Unless you are living in as a hermit in a cave, you will indeed be aware of this momentous landmark: the release of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Auction houses certainly are and Fab Four lots will be appearing more than ever to take advantage.
One stand-out lot so far has to be the cardboard cut-out expected to
sell for about $60,000 in the Heritage Auctions sale on June 17-18 in
Beverly Hills, California. The black and white image shows one of the 61
people on the instantly recognisable pop art-style Sgt Pepper’s… album cover.
Actor Tony Curtis is the person depicted, and the 14 x 17in (35.5 x
43cm) cardboard head and shoulders portrait (circa late 1950s pose)
is mounted on fibreboard. It is signed on the verso by Curtis (September
2007) in black felt tip: The Beatles chose/ ME For/ Sgt Pepper/ Tony Curtis.
Looking at Michael Cooper’s album cover photograph, Curtis can be
seen in the second row down from the top, between singer Dion DiMucci on
the left and artist Wallace Berman on the right. He is just below WC
Fields and above Oscar Wilde.
In 1967, an album cover usually consisted of a posed photo or piece
of artwork on the front for which the record company usually budgeted
under £100. This sleeve artwork ended up costing nearly £3000, but after
all, it was the Beatles and they got what they wanted.
How it came about
Quotes from The Beatles Anthology (2000) explain the origin
of the cover. Paul McCartney said: “This album was a big production, and
we wanted the album sleeve to be really interesting. Everyone agreed.
“We liked the idea of reaching out to the record-buyer, because of
our memories of spending our own hard-earned cash and really loving
anyone who gave us value for money. So, for the cover, we wouldn't just
have our Beatle jackets on... To help us get into the character of Sgt
Pepper's band, we started to think about who our heroes might be. Well
then, who would this band like on the cover? Who would my character
admire? We wrote a list.
“They could be as diverse as we wanted - Marlon Brando, James Dean.
Albert Einstein - or whoever. So we started choosing - Groucho Marx and
so on. It got to be anyone we liked.”
Paul McCartney added: "We got artistic people involved. I was very
good friends with Robert Fraser, the London art dealer, a guy with one
of the greatest visual eyes that I've ever met. I look the whole
album-cover idea to him.
“He represented the artist Peter Blake, and he was very good friends
with the photographer Michael Cooper. Robert said ‘Let Michael take some
pictures. We'll get Peter to do a background, and then we'll collage it
all together’. I went down to Peter's house and gave him a little
drawing of mine as a starting point. It all came together and we had the
photo session in the evening [March 30, 1967]. We had all the plants
delivered by a florist - people think they’re pot plants - marijuana
plants - but they’re not. It was all straight."
Not all the Beatles’ suggestions made it to the final cover: Gandhi,
Jesus, and Hitler were all excluded for various reasons. EMI feared
lawsuits so a letter was written to everyone asking permission for the
use of their image. That eliminated Leo Gorcey, who demanded a $400 fee.
Gnome from home
Other cut-outs from the cover have come to auction recently.
In April 2015 a garden gnome included on the Sgt Pepper’s cover sold
at Heritage’s Entertainment & Music Memorabilia auction. Signed by
all four members, it made a premium-inclusive $42,500.
The 20in (51cm) tall cardboard cutout was chosen as a memento by an
assistant to cover photographer Cooper, and it was signed by The Beatles
immediately following the shoot. It was auctioned framed, along with an
unopened stereo copy of the LP.
Meanwhile, at Bonhams in June last year, the actor and singer Bobby
Breen cut-out signed later by Sir Peter Blake sold for a
premium-inclusive £25,000.
A lifesize standing figure of Marlene Dietrich sold for a
premium-inclusive £86,250 at Christie’s South Kensington in April 2003.
It was not juts cardboard cut-outs, however. British actress Diana
Dors was one of a handful of waxwork figures included in the front row
of the Sgt Pepper’s cover. The original Diana Dors portrait bust sold at
Cooper Owen Auctions of Kensington, London, for £15,000 in 2005.
Sold by the same saleroom for £81,500 that year were four waxworks of
John, Paul, George and Ringo dressed in their early suits which appear
to the left of the band, as if they had just been to the concert of the
real Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. They had been borrowed from
Madame Tussaud’s waxworks museum for the cover shoot.
Another Beatles highlight of the Heritage June 17-18 auction is a copy of the infamous Yesterday and Today
'sealed butcher cover' LP from Part I of 'one of the most complete US
Beatles vinyl collections in the world: the Stan Panenka Collection'. It
is estimated at $30,000.
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