A restored Patsy doll, circa 1931
A restored Patsy doll, circa 1931
photo by:David Mudd

Doctoring Beloved Dolls

Mary Ann Pizzolato peers into the dull blue eyes of Baby Coos, a 60-year-old doll whose plastic peepers have been clouded by a fungus—and time. Next, she flexes the doll’s vinyl legs, which are ripped and ready to fall off.
Mary Ann Pizzolato peers into the dull blue eyes of Baby Coos, a 60-year-old doll whose plastic peepers have been clouded by a fungus—and time. Next, she flexes the doll’s vinyl legs, which are ripped and ready to fall off.

After examining the doll from head to toe, Pizzolato looks hopeful. After all, she’s been repairing cracked Kewpies, balding Barbies and tattered teddy bears for 30 years.

“If we treat her mold and attach these legs the best we can, it’s going to be about $60,” says Pizzolato, 53, the owner of The Doll Hospital in Spring, Texas (pop. 36,385).

Baby Coos is worth saving to Beverly Peach, 68, of Mount Carmel, Ill., who received the doll as a Christmas gift when she was 10.

“Then we’ll get her admitted,” says Pizzolato, who has repaired dolls as a sideline since the 1970s when she apprenticed with a doll doctor in her hometown of East Orange, N.J.

Clad in a white lab jacket, Pizzolato tags and bags Baby Coos’ clothing and assigns her a bed-box in a ward with a hundred other dolls with flopping limbs, sunken eyes, broken necks, squawky voice boxes and sawdust seeping from their middles. Dolls that arrive without clothes are robed in miniature hospital gowns. “They get embarrassed,” Pizzolato says with a smile.

“Some things are minor, like reattaching a head or restyling hair,” she says, whereas other dolls need major makeovers. “I restored a Shirley Temple doll that had both feet and arms eaten by a rottweiler.”

In 1985, Pizzolato left a career as a chemical engineer for Gulf Oil Co. during a slump in the oil business and opened the doll repair and retail shop two years later. Her chemistry background comes in handy in duplicating the original material used by the doll makers.

“I go back to the basics,” she says. “I’m at heart a conservationist.”

Pizzolato restores dolls made of china and leather, wood and wax, papier-mâché and plastic. With the duplicated material, she sculpts a new toe, a chin or other body part, then sands and paints them.

To remove decades of dirt left by grubby little hands, Pizzolato concocted a solution that cleans without removing painted ruby lips and pink cheeks.

A rejuvenated 1931 Patsy doll decked in a pink corduroy coat and a 1923 Bubbles in bloomers and bonnet look like a lineup in a beauty pageant after Pizzolato’s handiwork. They smell as fresh as they look, too, because she sprays them with a vanilla-scented fragrance that she formulated.

“New dolly smell and Christmas morning just go together,” Pizzolato says. “I like being able to bring back some of that magic to people’s lives.”

Dolls are sent to The Doll Hospital for appraisals and repairs from around the United States and keep Pizzolato and four assistants bustling. Costs range from $25 for a simple restringing of limbs to more than $1,000 for a major reconstruction, such as the work needed on an 1850s china doll with a shattered face. In its restored condition, the rare doll by French doll maker A. Thuillier is valued at $50,000.

Not every doll that Pizzolato rescues has antique value, though. Some are modern plastic dolls that have been squeezed and smooched to shreds, but are priceless to their young owners. Last year, Brooke Frohock, 7, and her sister, Madison, 9, checked their dolls into the hospital for needed eye implants and skin transplants, but were sad about leaving their beloved babies.

“These were their first dolls,” says their mother, Gabrielle Frohock, of Sugar Land, Texas. “They put them to bed each night.”

To ease the girls’ worries, Pizzolato sent daily e-mails to them from their dolls. “Dr. Mary Ann gave me a bubble bath and I got to eat chocolate ice cream,” one message read. “Don’t be sad because I’m going to be so beautiful when you see me.”

“Mary Ann made the whole thing a pleasant experience,” Gabrielle says.

Pizzolato delights in seeing the faces of 7-year-olds and 70-year-olds when they come to take their rehabilitated dolls home from The Doll Hospital.

“It’s a little piece of childhood that people hang onto,” she says. “We get to relive a lot of happy times with people.”

Marti Attoun is a Contributing Editor for American Profile

Upload Your Own Stories, Photos and Videos

share icon
Every week, American Profile magazine brings you stories that celebrate the people and places that make America great. Now we want to hear your stories and see your photos, videos and even audio.

share your story Start Uploading Now!

Related Stories

If you enjoyed reading this story, Doctoring Beloved Dolls, then you might enjoy these other stories.
 

Discuss this Article

Here are some of the current comments about this article. To read more or post your own comments, visit our message boards.
loved your article but can't contact anyone in the article....have tried phone and web site. can you jelp me?
AP Editors wrote:
THE DOLL HOSPITAL
419 GENTRY, #102
SPRING,TEXAS 77373
(281) 350-6722
aaadolldoc@aol.com

Business Hours
Tuesday thru Saturday
10:00am to 5:00 pm
Sunday & Monday - Closed

post your comment Post your comments on this article

Newsletter Sign Up
share ad

Below are the most recent articles from our Relish sister site. Click on the "Spry" tab above to see the most recent articles from our other sister site. read more...
Below are the most recent articles from our Spry sister site. Click on the "Relish" tab above to see the most recent articles from our other sister site. read more...