Whitney Houston. AP photo
There had to be an auction, but so soon?
A black velvet dress that belonged to Whitney Houston and a
pair of earrings she wore in "The Bodyguard" will be sold to
the highest bidder next month.
Celebrity auctioneer Darren Julien says the pieces and other
Houston items became available after the singer's unexpected
death on February 11 and will be included among a
long-planned sale of Hollywood memorabilia such as Charlie
Chaplin's cane, Clark Gable's jacket from "Gone With the
Wind" and Charlton Heston's staff from "The Ten
Commandments."
Julien said celebrity collectibles often become available
after their namesakes die.
"It proves a point that these items, they're an investment,"
Julien said. "You buy items just like a stock. Buy at the
right time and sell at the right time, and they just increase
in value."
But could it be too soon to profit from Houston's passing?
She was just buried on Saturday.
"It's a celebration of her life," Julien said. "If you hide
these things in fear that you're going to offend someone -
her life is to be celebrated. These items are historic now
that she passed. They become a part of history. They should
be in museums. She's lived a life and had a career that
nobody else has ever had."
Houston is "someone who's going to maintain a
collectability," he said. "For people who are fans of Whitney
Houston and never would have had a chance to meet her and
never got to talk to her, these are items that literally
touched a part of her life. They are a way to relate to her
or be a part of her life without having known her."
The singer's floor-length black dress is valued at $US1000
but likely to collect much more. Same goes for the vest she
wore in "The Bodyguard," listed at $400, and the faux-pearl
earrings that start at $600.
Houston fans and other collectors can bid online, by phone or
in person during the "Hollywood Legends" auction on March 31
and April 1. Lots will be shown during a free public
exhibition beginning March 19 at Julien's Auctions in Beverly
Hills, Calif., just blocks from the Beverly Hilton Hotel,
where Houston died at age 48.
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