Showing posts with label debbie reynolds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debbie reynolds. Show all posts

Auction gavel drops for Debbie Reynolds' Hollywood costumes

Audrey Hepburn's Ascot dress in My Fair Lady
sold for $3.7 million

Felt a little bit sad today when thinking of these iconic costumes being sold. I still am befuddled that there weren't any supporters of the film industry interested in maintaining this collection of four decades' worth gathered by Debbie Reynolds. I ended up staying awake until 3 a.m. just to watch the live auction, curious to see the sale of Hepburn's dress from My Fair Lady!

According to Indiewire, in the end, many items went to Saudi Arabia or Japan. "With an hour to go before the auction was scheduled to begin, the theater of the Paley Center in Beverly Hills was already full and the downstairs gallery was filling up. When Debbie Reynolds walked in, looking perky in a white pants suit, the crowd rose and applauded as she took the podium to say a few last words before hundreds of her costumes and props went under the gavel. “I’ve been collecting for 45 years and I’m only forty,” brought appreciative laughs and her eyes welled up as she thanked everyone for coming—and bidding. While she has passionately and lovingly tried to save this slice of Hollywood history, the years of accumulated bills necessitated this sale. But the anticipation hung heavy in the room. The people filling the theater looked more like observers and fans than capable of coming up with major bucks, but one truth of auctions is that all it takes is two people who want the same thing to drive prices sky high."

Here are some of the items that sold:

Worn by Marilyn Monroe in The Seven Year Itch
Sold for $4.6 million

Worn by Marilyn Monroe in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
$1.2 million

Worn by Judy Garland during first 2 weeks of filming The Wizard of Oz
Sold for $910,000 - more than ten times the estimate

Original shoes worn by Judy Garland in The Wizard of Oz
$510,000

Worn by Grace Kelly in To Catch a Thief
$450,000

Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music
Dresses (L-R) sold for $550,000 / $45,000 / $42,500

Outfits for Marta and Gretl (The Sound of Music) sold for $35,000
Autographed guitar - $140,000, movie poster - $6000

Worn by Ingrid Bergman in Joan of Arc
Sold for $50,000

Worn by Bette Davis and Joan Collins (middle dress) in The Virgin Queen
$7500, $3000 and $22,500
Worn by Charlie Chaplin in Little Tramp
$110,000

Marlon Brando and Merle Oberon
as Napoleon Bonaparte and Josephine in Desirée
$60,000 and $22,500


1952 red MG TD used by Marilyn Monroe and Cary Grant in Monkey Business
$210,000

Charlton Heston in Ben-Hur
$320,000
(sandals sold for $14,000, poster sold for $5500)


Worn by Katharine Hepburn as Jo in Little Women
$9000

Worn by Greta Garbo in Anna Karenina
$40,000

Deborah Kerr as Catherine Parr in Young Bess
$6500

Angela Lansbury as Queen Anne in Three Musketeers
$6500

Elizabeth Taylor in Little Women
$13,000

Katharine Hepburn in Mary of Scotland
$35,000

Laurence Olivier in Pride and Prejudice
$6500

Other items sold:
Orson Welles' outfit as Edward Rochester in Jane Eyre - $20,000
Elizabeth Taylor's riding outfit from National Velvet - $60,000
Yul Brynner's outfit in The King and I - $9500
Elizabeth Taylor's headdress from Cleopatra - $100,000
Richard Burton's tunic and cape from Cleopatra - $85,000
Grace Kelly's Princess Alexandra dress from The Swan - $110,000
Lydia Bennett's dress from Pride and Prejudice (1940) - $5000
Marilyn Monroe's outfit from There's No Business Like Show Business - $500,000
(and poster from same movie sold for $7500)
Marlon Brandon's Mutiny on the Bounty naval outfit - $90,000
Barbara Streisand's Hello Dolly gold dress - $100,000
Leslie Caron's plaid dress & cape from Gigi - $65,000
Joan Crawford's waitress outfit from Mildred Pierce - $22,500
Vivien Leigh's robe from A Streetcar Named Desire - $18,000

Profiles in History: "The Debbie Reynolds Collection is deemed to be the most significant collection of Hollywood costumes and props since the liquidation of the MGM and FOX studios in the 1970’s. Profiles in History plans to sell this massive collection through a series of auctions starting with part one in June 2011 and part two in December 2011. This entire collection contains over 3,500 costumes, 20,000 original photographs, several thousand original movie posters, original costume sketches and hundreds of key props from film history."

View: Auction Results
Highlighted items on auction block

Gallery of Period Costumes to be sold in largest auction ever

What an astounding collection!

It is a shame that these outfits and memorabilia lovingly acquired over 4 decades by actress Debbie Reynolds are now to be sold individually at auction. Many of us would have loved to see a museum created to house these period pieces but sadly that did not happen and not for lack of trying on Reynold's part!

However, since they're now up for auction, it gives us a chance to see them! Here I've posted just a sample of the period costumes in the catalogue for Profiles in History!

