YORK, PA.- Premium-quality merchandise and strong competition were the winning combination that drove Hakes Americana & Collectibles Auction to a $1.1 million finish on November 12, 2015. The online double-header with two days of feverish bidding divided by an intermission day featured some of the finest examples of rare pop culture items ever to appear at auction.
Although the term pop culture is ubiquitous these days, it has always been in Hakes vocabulary, and in our 48 years of operation, weve never assembled a more impressive group of collectibles falling under that heading than what was organized for this sale, said Alex Winter, President of Hakes. The response from our bidders exceeded even our own lofty expectations, and we achieved some truly staggering prices on many pieces.
Superman soared to the number-one slot when Frank Frazettas (American, 1928-2010) original specialty artwork depicting the Man of Steel sold for $35,420, a price well beyond the estimate of $10,000 to $20,000. The professionally matted 15½ by 17½-inch watercolor of an airborne Superman was one of many choice auction items that came to Hakes from the late Ken Franco Toscaninis collection.
One of the predicted stars of the November sale was a framed and matted original album cover for the Beatles 1964 studio album A Hard Days Night, autographed on verso by all four members of the legendary English band. Multiple-autographed Beatles material is extraordinarily rare, and in the case of the LP in Hakes sale, it came with not only a Hakes Certificate of Authenticity (COA) but also a Letter of Authenticity from Frank Caiazzo, the worlds top authority on Beatles handwriting. The signed album closed at $27,781.
Superman also claimed third place in the auction when a rare Superman linen-mounted one-sheet for the 1948 movie serial starring Kirk Alyn realized $16,761. It came from the Toscanini collection, as did a colorfully pictorial shipping carton that originally contained 20 boxes of Bowmans Superman 1-Cent Super Bubble Gum and Picture Card sets. One of only two examples known to Hakes, it landed at $12,525. Other Superman highlights included: a die-cut promotional folder in the shape of the superhero, $9,260; a circa-1949 Superman Official Junior Suspenders display box with contents, $8,625; and a rare Superman Cut-Outs book, $7,590.
A happy unbirthday party was declared when an Alice in Wonderland Mad Hatter Regal China prototype teapot decimated its $1,000-$2,000 estimate to sell for an astonishing $15,306. The heavily glazed vessel was cleverly designed so that the zany, top-hatted characters body shape followed the teapots classical bulbous form.
From the exceptional but little-known superhero collection of Chicagoan Gary Keller, a boxed Remco Official Green Hornet Working Black Beauty Dashboard set crushed its $2,000-$5,000 estimate, steering to $14,055. The dashboards design incorporates such features as a moving steering wheel, moving speedometer, motorized windshield wipers, working horn, workable gearshift, electric directions signals, glove compartment, turning radio knobs, cigarette lighter and ignition.
The rarity and condition of key items from the Gary Keller collection played a major role in our achieving another million-dollar-plus sale, Winter remarked. Those items included an Ideal Batman Play Set, $10,247; a Hot Wheels Line 1970 store display with 16 die-cast replica vehicles, $6,072; and two windowpane-boxed Posin Dolls from Ideals quartet of Super Queens. Wonder Woman raced to $5,313; while Aquamans wife, Mera, was bid to $4,898.
Political memorabilia was another red-hot category. An important 1948 Thurmond/Wright Dixiecrats States Rights the Constitution jugate button sold for $7,653. From an earlier era, a Taft Good Luck 1908 swastika jugate button spurred strong competition, earning $5,514 against a $1,000-$2,000 estimate. A Bryan/Stevenson real photo jugate button retired at $4,428.
A rare Black Panther poster with a photographic image of founders Huey Newton and Bobby Seale in front of the groups storefront headquarters in Oakland, Calif., was a popular entry, selling for $4,427 against a $400-$1,000 estimate. A circa 1969 Emory Douglas poster depicting a black female revolutionary with a rifle and spear swept past its $400-$700 estimate to settle at $1,984.
Concert posters flexed their muscles and attracted stunning prices, just as they did in Hakes July 14-16 sale. As was the case with our summer auction, many posters we offered were extremely rare examples that just dont turn up at auction, said Winter. A thin cardboard poster for The Doors Oct. 14, 1967 show at Susquehanna University (Pa.) more than quadrupled its high estimate at $9,336. Another vividly visual flashback to the Sixties, a Jimi Hendrix Experience concert poster from Germany with artwork by Gunther Kieser blazed to $6,600. Other encore-worthy posters included a Joe Tex and Percy Sledge advert for a 1968 concert on segregated beaches in Annapolis, Md., $5,060; a 1958 November Dance doo-wop poster promoting a fraternity dance in New Jersey $3,985; a late-1960s Aretha Franklin poster, $3,479; and a psychedelic-style first printing announcing Creams 1968 concerts at San Franciscos Winterland, $1,961.
Sports collectors vied for a 1960s Baltimore Colts retailers-display bobbing head that closed at $5,983. The large, impressive figure stands 13-1/2, much taller than the typical 5-inch to 8-inch figures that were popular at that time.
Baseball cards always do well at Hakes, this time leading off with a 1924-1925 Aguilitas #869 Oscar Charleston (PSA Poor 1) that realized $5,509. The Cuban card produced for the Aguilitas Cigarette brand features a glossy photo front with the text Charleston Base Ball.
Other auction stars included a Marx For Toys pin depicting Santa in a Spirit of 1927 bi-plane, which sold for $3,289 (a record for any Santa pinback); Jack Kirbys original art for Page 28 of the comic book Journey Into Mystery #107, $10,120; a 1930s French carousel figure of Mickey Mickey Mouse, $7,475; and a large-size 1930s Mickey Mouse and friends sand pail from the Doug and Pat Wengel collection, $5,693.
To contact Hakes about consigning to a future auction, call toll-free: (866) 404-9800 or (717) 434-1600. Email: hakes@hakes.com. To view the fully illustrated catalog for Hakes Auction #216, visit
www.hakes.com.
All prices quoted in this report are inclusive of 15% buyers premium.