Fierce bidding for Cabaret costume

Liza Minnelli won as Oscar for playing Sally Bowles in the 1972 film Cabaret. Image: YouTube
Liza Minnelli won as Oscar for playing Sally Bowles in the 1972 film Cabaret. Image: YouTube

Liza Minnelli's signature Cabaret bowler hat, boots and halter top vest have fetched a high price at a Los Angeles auction.

The three-day "Love, Liza" auction in Los Angeles, coming from the vast personal collection of the actress and singer, raised more than $US1.2 million ($NZ1.7 million), with some items selling for more than triple their pre-sale estimates.

The hat, boots and halter top vest sold for $US81,250 ($NZ 119,000) while her hand-annotated shooting script for the 1972 movie Cabaret sold for $US15,000, organisers Profiles in History said on Wednesday.

 

Liza Minnelli said earlier this year she wanted to downsize her life. Photo: Getty Images
Liza Minnelli said earlier this year she wanted to downsize her life. Photo: Getty Images

The more than 1700 lots included items belonging to Minnelli's parents - actress Judy Garland and film director Vincente Minnelli - and hundreds of the singer's hats, scarves and Halston designer outfits from the 1970s.

Garland's blond Dorothy wig from The Wizard of Oz, which was later replaced by simply brown braids, went for $US17,500 - 16 times the original estimate. Vincente Minnelli's photo collection spanning his film career fetched $US11,875.

Profiles in History declined to release information on the buyers.

Memorabilia from Cabaret, which brought Minnelli an Oscar for her performance as Berlin nightclub singer Sally Bowles and sent her career rocketing, attracted some of the fiercest bidding.

Her shooting script for the musical was estimated to fetch just $US2000 ahead of the sale, while her iconic boots and bowler hat costume had an estimate of $US6000.

Minnelli (72) said earlier this year that she wanted to downsize her life and sell off the collection she had amassed over decades and kept in more than six locations.

"I woke up one day and thought, 'Honey, you ain't gonna wait till you've bought the farm and leave your life on someone else's doorstep.' So it was time to go there, and I have, and it feels good," she is quoted as saying in the auction catalogue.

Some of the proceeds of the sale will benefit the Great American Songbook Foundation which aims to preserve America's musical legacy.

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