Shown on left: Audrey Hepburn’s iconic Ascot dress from My Fair Lady (1964) designed by legendary costume designer Cecil Beaton. (listed at $200,000 to $300,000)



The Virgin Queen (1955)
1. Bette Davis “Queen Elizabeth I” golden yellow brocade royal gown
2. Joan Collins “Beth Throgmorton” rose brocade gown
3. Bette Davis “Queen Elizabeth I” rose-colored silk royal gown



The Sound of Music (1965)
Three dresses worn by Julie Andrews as Maria Von Trapp (The brown jumper worn by Maria as she sang Do-Re-Mi, is listed at $30,000-60,000 while the green dress is listed for $6-8,000 and the beige peasant dress is listed at $30-50,000)

The Sound of Music (1965)
"Drapery" costumes worn by Debbie Turner “Marta” and Kym Karath “Gretl”



Marie Antoinette (1938)
1. Norma Shearer “Marie Antoinette” umber silk velvet two-piece dress
(Also worn by Lucille Ball as “Madame Du Barry” in
Du Barry Was A Lady)
2. Norma Shearer “Marie Antoinette” ivory with black velvet two-piece gown



Marie Antoinette (1938)
1. John Barrymore “King Louis XV” peach silk brocade jacket
2. Joseph Schildkraut “Duke d’Orleans” wine velvet period coat



Pride and Prejudice (1940)
1. Laurence Olivier “Mr. Darcy” green wool tailcoat
2. Ann Rutherford “Lydia Bennet” Green wool dress
3. Melville Cooper “Mr. Collins” grey wool tailcoat



Raintree County (1957)
Dresses worn by Elizabeth Taylor as “Susanna Drake”



Mary of Scotland (1936)
1. Florence Eldridge “Elizabeth Tudor” green velvet gown
2. Katharine Hepburn red period gown
3. Florence Eldridge “Elizabeth Tudor” black, red and silver gown



Little Women (1949) Designed by Walter Plunkett
1. Edna May Oliver “Aunt March” burgundy dress
2. Elizabeth Taylor “Amy March” lavender dress
3. Katharine Hepburn “Jo” brown dress
Little Women (1949)
Worn by Janet Leigh (Meg) and June Allyson (Jo)



Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)
1. Olivia de Havilland “Lady Penelope Gray”
2. Worn by a Lady of the Court



Diane (1956)
1. Lana Turner “Diane de Poitiers” champagne velvet pearl-encrusted court gown
2. Marisa Pavan “Catherine de Medici” rose velvet court gown



Diane (1956)
1. Lana Turner “Diane de Poitiers – Countess de Breze” black satin gown
2. Marisa Pavan “Catherine de Medici” green velvet and satin court gown



Desirée (1954)
1. Marlon Brando “Napoleon Bonaparte” coronation costume
2. Merle Oberon “Empress Josephine” Coronation gown

Desirée (1954)
Pair of ivory satin Coronation gowns worn by Napoleon's sisters



How the West Was Won (1962)
1. Debbie Reynolds “Lilith Prescott” pleated silk gown with lace overlay
2. Debbie Reynolds “Lilith Prescott” silk floral gown
3. Thelma Ritter “Agatha Clegg” blue silk gown



Romeo and Juliet (1936)
1. Leslie Howard “Romeo Montague” black-velvet doublet and pants
2. Norma Shearer “Juliet Capulet” purple velvet embroidered dress



A Midsummer Night's Dream (1953)
3 court gowns worn by extras



Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964)
1. Hermione Baddeley “Buttercup Grogan” peach silk floral gown
2. Debbie Reynolds “Molly Brown” signature lavender lace gown



Young Bess (1953)
1. Jean Simmons “Queen Elizabeth I” beige silk gown
2. Deborah Kerr “Catherine Parr” blue and gray damask gown



The Swan (1956)
1. Jessie Royce Landis “Princess Beatrix” beaded silk gown and
2. Grace Kelly “Princess Alexandra” ivory silk chiffon evening gown
3. Estelle Winwood “Symphorosa” red silk beaded gown



Magnificent Ambersons (1942)
1. Dolores Costello “Isabel Amberson” aubergine silk-velvet and lace robe
2. Agnes Moorehead “Fanny Minafer silver satin floral pattern ball gown



Mrs. Parkington (1944)
1. Greer Garson “Susie ‘Sparrow’ Parkington ivory lace gown
2. Greer Garson “Mrs. Parkington” portrait



1. Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) worn by Judy Garland “Esther Smith”
2. Anna Karenina (1935) worn by Greta Garbo “Anna Karenina”
3. Beau Brummel (1954) Elizabeth Taylor “Lady Patricia”



1. Gigi (1958) worn by Eva Gabor “Liane d’Exelmans”
2. The Three Musketeers (1948) worn by Angela Lansbury “Queen Anne”
3. Gaslight (1944) worn by Ingrid Bergman “Paula Alquist”





1. Desirée (1954) worn by Jean Simmons “Desirée Clary”
2. Salome (1953) worn by Rita Hayworth “Princess Salome”


View more of the collection
(I've uploaded 100+ photos to photobucket)

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