Media Relations
Press Release - July 3, 2024
A Chance to Own Joey Pants’ Pants – and Boots, Scripts, Props and Much, Much More – as Actor Joe Pantoliano Brings His On-Screen History to Heritage Auctions
Signed and annotated scripts, props, costumes and inscribed posters from ‘The Matrix,’ ‘Bad Boys,’ ‘The Fugitive,’ ‘The Sopranos’ star in July 25-26 Entertainment event DALLAS, Texas (July 3, 2024) — Heritage is honored to present the first-ever auction that lets you step into Emmy Award-winning actor Joe Pantoliano’s shoes — boots, actually, the same pair he had custom-made before his Cypher slipped into The Matrix and sold out Morpheus for a bite of steak and a little dough. There’s certainly no doubt to whom these once belonged. Look only at the bootstraps: “PANTS,” they say, as in Joey Pants, the moniker by which the actor’s been known since he was a little kid in Hoboken and no one could pronounce Pantoliano. “The Wachowskis really liked the boots when I went to my first fitting in Australia in 1998,” Pantoliano says of the intricately tooled leather-and-suede Falconhead-made boots that also bear the black-ink markings “Cypher #1” and “FH-198.” Pantoliano moved to Los Angeles in the 1970s and was enamored of the boots and suits made by Nudie’s Rodeo Tailors for Hollywood’s famous and fabulous singers and actors. When he could afford it, he got his boots custom-made by Falconhead, joining the likes of John Wayne, Jimmy Dean, Gene Autry and his other big-screen idols outfitted in hot-damn western wear. “I just got them,” Pantoliano says of those boots, “and I wanted to wear them.” From Pantoliano’s collection comes a contender for the most coveted piece: a first edition of Budd Schulberg’s novel Waterfront that the author autographed for Sammy Davis Jr. upon its publication in 1955, then signed 51 years later for Pantoliano. The Oscar-winning author’s inscriptions alone make for some captivating reading: “For Sammy Davis, Jr. / A great artist who / sings song into life and / life into song. Godspeed all the / way, from your friend, / Budd Schulberg / Sept. 9, 1955,” he wrote more than half a century ago. Decades later, the book landed in the hands of Pantoliano, a collector of fine and rare books. After the two men spoke, Schulberg wrote again in this copy: “For Joe Pantoliano, Here we go again. It’s an honor to meet his distinguished son of Hoboken. I’ve enjoyed our talk today. Here’s to many more. With my admiration and warmest wishes / Budd Schulberg / 5/5/06.” “My objective was to be as different as possible so I could get the next job,” Pantoliano says of his vast and varied filmography. “I didn’t want to overstay my welcome. I’ve gotten incredibly lucky, even now, working on projects that are still challenging and fun. It’s the greatest job if you can get it.” For years, most of this material had remained in boxes stashed out of sight — keepsakes from a career that began on the stage when Pantoliano was cast in 1974 as Billy Bibbit in a touring production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, his heavily annotated script from which appears in this event. As his career took off in the early 1980s, with roles ranging from the small-screen M*A*S*H to Guido the Killer Pimp in Risky Business and Francis Fratelli in The Goonies, from which this personalized chairback hails, Pantoliano stashed away the mementos and memories he’s finally prepared to share. “When people ask about provenance — where do these things come from? — this is the best source you can have,” says Heritage Executive Vice President Joe Maddalena. “Joe’s a cultural icon, one of the most beloved members of The Sopranos cast and in movies we all remember. All of this material comes from him. This is as good as it gets. This is the gold standard.” There are several significant Matrix items in this auction, including Pantoliano’s annotated script signed by the cast (including Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne and Carrie-Anne Moss) accompanied by a spiral notebook full of candid on-set photos. There’s also a copy of the special effects storyboard bible signed by storyboard artist Steve Skroce and conceptual designer Geofrey Darrow; and Cypher’s sunglasses, which he wears on this cast-and-crew-signed advance poster — and were Pantoliano’s. “I bought them at an LA Eyeworks. They were my prescription. I needed ’em to see!” He laughs. Particularly special to the actor is the Nebuchadnezzar bulkhead dedication plaque, of which only a few were made. The small handful was presented to some cast and crew members as a thank-you for the film’s success — and cultural impact. Pantoliano, of course, had worked with the Wachowskis on their first film, 1996’s Bound, which finally received its 4k digitally restored Criterion Collection release in June and has rightfully received yet another round of critical huzzahs in the weeks since. Pantoliano’s meticulous money-laundering Caesar was something of a precursor to his award-winning turn as Ralph Cifaretto, a mobster for whom brutality is the sole solution when betrayed by his girlfriend Violet (Jennifer Tilly) and her lover Corky (Gina Gershon). From that film, Pantoliano offers one of Caesar’s suits and his annotated script signed and inscribed by several castmates and crew members, including Tilly and Gershon. For years, all of this material sat in boxes, stored out of sight and never seen again until it reappeared in this auction. As the actor became what Vanity Fair recently called a man who’s “almost impossible to miss,” Pantoliano — for whom Hollywood offered salvation at first and success later — realized he had an “accumulation of things that I thought would define me.” But when he and his wife, Nancy, began downsizing in recent years, the actor realized it was time to share those memories with the people who helped define him as an actor: the fans. “Many of my movie-star friends collected everything, and it’s in warehouses that are hermetically sealed, while my stuff was in my mother’s wedding hope chest,” Pantoliano says with a small laugh. That’s the last place he wanted this material to wind up. He would much rather have it land in the hands of those who helped make him among his generation’s most recognizable, in-demand and adored actors. “It’s tremendously gratifying that someone would even want this stuff,” says the man called Joey Pants. Pantoliano has played his share of good guys, too, which is why, among the treasures of Joey Pants, there are some badges, including those from his charming turn as Deputy U.S. Marshal Cosmo Renfro in Andrew Davis’ 1993 The Fugitiveand its sequel U.S. Marshals. There are two more, along with an ID badge, from the franchise that saved Hollywood this summer: the Bad Boys movies, in which Pantoliano’s Captain Howard lost his life in Bad Boys for Life but was so beloved by fans he was resurrected to Ride or Die again this summer. Some fans know him from those movies, especially younger audiences; others, like maybe their parents, remember him as that guy from The Sopranos or The Matrix or Running Scared, Risky Business, Eddie and the Cruisers. For decades Joey Pants has been “almost impossible to miss,” absolutely; he’s harder still not to remember from somewhere, anywhere, everywhere. “Celebrity wasn’t anything that I coveted,” Pantoliano says. “I wanted to be a good actor, and I wanted to be in the movies. Celebrity was some kind of empty byproduct that had no real value to me. But the armorist on my latest project recently said, ‘I would be remiss if I didn’t tell you how important The Goonies was to me as a young kid and how it was my go-to movie in my adolescence and into adulthood.’ Hearing that makes me smile.” Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, Hong Kong and Tokyo. Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet's most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 1,750,000 registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of 6,000,000 past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit. For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases . Hi-Res images available: Robert Wilonsky, VP Public Relations and Communications 214-409-1887 or RobertW@HA.com |