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The Judy Garland Dress Auction
So there I was sitting in the basement of Pizza on the Park
watching one of my favourite cabaret performers Nathan Martin singing
his way through The Fred Astaire Songbook. Nathan’s performances
are always highly sincere and extremely witty. ‘Heaven,
I’m in Heaven’ Nathan
sang and I was there too, eyes half closed, platform wedges kicked
off, taking dainty sips of red wine and hoovering up stray pizza
crumbs. Afterwards Nathan came and sat at our table and after
a while the talk turned, as it often does in such settings, to
my love affair with Judy Garland.
Of course, many people harbour
an obsession with Judy Garland. They are drawn to the mixture
of Technicolor optimism and high tragedy in her small person,
those twin banners she flaunted which state, uncontrovertibly
that The Show Must Go On but The End is NIgh. My love for Garland
goes further than the next man’s I like to think because
since childhood -when all my feelings ran so high I could barely
function- I identified so intensely with my heroine’s spirit.
In her performances, from my childish perspective, Garland seemed
to side-step all the indignity that goes hand in hand with difficult
feelings. Instead she showed them with pride, she capitalised
on them, presenting her strongly felt uncertainties, her pain
and her disappointments openly and with triumph, as amongst the
strongest and truest things life offers. To me this was a revelation.
I looked up. Nathan was talking to me. I had the feeling he
might have been speaking for some time. ‘Did you know they’re
auctioning the Wizard of Oz dress next week? he inquired, ‘the
gingham one, the one with the straps?’
As I left the house
to attend the auction I said to Tom, ‘I
think whatever that dress goes for, it would still be a really
good investment.’ ‘What facts are you basing that
comment on exactly?” He
smiled, indulgently. This is an example of the sort of financial
acumen known in this house as Susanomics. ‘There will always
be some rich crazy who’ll fork
out silly money for it, is what I mean,’. For a moment
he looked worried, ‘Not you though,’ ‘See you
later,’ I said, mischievously, twirling
my keys on my thumb.
Bonhams was packed. I registered quickly and took a seat. The
lots which preceded the feature item were a selection of film star
autographs. “Good
Luck John Wayne” ‘Regards Humphrey Bogart” that
sort of thing. I have a feeling slightly naive highly prosperous
people exchange these sorts of things at birthday bashes. As
we drew nearer and nearer to the feature item, the atmosphere
became very solemn. ‘ Lot 225,’ the auctioneer
announced, ‘One of the most iconic dresses of all time.’ There
was a second of silence and then the sale room was flooded with
the opening bars of ‘Somewhere
over the rainbow....’ As if by magic a young woman, her
red hair in bunches, stepped out from behind a curtain wearing
the actual dress. It was so overwhelming that tears sprang immediately
into my eyes and looking round the room I saw I was not alone.
The dress looked humble enough, a simple Kansas farm girl’s
dress, the blue gingham darkened almost to black with age. On
the front was one decorative pearl button where the strap met
the bodice and at the back were dark hooks and eyes and a stitched
in slip of white tape bearing the legend Judy Garland 1939.
The bidding began at ten thousand pounds. Although the room
was largely made up of dealers there were a good number of people
like me in the audience with their hearts (and life savings)
in their mouths. We’d
come to pay homage; some of us were worried we might lose control
at the last minute and do something insane, at least we hoped
we might. Some of these people, my people, bid up to the £50,000
mark, before shaking their heads sadly. It wasn't worth losing
your house over, they muttered with the dim sense of an ending.
The bids went to the telephones, seventy thousand... seventy
five.....All the Judy fans, at this point, wanted the dress
to go as high as possible. It seemed like a form of respect.
We willed the numbers to rise. One hundred...one hundred and
twenty. Whatever that dress goes for it’s still a bargain,
I thought. What does £120,000 buy you, anyway? Quite a
good Ben Nicholson. Half a small flat in the Marais. A million
packets of supermarket own-brand crisps. At one hundred and twenty
five thousand the war between the two telephones on opposite
sides of the room was over. The dress was sold. The sale room
filled with deafening applause and the ordeal for Serena, the
dress’s comely model, was over. I felt absolutely elated.
We’d
been through something together, Judy and I. I felt something
very powerful - love I suppose. Dazed I went to the place on
the corner for a drink. They were running a special donut promotion
there. ‘These donuts are baked not fried’,
the label said ‘and contain only 160 calories.’ I
ordered a cappuccino and as an after-thought speared one of the
little low-cal, pallid sweet treats with my finger. It’s
what she would have wanted.
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