The Daily Telegraph

Volume of Shakespear­e plays sells for record $10m

- By Dominic Penna

THE first collection of William Shakespear­e’s plays has sold for almost $10 million, a new auction world record.

Shakespear­e’s First Folio, a rare volume dating from 1623 that initially brought t ogether Shakespear­e’s plays, fetched $9.97 million yesterday, Christie’s auction house in New York confirmed.

The auction price marked a new world record for any printed work of literature at auction, Christie’s said, surpassing t he previous re cord of $6.16 million for another copy of the first copy that was auctioned in 2001.

The identity of the new buyer of the collection, which was given an estimated value of around $6 million prior to its sale, is not currently known.

Mr William Shakespear­e’s Comedies, Histories and Tragedies was compiled seven years after the death of the playwright and poet by his friends.

Containing 36 of the Bard’s plays, including Macbeth, Twelfth Night and Antony and Cleopatra, it is one of just six complete copies in private hands.

“Idioms such as ‘ be-all and the endall’ and ‘one fell swoop’, both from Macbeth, might never have entered the popular lexicon if not for this literary masterpiec­e,” Christie’s said prior to the auction.

The compilatio­n had been put up for auction by Mills College, a private women’s liberal arts college in California, and was the first complete copy to come on the market for almost two decades.

The First Folio contains all of the Shakespear­ean works except for Pericles, Prince of Tyre, and The Two Noble Kinsmen, in addition to the playwright’s two “lost plays”.

Eighteen of the plays had previously been published in t he f orm of quarto pamphlets.

However, the book is considered to be the only reliable text for more than half of the works featured, and it set down 18 plays for the first time.

An initial 750 copies of the First Folio were initially printed across a two-year period in the 17th century. Of these, 235 are currently thought to still exist. One edition sold by Oxford University in 2003 fetched £3.5 million at auction.

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