Toy that stole Olympic fans` hearts
As cheering crowds greeted Russia`s returning Olympians at Sheremetyevo Airport on Monday evening, elsewhere in Moscow another unofficial champion of the Turin Winter Olympics - the country`s much-loved furry, big-eared creature, Cheburashka - appeared to have been driven to extinction by his own popularity.
Cheburashka, the Russian team`s official Olympic mascot since the 2004 Summer Games in Athens, was nowhere to be found in stores Monday - either in Moscow or in Turin.
"It`s safe to say that up to 250 people lined up every day in front of the Russia House in Turin, all looking to snap up souvenirs and sports gear," said Yelena Kravets, a spokeswoman for Bosco di Ciliegi, the luxury clothing firm whose logo was omnipresent in Turin, emblazoned on Russian Olympic uniforms and souvenirs.
While the national team finished fourth in the medals table behind Germany, the United States and Austria, sports officials appeared even more pleased about the PR impact Russia had made on the Games.
"I have not seen any Olympic Games before where the presence of Russian symbols - the flag, national anthem and uniform - were felt as strongly," Vyacheslav Fetisov, head of the Federal Agency for Physical Culture and Sports.
But while Fetisov was surely referring to the presence of Russian medal-winners on the podium, in Turin the team`s furry little mascot seemed to have been adopted by thousands of non-Russian fans as the Games` unofficial champion.
Cheburashkas of all sizes were a huge hit in Turin, Kravets said by telephone from the Italian city on Monday, adding that at prices of between 10 euros and 35 euros they were sold out completely.
For those cheering on the Russian team from back home, the fluffy stuffed animal - made especially in white for the Winter Olympics - popped up everywhere.
One minute he was being tossed onto the ice rink after a performance by a Russian skater and the next he was being cuddled by Russian athletes and fans alike.
In Moscow, eager children and their parents joined the ever-more-desperate hunt for Winter Olympic Cheburashkas, resulting in their complete extinction in BoscoSport stores across the city.
Meanwhile, in Turin, the Russian House had run out days before the games ended Sunday. In two of Moscow`s BoscoSport stores the furry creatures sold out days ago, said Andrei Shadrin, who manages the firm`s store in the Kalinka-Stockmann shopping center near the Smolenskaya metro station.
"The last Cheburashka was sold five days ago. They were snapped up very quickly: A batch of 200 would go in a day and a half to two days. We would love to order more, but we can`t because no more were made," Shadrin said.
"It`s a shame, as we get 50 calls a day asking if we have Cheburashkas, and they get really upset when they learn there aren`t any."
Some of the more determined, or desperate, Cheburashka hunters were still out scouring stores Monday.
Shadrin said that the ranks of Cheburashka`s fans were by no means limited to children. When asked what reasons customers gave for buying a Cheburashka, Shadrin said, "People just said they liked it, or that it was a souvenir to remember these Olympics, or that it was unique and pretty."
And even at 1,100 rubles ($40) a pop for a 35-centimeter-tall Cheburashka, "only a few customers complained that it was expensive," Shadrin said. "Many adults bought Cheburashkas as a souvenir for themselves or as a present for a friend."
While Cheburashka turns 40 this year, his Olympic workout seems to be keeping him as youthful as ever.
First created in 1966 by children`s writer Eduard Uspensky as a strange animal who came to Russia from Africa in a crate of oranges, Cheburashka later made the transition from book to film, featuring in countless Soviet-era cartoons.
The cartoons made Cheburashka and his best friend, Gena the Crocodile, so famous that not only every Russian knew them, but the two became the unwitting stars of numerous, quite off-color jokes.
A new wave of popularity came in the post-Soviet era, when the creatures` creators - including Uspensky and several animators and book illustrators - began touting the image abroad.
Uspensky registered his Cheburashka copyright in 1997. In 2004, he agreed to lend his Cheburashka to the Russian Olympic team, despite howls of protests from cartoonists claiming their own rights to the image.
"Hey, you`re asking me a silly question when you wonder what it feels like to see Cheburashka now," Uspensky, 68, said by telephone Monday.
"It`s good to see one of your creations marching across the globe. As for the future of Cheburashka, maybe he`ll replace the national seal?" Uspensky said, referring to Russia`s double-headed eagle.
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