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Hepburn's Tracy sculpture nets $316,000

NEW YORK -- A bronze bust of Spencer Tracy sculpted by Katharine Hepburn sold for $316,000 yesterday on the second day of an auction of the late actress's effects.

The bust, sitting on a green onyx and marble pedestal, was purchased by an anonymous telephone bidder, said Patty Fox, a spokeswoman for Sotheby's.

It was the highest price fetched at the two-day event.

After spirited bidding in the room, the competition "came down to two determined bidders on the phone who bidded very slowly and deliberately," Fox said. The sculpture had been estimated to sell for $3,000 to $5,000. Hepburn made the bust of her longtime love and frequent costar in the 1960s. She considered it one of her prized possessions. It sat on a bedside table in her New York City townhouse and often went with her when she traveled.

It was featured in their 1967 movie, "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," Tracy's last film.

On Thursday, a diamond and sapphire brooch given to Hepburn by her one-time beau Howard Hughes sold for $120,000.

The items were among hundreds offered at the auction, including the Hollywood star's furniture, clothing, studio photographs, movie contracts, and membership cards in the Screen Actors Guild and Actors' Equity.

All 222 items offered on the first day sold, fetching nearly $1.8 million.

Hundreds of people filled Sotheby's showroom and competed with phone and Internet bidders to drive the prices far above pre-sale estimates.

Hepburn, who won four Academy Awards, died last June at age 96 at her home in Old Saybrook, Conn.

The auction offered a glimpse into the life of an intensely private star who appears to have been a bit of a pack rat as well.

The cream-colored velvet dress Hepburn wore to her 1928 wedding to Ludlow Ogden Smith sold Thursday for $27,000. The marriage lasted six years.

Two canceled checks to Hepburn's long-ago voice coach sold for $2,280 and $2,400. A suffragist leaflet with a picture of Hepburn's mother on it sold for $2,700.

A seascape painting by Sir William Nicholson, "Mending the Nets," sold for $102,000, and a silver cigarette box engraved with the signatures of the rest of the cast from the Broadway production of "The Philadelphia Story" sold for $57,000.

The buyers of the top lots were anonymous, but Sotheby's said that romance novelist Danielle Steel, bidding by phone, bought three of Hepburn's hats for $3,600.

Craig Bowley, who runs the box office at a Broadway theater, bid unsuccessfully on several items before scoring an early Victorian armchair for $3,200.

"We just renovated our apartment," he said. "We'll put it in a prominent place."

The auction house received a commission of 20 percent of the first $100,000 and 12 percent of anything beyond that.

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