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Jewelry not only
can charming you as an important accessory, but also has the worth to
collecting.
Recently Taylor sells
her jewelry at auction. A necklace Richard Burton gave the actress sells for
millions more than expected. "These have
always brought me luck," Elizabeth Taylor famously boasted of her
diamonds, in a fragrance commercial. She wasn't kidding. Yesterday her jewelry collection broke
records and toppled expectations when it sold at auction for an estimated $115
million. While Taylor's cache added immense value, the astounding sale had a
lot to do with the merchandise: big rare rocks of the sparkling nature.
Taylor was a life-long collector of
unique gems. Many of the milestones of her life were marked by additions to her
collection, now valued at well over $100 million. There was the diamond brooch
passed down from the Duchess of Windsor. And the diamond encrusted bracelet, a
gift from her best friend in later life, Michael Jackson. On Tuesday that gift sold at
Christie's auction house for almost $200,000 -- four times the price it was
expected to command. The two biggest sales in Taylor's collection were markers
of another famous relationship.
During her two (that's right two)
marriages to Richard Burton, she amassed some of the rarest, most coveted
jewels from around the world. The 33-carat Cartier diamond ring Burton designed
for his bride sold on Tuesday for $8.8 million to a private buyer from Asia.
That was a steal, compared to the $11.8 million dollar necklace, purchased by
Burton for his love in 1969. It was estimated to sell for $2 or $3 million at
Tuesday's auction, but bidders skidded right into the double digits for the
charm. The ruby and diamond necklace, named La Peregrina, boasts a two-inch
pearl that dates back to the 16th century. Burton had paid $37,000 for it at an
auction. When Taylor lost it in her suite at a Las Vegas hotel she spent the
night crawling around the floor in search of it. Burton found it the next day
in her dog's mouth. It's fitting that one of Hollywood's greatest, most
volatile and most over-the-top romances would live on in the form of
highly-coveted gems. But there's another side to Taylor and her sparkling
collection. In addition to being a hopelessly garish romantic, she was also a
generous and powerful AIDS activist. A portion of the proceeds of Tuesday's
auction go to The Elizabeth Taylor AIDS foundation, a non-profit organization
the actress started in 1991 to support people living with the virus. For
Taylor, diamonds offered more than just luck, they paved her legacy.