:At Bonhams & Butterfields' entertainment memorabilia sale on
June 25, film legend Charlie Chaplin's trademark bowler hat and
cane from his iconic Tramp costume sold for $139,250.
"We are a global company with an international vision of customer
service and sales," said Jon Baddeley, group head of the
collectibles department, "the Chaplin hat and cane is a prime
example of this; although these items were initially consigned in
London, Bonhams draws from corporate resources worldwide to place
a lot where the market is strongest, across a nation or around
the globe."
Chaplin's famous origins of the Tramp persona were concocted
almost spontaneously in the communal male dressing room at
Keystone Studio in Hollywood. As the legend goes, one rainy
afternoon in early February 1914, Chaplin created an inspiring
ensemble of contrasts; he borrowed Fatty Arbuckle's voluminous
trousers, Charles Avery's tiny jacket, Ford Sterling's size 14
shoes, which he was obliged to wear on the wrong feet to keep
them falling off, a too-small derby belonging to Arbuckle's'
father-in-law, and a moustache intended for Mack Swain's use,
which he trimmed to toothbrush size.
According to Chaplin's Hollywood producer and costumier at the
time, Ted Tetrick, the hat and cane were originally at the studio
costume department and were selected by Chaplin personally. The
bowler hat, stamped with manufacturer's details inside the
leather hatband and original studio label stamped "The Chaplin
Studios Inc. California" and ink stamped "Charles Chaplin Film
Corporation." The cane is 32 inches long and made of bamboo.
Charlie Chaplin was without doubt, the most innovative and
recognizable comic of the silent screen.
Additional highlights from part one of the entertainment
memorabilia sale include a world auction record for a two-headed
llama from the original Doctor Dolittle, 1967, starring
Rex Harrison fetched $4,780, a John Lennon inscribed book
Kahlil Gibran brought $9,560, a Walt Disney celluloid from
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs sold for $8,365, and a
saxophone played by former US President Bill Clinton went for
$7,768.
A complete report will appear in a future issue.