blooming bush in a large pot.
First floor exterior of the Lively Livin’ House, via grozalis on eBay.

The chair and fountain would not be out of place in the original Star Trek series, while the stained glass and fieldstone chimney are all peak 1970 aesthetics.

In addition to the surfaces we’ve highlighted here, there was a bedroom in rich blues and purples, and three panels of garden walkways including a shuffleboard court. In a sharp pivot, this house didn’t fold up for carrying, but the three outdoor walkway panels did fold up to complete the house exterior with additional windows and decor and make it a bit more compact to store. The panels easily remove from the structures to serve as stylish backdrops for dioramas, and they are indestructible-ish vinyl, so they’re fairly common today.

Floors

When I named floors as a distinguishing trait of the Lively Livin’ House, I wasn’t talking about the appealing tiled floors that complement the walls detailed above. They’re great, but the real innovation of this house, floorwise, is this: as a two-story structure, it is the first Barbie home to have a second floor. Its multistory structure and lack of fold-and-carry capability set the precedent for more famous Seventies houses: the Townhouse and the A-Frame.

L: Barbie Townhouse packaging shows a 3-story colorful plastic house with its own elevator. The rear walls and floors have screened designs. R: color catalog image for the A-frame house, a large 2-story structure with slatted and vented walls instead of vinyl or chipboard screened images.
Famous houses. Sources: some_gave_all on eBay; Wishbook Web.

The Townhouse had stylized interior walls featuring a heavy helping of gingham, but no printed exteriors. By the time the A-Frame arrived, screened-on wall decor was passé. We intend to end our Many Abodes series here, without digging into these dwellings; but it’s worth noting that the Townhouse is, with the possible exception of the Sleep-n-Keep case rooms, the most urban accommodation the Teen-Age Fashion Model ever inhabited. It took multistory housing to convince her to make the move which we’ve argued was necessary for her career since the start.

Back to our thesis: the combination of richly illustrated interiors (and exteriors!) as Barbie enjoyed in the Sixties, with the structural sophistication she’d come to know in the Seventies and beyond, is what makes the Lively Livin’/Surprise House the best Barbie Dream House, ever.

Rooms for Lively Livin’

A column runs down the right-hand side of the box art that led this post, apparently describing the house’s three rooms: Lively Livin’ Room, Cookin’ Fun Kitchen, and Teen Dream Bedroom. There’s nothing unusual about describing the play set’s contents on the package, and it’s not too extraordinary to give them these cute little names. But as it happens, there is more to this tale.

Color catalog image showing the house as described in the post. Text reads, "Barbie Lively Livin' House; beautifully furnished... over 2 1/2 feet long; Spacious vinyl house for Barbie includes dining room with table, chairs; den with couch, table, chair; porch with swing, shuffleboard; bedroom with clothes racks and mirror (bed, headboard, spread not incl.). 32x17x27-in. house folds for storage. Shpg. wt. 5 lbs.; 79N31029C...$11.87; Bedroom Set only. Plastic bed, headboard, spread and chair. 49N31034--Wt. 8 oz...$1.96; Den Set only. Plastic couch, table, chair and shuffleboard. 49N31033--Wt. 8 oz...$1.96; Dining Set. Table, 2 chairs. 49N31032-_Wt. 8 oz...$1.96."
1970 Sears catalog entry for the Lively Livin’ House. Source: Wishbook Web.

The 1970 catalog excerpt above lists not just the house itself, but also three individual rooms, sold separately: Bedroom Set, Den Set, and Dining Set. From the terse description, it seems as if these are just subsets of the full play set’s components (although this listing claims there is no bed or bedspread included with the Lively Livin’ House, other sources–including the box shown at top–disagree). But the Christmas catalog entries were often based on prototypes and concepts, as is the case here: besides the bedding confusion, note the red brick chimney on the lower left side of the house, and the densely-slatted fencing that differs from the final product. The real Lively furniture sets, rare-to-vanishing today, put their own spin on these rooms.

Packaging for the furniture set Barbie lively livin' room (or livin'room, it's had to tell if they wanted a space there). Smaller text says, "ONE OF BARBIE's FAVORITE FUNROOMS; For Swingin' Party-Givin' or Cozy Fireside Conversation!" In the image, a child plays with a Barbie doll and furniture set of blue plastic, consisting of snap-together sofa, table, and chair. The sofa and chair have stickers showing vertically-striped upholsetery in blues and brown, while atop the table is a sticker showing a chess board.
1970 Lively Livin’Room box art

In fact, the “livin’room” set (probably the Den Set from the Sears catalog) does include the sofa, chair and table from the Lively Livin’ House, but in a different color palette (shuffleboard is not in evidence). The same was true of the Teen Dream Bedroom and Cookin’ Fun Kitchen furniture pieces. But it’s in the walls and floors (again with the walls and floors!) where the furniture sets really went in their own direction.

Living room walls and floor: the carpet is pretty psychedelic, with blue and green swirls. Other furnishings are more staid, such as a grandfather clock, a landscape painting, and a television in a heavy wooden cabinet. The space is dominated by a white brick fireplace. Outside, the house is red brick up to a couple feet, then yellow boards; a window has green shutters and blue-and-white curtains within.
1970 Barbie Lively Livin’Room interior walls and floor (L) and exterior (R). Source for this and previous image: wonderwoman13 on eBay.

They’re not as groovy as the Lively Livin’ House–then again, what is?–but still deeply Seventies. This living room is a little more family-oriented than the one in the Lively house, displaying grown-up touches along with that trippy carpet.

The wall had a simple dimensional feature that pushed the fireplace into the room, as shown above. The other two sets augmented their basic furnishings in the same way, with a dimensional bedroom dresser and kitchen sink. Like the livin’room, these rooms’ walls were new conceptions. Due to the rarity of the sets I have no images to share; however, Marl Davidson photographed them for her book on Barbie structures, and we included a snapshot of those pages when we recommended her book.

Well there you have it! It’s the end, for now at least, of the Many Abodes of Barbie series. Our final house isn’t technically the Lively Livin’ House of 1970, or even the same-y Surprise House of ’72, but rather the ’73 Country Living Home we visited last time. There are still some Seventies furniture sets we wish to discuss with you, but on the whole, Barbie’s focus during this decade was outside the home. Where might we find her as the next decade progresses?

Collage of images from walls of the Lively Livin' House: A stone lion guards the front door; inside the rood, a ceramic cat sits on a side table; in the bedroom, a modern sphere-shaped lamp sits on an hourglass-shaped stool/side table, with psychedelic blue-and-purple wallpaper depicting signs of the zodiac; a pink cake on a cakestand in the kitchen; an exterior view of a funky planter in the bedroom; and a bird alighting at a futuristically shaped birdfeeder, an orange sphere with large cutouts.

Where to next? This post is about Barbie’s early built environment. The most recent post in this category is part three of the Barbie’s Seventies Travelogue series, and the most popular are those on Mattel Modern and Susy Goose furniture and on penthouse apartments. Otherwise, the overall most popular posts on this site are about Barbie shoes, 1959-67, and about Mattel fashion booklets. Or just head up to the Table of Contents to see more options.

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