Poster For Hank Williams 1953 New Years Concert Sells For World Record $150,000
Rarity Found In Ohio Barn And Bought For $5 In 1981 Leads Heritage Auctions’ $1.8 Million Entertainment And Music Event
June 04, 2021
A $5 purchase 40 years ago became a world-record setter. An advertisement for the 1953 Hank Williams show that never happened sold for $150,000 at Heritage Auctions, setting a world record for the most expensive concert poster ever sold at auction. That stunning record-setter, a bright yellow slice of cardboard featuring the Hillbilly Shakespeare, was found in 1981 in a Canton, Ohio, barn and is one of only three known existing copies. Williams unseats the Beatles as record-holder for worlds most expensive poster. In April 2020, a poster for the Fab Fours Aug. 23, 1966, show at Shea Stadium realized $137,500 at Heritage Auctions. The Williams poster led the Dallas-based auction houses May 1 and 2 Entertainment and Music Memorabilia Signature Auction, which realized more than $1.86 million. Nearly 4,000 bidders worldwide participated in the two-day event, which featured more than 1,350 lots that almost completely sold out and included a staggering number of rare rock posters, Elvis Presley-owned pieces, copious Beatles rarities, a prop gun from 1987s RoboCop and items from the Trini Lopez estate, among them some of the guitars he designed for Gibson. Im pleasantly surprised but not shocked at all that this magnificent beast set a new world record, stated Pete Howard, consignment director in Heritages Entertainment and Music Memorabilia category, of the Williams poster. Its not often I use a term like Smithsonian piece for a concert poster, but this is not only one of those, its probably the one. Really, if that museum called me and asked what concert poster they should put on their walls, Id fly right past Elvis, Buddy Holly and the Beatles and tell them, This one. Thats because Hank Williams never made this Jan. 1, 1953, concert at the Canton Memorial Auditorium in Ohio. He died of a heart attack in the backseat of a car somewhere between Bristol, Tenn., and Oak Hill, W.Va., en route to that Ohio show. Williams was 29 when he died. The concert still took place as scheduled, with his backing band, The Drifting Cowboys, and everyone else on the bill offering in Williams absence a heartsick tribute to the man whose songs they performed by way of farewell. This poster for the concert has acquired its own mythic status, in large part because there are but three known copies in existence. And the one in the auction was the first ever to reach the auction block. As a result of its restoration, Ken Burns featured the poster in his documentary, Hank Williams: The Hillbilly Shakespeare. Indeed, its significance cannot be overstated, in large part because so many bootleg versions would appear in the years following Williams death, as fans scrambled for some keepsake. Its beauty, too, is unparalleled, from the portrait of Williams to its mention of Jambalaya (his most recent hit single at the time) and its reference to Williams as Mr. Lovesick Blues and the Star of MGM Records and Films, though, as Bill Malone notes in his essential history Country Music U.S.A., Williams five-year movie contract had not resulted in a motion picture before he died. Hence this posters reputation as one of musics holy grails, as its far scarcer than the Beatles Shea Stadium poster sold last year. But as Howard notes, in this weekends event, 10 concert posters sold for more than $10,000 each, a first for the auction house, whose Entertainment and Music Memorabilia events are filled with such coveted rarities. Among the top sellers was a 1966 Grateful Dead Skeleton & Roses concert poster, graded 9.6 by Certified Guaranty Company and signed by the artist Stanley Mouse, which realized $84,375, and a Dead-Jefferson Airplane poster from a series of shows in Toronto in 1967 that brought $45,000. One of the most famous, or infamous, albums of all time realized $38,750 in this auction: The Beatles 1966 Yesterday and Today, featuring the grinning Fabs clad in butcher smocks covered in raw meat and demolished baby dolls. The cover is perfectly preserved inside the plastic shrink-wrap left intact by the original owner. Among the myriad articles of clothing available in the sale, one stood out: an Army suit worn by Elvis Presley during his two-year stint in the armed forces, from 1958 to 1960, which fetched $21,250. The photo-matched jumpsuit, which bears the PRESLEY name above the right breast pocket, came with a handwritten letter of provenance from Elvis first cousin Patsy Presley Gambill. One of Presleys friends and, briefly, one of his neighbors during Elvis and Priscillas 1967 Palm Springs honeymoon was singer Trini Lopez, whose death last year made international headlines. Heritage Auctions was proud to offer during this event dozens of items from the Trini Lopez estate, among them a ca. 1967 Deluxe Model Gibson Electric guitar, which the Dallas native designed. That guitar, a favorite of Dave Grohl and Noel Gallagher, brought $22,500. Most of the auction was top-lined by entertainment memorabilia, in fact, save for one extraordinary piece from the 1987 film RoboCop, filmed entirely in Dallas, Texas. A prop pistol used by Peter Weller in director Paul Verhoevens film sold for $14,375, more than 14 times its estimate. As the charactor said, Thats nice shooting there. For more information, visit www.HA.com.
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