The Borneo Post

Robin Williams memorabili­a fetches RM25 million in NY

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NEW YORK: Art, fi lm memorabili­a and personal effects owned by the late actor Robin Williams and his wife fetched $ 6.1 million ( RM25 million) at auction in New York on Thursday, four years after his death, Sotheby’s said.

The Oscar-winner, movie veteran, stand-up comedian and television star was one of Hollywood’s most popular entertaine­rs whose death in August 2014 triggered an outpouring of emotion the world over.

More than 2,000 fans and collectors from across the globe registered to bid for some 300 works owned by Williams and his second wife, fi lm producer and philanthro­pist Marsha Garces Williams, Sotheby’s said.

The most expensive lot was Swiss artist Adolf Wolfl i’s “Der San Salvathor” that sold for US$ 795,000, the auction house said.

Stand- out items included a watercolou­r from the movie “Good Will Hunting” that sold for US$ 90,000 and street artist Banksy’s “Happy Choppers” from 2006 that fetched US$ 735,000.

Williams won an Oscar in 1998 for “Good Will Hunting.”

The watercolou­r, painted by the fi lm’s director Gus Van Sant and inscribed to Williams, was displayed in the office of his therapist character Sean Maguire.

Forty-five watches from Williams’ personal collection sold for a combined total of US$ 445,000, including his watch from “Dead Poets Society” (1989) that went for us$ 32,500, the auction house said.

The entire sale fetched US$ 6.1 million, smashing pre- sale estimates of US$ 4.6 million with 95 per cent of all lots sold.

Among the organisati­ons to benefit are The Juilliard School in New York, where a permanent scholarshi­p in Williams’ name will be set up, the Wounded Warrior Project and the Challenged Athletes Foundation.

A father of three, he was known for high- energy, rapidfi re improvisat­ion and clowning, and starred in hit fi lms such as “Good Morning, Vietnam” and “Mrs Doubtfi re.”

Marsha was his second wife. The couple were married from 1989 to 2010, and had two children together.

Williams committed suicide aged 63. His widow and third wife, Susan Schneider, later revealed that he had been suffering from Lewy body dementia, a neurodegen­erative disease that alters mood, movement and provokes hallucinat­ions.

 ??  ?? Williams gestures during a panel discussion at the Television Critics Associatio­n Cable summer press tour in Pasadena, California on July 30, 2009. — Reuters file photo
Williams gestures during a panel discussion at the Television Critics Associatio­n Cable summer press tour in Pasadena, California on July 30, 2009. — Reuters file photo

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