'Succession' auctions off 'Ludicrously Capacious Bag' and other, less capacious props
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'Succession' auctions off 'Ludicrously Capacious Bag' and other, less capacious props
Bidding on memorabilia from the Emmy-winning drama ended on Saturday, drawing over $600,000 in total sales. A viciously mocked tote bag was among the auction’s most expensive items.

by Callie Holtermann



DALLAS, TX.- An auction house in Dallas that is usually stocked with fine art and rare baseball cards now holds a 6-foot dog mascot suit last seen in Episode One of the HBO drama “Succession.” Audiences may recall a nauseated Cousin Greg (Nicholas Braun) putting on the costume and puking through its eyeballs.

The item has been thoroughly cleansed of prop vomit, according to auction staff members, and is now among 236 lots of memorabilia from the show that were sold on the Heritage Auctions website Saturday. The furry mascot fetched just over $7,800.

“Even the eyeholes are mostly clean,” said Robert Wilonsky, a spokesperson for the auction house.

“Succession,” the story of ultrawealthy siblings jockeying for control of their father’s media empire, ended its four-season run in May and is up for 27 Emmys on Monday — the most of any series. Fans and collectors wanting to own a piece of the show were able to bid on luxury suits worn by the show’s cast or the vape pen puffed by its Season Four antagonist, Lukas Matsson (Alexander Skarsgard). Fear not: It comes with a charger.

The auction’s most coveted item may have been a boxy Burberry tote ridiculed by Tom Wambsgans (Matthew Macfadyen) when it is carried to a family event by an interloper. “She’s brought a ludicrously capacious bag,” he says. “What’s even in there, huh? Flat shoes for the subway?”

The bag was viciously memed. On Saturday, it was among the auction’s most expensive items, and sold for $18,750.

Other instruments of humiliation include the Vitamix blender used to douse Kendall Roy (Jeremy Strong) in Season Four and the prop sausages from a hazing ritual in Season Two called “boar on the floor.” Taxidermy boars from the same scene could not be put up for auction because they are “kind of hard to store,” said Monica Jacobs, a prop master for the show.

Even the most mundane props could take weeks to create, Jacobs said. Credit cards were fabricated specifically for the show — don’t get your hopes up, none of them work — and handwritten speeches for a funeral scene were scrawled by a member of the show’s art department. (Strong requested to write his own, she added.)

HBO has previously auctioned off props from the shows “Insecure” and “Watchmen,” joining A24 and Netflix in a crowded field of Hollywood memorabilia auctions that can generate buzz — and profits — long after filming has wrapped.

Sales from the auction totaled $627,825, according to Heritage Auctions, and will be shared between HBO and the auction house.

Items for the auction were selected while Season Four was being filmed in the early months of 2023, said Jax Strobel, a managing director in entertainment for Heritage Auctions. He was invited by HBO to snoop around sets in New York and earmark items — say, the bayonet sword hanging on the wall of Logan Roy’s office — that should be set aside.

“What will a fan remember or recognize?” he said. “The things that show up often, or that have a special moment or memory attached.”

Also up for auction were several of the costumes that helped spawn a frenzy over “stealth wealth” — the subtle flexing of understated pieces that are in fact quite expensive. See: the brown Brunello Cucinelli blazer worn by Kendall in Season Two, which sold for $1,875.

The show’s characters “stand for money,” Michelle Matland, the costume designer, said in an interview last year. “They stand for affluence. They stand for position and posture.”

Matland dressed them accordingly, beginning with their shoes, which she called “the most important article of clothing on a person’s body.” Her selections from brands including Prada, Saint Laurent and Lanvin appeared in the auction at various levels of wear and tear.

Some fans of the show grumbled on social media about the markup on a blue children’s T-shirt from Walmart worn by Roman Roy (Kieran Culkin) in the series finale. The shirt and a corresponding pair of salmon shorts from Old Navy sold for $1,875.

Jacobs, the prop master, is encouraged that the show’s carefully selected signifiers of wealth, status, self-absorption and poor taste are still being appreciated by fans.

Some of them were headaches to procure. She ordered around 20 dried scorpions for the paperweight that Tom gives to Shiv Roy (Sarah Snook) in Season Four, and reshaped their tails into “attack mode.” She dried the scorpions in the oven of her apartment before one, cast in resin, enjoyed just a few seconds as a guest star on prestige TV.

The paperweight sold for $10,000. “My kitchen smelled terrible for a couple weeks,” Jacobs said, “but it was worth it.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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