A guitar played by the late George Harrison during the Beatles’ last public performance has been sold for £289,000 in a public auction
Published:
15 September 2003 y., Monday
Harrison played the custom-made Fender Rosewood Telecaster during the filming of the movie Let It Be, said Bill Miller, president of Odyssey Auctions, the California auction house that conducted the sale on Saturday.
The January 30, 1969, performance on the roof of London’s Apple Records was the last time the band performed together in public, Miller said.
The winning bidder was an “anonymous West Coast collector”, the auction house said.
Harrison, 58, died of cancer on November 29, 2001.
The sale in Los Angeles was part of a two-day auction of entertainment and pop culture memorabilia.
Šaltinis:
scotsman.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
More than 6,000 Harley Davidson motorcyclists parade across one of the longest suspension bridges in the world.
more »
A four-year-old Chinese boy is a natural born thriller when it comes to impersonating Michael Jackson's most famous dance moves.
more »
A 13-year-old boy from California becomes the youngest climber to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
more »
This wedding has been billed as a world first. The first time, that is, that a wedding has been presided over by a robot.
more »
The American Weeki Wachee mermaids make their first appearance outside of the U.S. at the London Aquarium.
more »
The world's first gold-dispensing-ATM-style vending machine is up and running in Abu Dhabi.
more »
Sixteen-year-old Jessica Watson gets a hero's welcome in Sydney after completing a journey as the youngest person to sail unassisted around the world.
more »
Bra maker Triumph is plowing new fields with its latest unveiling, focusing on the Japanese dietary staple: rice.
more »
Wallaby keepers in southern England use the Tazmanian marsupials to keep their grass trim.
more »
Craftsman Taufik Tarodji has employed a traditional Indonesian style of drawing, batik, on helmets to increase riding safety.
more »