Thanks Marcelo,
it is really good to have a member living in Brazil in the 80s when we are talking about this.
Thanks =)
Why do you think they erased the marking on the smurfs??
I don´t think they did this just because it was fun, do you!!
There had to be a reason for erasing the Hering and made in Brazil markings.
But there is one more thing. They did not erase the Schleich and Peyo marking? Did they Lia??
I have no idea. I'm sure there's a reason but they removed only the less relevant stuff. All credits and original brands were still there.
So it could be that they made these in Argentina after 1983.
So only made in Brazil 1982 and then all southamerican smurfs were made in Argentina. And Minimodels got these molds and maybe used them for a while and blocked the marking Hering and made in Brazil and only left the Schleich and Peyo???
I don't think so. I'll quote myself (from
http://www.forum.bluecavern.com/viewtop ... g&start=20):
(...) I'm sure that all of them are Brazilian since imported products were not common here in the 80s. Until 1985 we were ruled by dictatorship governments and we had little or no access to foreign products (only licensed, made in Brazil versions of international stuff was available).
President Fernando Collor was one of the big responsibles for opening Brazil's doors to foreign companies and products - but this happened much later (1990).
In fact the only foreign Smurf toy I see in my ENTIRE life was Gargamel. I had a rich classmate in 3rd grade and after an international vacation she bought a Gargamel. Everyone at school was impressed since we only had seen the same few Smurfs over and over for years.
Yep. I'm sure I had bought Tailor Smurf when I was WAY older (8, 9 or 10 years old, I don't remember). The weirdest thing about this is: Tailor was one of my few Smurfs with non-erased markings.
And Marcelo,
I don´t expect you to remember anything before 1985 if you were born 1979.
Not many people remember things before 5 years old. Usually memories from before this age is things others have told us and we sometimes think are memories. I only have vaugue memories from my early childhood.
I remember we made big landscaping scenerys with smurfs and animals and parents and friends had to pay to get inside the room and look. Like on a zoo!!
That's why I ALWAYS say these memories are guesses.
I'm not trying to prove anything but I trust a lot on my memories (even the ones from my early years) when I talk about TV shows and toys. For some reason these subjects were always important to me.
I remember completely irrelevant things like the exact place in my house where I was when my aunt Amelia gave my first two Smurfs (Cowboy and the guitarist) and how euphoric I was gor getting them. I really think it had happened a few months before (or after) the 1984 Christmas when I've got my Papa Smurf plush and my sister got the Smurfette plush (
http://www.forum.bluecavern.com/viewtop ... f64e7b5b97 )
In fact there's no much info about Hering AT ALL.
Major companies are located in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro - and Hering was a smaller company located in the State of Santa Catarina. They were doing well with the musical instruments for kids (I still have my Hering Xylophone!) so they opened this department for "other" toys in the 80s.
The funny thing is when people (including me) talk about other toys by Hering we ONLY remember the Smurfs. I'm not sure if they had released any non-musical toy other than Smurfs.
Hering's toy department closed many years ago but the company still exists under the name "Hering Harmonicas":
http://www.heringharmonicas.com.br/a-hering/
Sometime ago I had sent an e-mail to them but I've got no replies.
As to the timing of those South American smurfs...no idea...Marcelo's timing makes sense, I know most Americans didn't know about the smurfs before the cartoons (big difference to Europe who fell in love with the comic books) so I can see that the Herings were made after the introduction of the cartoon series which started in 1981 (I think) in the US. As to when it was introduced to Brazil..again
...more than likely a year or so afterwards, so we could put the timing of the Brazil Herings around 1983/4? (Give or take one year after the cartoon series started to be shown). I am pretty sure they weren't produced for many years, or we would have more of them
(doesn't mean they weren't available in the stores for many years though if they didn't sell that well)
The cartoon made the Smurfs popular in Brazil but they technically had arrived here in 1975 under the name "Strunfs". 10 (unsuccessful) "Strunfs" comic books were published between 1975 and 1976. I had never heard about "Strunfs" comics until a few weeks ago:
http://www.guiadosquadrinhos.com/thumb. ... p=&total=7
http://www.guiadosquadrinhos.com/thumb. ... p=&total=3
Until the early 1980s Brazilian toy market didn't used to sell foreign toys here (with the exception of a few ones like 'Playmobil' by 'Trol'). We had our own characters like "Suzi" and "Monica's gang". The only foreign buddies we had as toys were Disney characters or classic Super Heroes (Batman, Superman). And even these toys based on american properties were created and molded in Brazil.
I don't know exactly what happened - but in the early 80s it changed dramatically. "Estrela" company got the rights for many foreign toys and suddenly Brazilian stores were full of never-seen-before stuff here like Barbie (1982), GI Joe (1984), Care Bears (1984?), My Little Pony (1985?) and Strawberry Shortcake (1984?). All these toys sold very well in Brazil.
Hering (and other companies like Glasslite) surely had followed Estrela's trail and made international deals to release toys that were successful in ohter countries (specially if these characters were on Brazilian TV).
I'm sure any Brazilian toy collector can confim this extreme change in our market from early to mid-80s. So I'm not only considering my childhood memories when I say I doubt we had Herings before I get my first ones (in 1984 or 85). I'm also considering how our maket used to be back in the day.