(19 Mar 1999) English/Nat
Just days before the American Academy Awards, Christie's in New York auctioned off 54 dresses, evening gowns and ensembles worn by famous actresses at earlier Oscars.
The charity auction raised nearly 800 thousand dollars for the American Foundation for AIDS research.
The highest price - 167-thousand-500 dollars - was fetched by Elizabeth Taylor's dress, worn at the 1969 Academy Awards and designed by Edith Head.
The Academy Awards, affectionately known as the Oscars, have become synonymous with glamour and each ceremony is now renowned for presenting the pinnacle of the year's fashion.
Christie's auction house in New York decided to use this pseudo fashion event to host a charity auction called "Unforgettable: Fashion of the Oscars" to benefit the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR).
The gala event presented a stunning selection of 54 of the most beautiful -- and sometimes the most outrageous -- dresses worn to the Academy Awards by some of the most distinguished actresses.
The highest price was fetched by a periwinkle blue and violet faille crepe evening dress designed by Edith Head and worn by Elizabeth Taylor in 1969.
A dress by Madonna brought the second highest price, at nearly 80 thousand dollars.
The third highest price was paid for a dress worn by Kate Winslet, nominated for best supporting actress in Titanic.
Elizabeth Taylor, Cher, Glenn Close and Sharon Stone were just some of the Academy Award winners, nominees, presenter and guests who opened their closets and donated their Oscar couture gowns to help amfAR's work in AIDS research.
After rigorous bidding, Mattel Inc. bought the dress for over 150 thousand dollars, but not without stiff competition from A-M-C, American Movie Classics.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"Well we had thought that it would go for around a hundred thousand to maybe a hundred and twenty five thousand. So we were prepared to go up, a little over budget to 140, and lost. But it's all for a good cause."
SUPER CAPTION: Kate McEnroe, President, AMC and RC
Madonna's black silk faille and dove-grey tulle evening ensemble, designed by Olivier Theyskens and Jean Paul Gaultier brought in the second highest price of the evening, just shy of 80 thousand dollars.
The dress worn by Kate Winslet, nominated for best supporting actress in 1997 for her role in "Titanic," brought in the third highest price of 57-thousand-500 dollars.
Designed by Alexander McQueen for Givenchy, the forest green silk crepe marocain and duchesse silk satin evening ensemble was bought by American Movie Classics.
Almost immediately after appearing in the dress, Winslet was dubbed a "Hollywood heavyweight, " implying she was fat by the industry's standards.
For this reason, Lane Bryant, the largest plus-size retailer in the U-S had high hopes for acquiring the dress, in order to make a statement about what it calls "the outrageous standards set for women's bodies at the end of the 20th century. "
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"Well, we really wanted to bid on the Kate Winslet dress because she wore it at a time when everyone was calling her fat. And Lane Bryant starts at a size 14. And we really wanted to buy the dress, travel with it around the country and show our customers how skewed and warped Hollywood's sense of body image is. And this is a beautiful, voluptuous woman, and she looked gorgeous."
SUPER CAPTION: Catherine Lippincott, Spokeswoman, Lane Bryant
Other highlights of the auction included a dress made of 171 gold American Express credit cards, worn by Lizzy Gardiner at the 1994 Academy Awards.
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