Media Relations
Press Release - July 1, 2024
Heritage’s July Entertainment Auction Offers Out of This World Spaceships, Costumes and Artwork from ‘Star Wars,’ ‘Star Trek’ and Beyond
Highlights include a Y-wing that took on the Death Star, Leia’s metal bikini, painting of the USS Enterprise by its creator, original Blade Runner poster art and much more DALLAS, Texas (July 1, 2024) — Heritage Auctions’ latest Hollywood/Entertainment Signature ® Auction spans the vast expanses of the final frontier and a galaxy far, far away and everything in between. The July 25-26 event, now open for bidding, is a blast into hyperspace featuring beloved starships, iconic costumes and important artwork from the worlds of Star Trek and Star Wars, as well as the films that influenced those franchises and the entertainment inspired by them. Among the auction’s nearly 600 offerings, collectors will find a Y-wing starfighter that helped take down the Death Star in 1977’s Star Wars, the USS Excelsior that crashed Star Trek: Voyager’s “Flashback,” Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke’s early production script for their trip into 2001: A Space Odyssey and John Alvin’s original concept art for the Blade Runner poster. Here, too, is the costume with which Carrie Fisher had a love-hate relationship: the skimpy metal bikini Princess Leia wore as Jabba the Hutt’s slave in Return of the Jedi. “As Heritage has done time and again, we’re bringing together some of the most important cultural artifacts that have never before been in single place,” says Heritage Auctions Executive Vice President Joe Maddalena. “When you do that, you immediately, instinctively recognize the importance and influence of these science-fiction films and television shows — how they’ve shaped how we look at and think about the world and beyond.” The Y-wing takes flight at Heritage less than a year after a screen-matched X-wing starfighter from Star Wars, from the collection of Oscar- and Emmy-nominated miniature man Greg Jein, realized $3,135,000. This ship is no less special: It was designed by modelmaker Colin Cantwell, among the first artists hired by George Lucas to work on Star Wars. “George wanted the Y-wing to be like a World War II TBF Torpedo Bomber, which had a gunner in the belly, facing back to cover the tail, and on top behind the pilot, and then the pilot facing forward,” Cantwell says in The Making of Star Wars. “So the Y-wing could have that kind of interaction between three people on it.” The X-wing and the TIE Fighters might have become more famous. However, as someone once pointed out on Reddit, the Y-wing was “the old, scrappy fighter that was the backbone of the rebellion.” By a certain segment of the fandom, no less adored is the so-called “Slave Leia” outfit that Fisher had to endure while filming Star Wars: Episode VI — Return of the Jedi. Not surprisingly, Fisher had strong thoughts about the Frank Frazetta-inspired, Nilo Rodis-Jamero-designed, Richard Miller-sculpted outfit made of resin and urethane. She told Rolling Stone before the film’s release that Jedi was meant to transition Leia from her Star Wars “soldier” into someone “more feminine, more supportive, more affectionate. But let’s not forget that these movies are basically boys’ fantasies. So the other way they made her more female in this one was to have her take off her clothes.” “Dignity,” Fisher later told Rinzler of the revealing and unpleasant bikini, “was out of the question.” This costume, which exhibits production wear, was more than just a piece of wardrobe. It became a metaphor, a lightning rod, a side to be taken in the culture wars — not to mention a perennial Halloween costume. Lucasfilm considered pretending it never existed. Essays were written that asked, “Is Star Wars Slave Leia Offensive Or Feminist?” The Hollywood Reporter noted in 2016 that “it has sparked controversy and fascination since its 1983 debut.” Even Fisher came to embrace it as a feminist metaphor, telling The Wall Street Journal that “a giant slug captured me and forced me to wear that stupid outfit, and then I killed him because I didn’t like it.” Greg Jein made this auction’s Excelsior to celebrate Trek’s 30th anniversary: It was used in the Voyager 1996 episode “Flashback,” which takes place aboard the ship piloted by Captain Sulu during the events of the sixth Trek film, The Undiscovered Country. The original big-screen model used in the films had been repurposed and modified so often that Jein fashioned a brand-new Excelsior for the small screen. Yet in person, the miniature — which has been oft-displayed, including at the Museum of Pop Culture in Seattle’s Star Trek: Exploring New Worlds exhibition –somehow remains larger than life. That’s no less true of this auction’s stunning, 5.5-foot-long illuminated USS Enterprise, a collaboration between Jein and Lou Zutavern, Jein’s shop foreman and an expert modelmaker himself. Jein made the hull for an episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine that was supposed to feature Mr. Scott in search of the USS Defiant, first seen in The Original Series episode “The Tholian Web.” When that DS9 episode was shelved before filming, and with the ship unfinished, Zutavern spent a few hundred hours retooling the ship into the Enterprise – a display piece that’s as ready for its closeup as any model ever made. The Enterprise and its crew soar throughout this auction: Here is the only known painting of the Federation’s flagship by the man who designed it, Star Trek’s art director, Walter “Matt” Jefferies. In the 1968 book The Making of Star Trek, Jefferies said the Enterprise’s design “was arrived at by a process of elimination,” based partly on designs he’d seen at NASA, Douglas Aircraft and other aerospace engineering outfits. The result was what Comic Book Resources once called, and rightly so, “sci-fi’s most beautiful starship.” This painting, signed by Jefferies, was ultimately used as the cover of Richard Jefferies’ book Beyond the Clouds: The Lifetime Trek of Walter “Matt” Jefferies, Artist and Visionary, which paid homage to his brother. Peak was one of a handful of movie-poster artists revered by filmmakers, cinephiles and art collectors, alongside Drew Struzan, Richard Amsel and John Alvin. The latter began his career with the Blazing Saddles artwork, gave E.T.’s poster its magic touch and had such a range he created posters for The Lord of the Rings trilogy, the Harry Potter movies, The Lion King, Bo Derek’s “10” and the Dolly Parton-Sylvester Stallone epic Rhinestone. Among Alvin’s most memorable images is the artwork for the Blade Runner poster, featuring Harrison Ford’s cop Rick Deckard, Sean Young’s replicant Rachael and the dystopian, dizzying Los Angeles of 2019, which was as much a character in the film as any actor. Alvin’s original conceptual art for that poster, used as the cover of Criterion Collection’s laserdisc release in 1989, makes its much-anticipated, long-awaited auction debut in this event. As Alvin’s website notes, the poster is as much a nod to noir as it is 1982’s possible glimpse into the distant tomorrow; the poster could have been as much about a movie set in 1959. “The Blade Runner art itself is like all of John Alvin’s original art,” says his website. “It has a way of breaking apart close up and coming together when seen from a distance.” This is no replicant. This is the real thing, the one and only. 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 |