The fourth episode of Andor, which aired last week, introduced a bunch of different characters in both the Rebel and Imperial side of the rising conflict. “I’m sure it will be a big hit because I’m sure everybody will love it, but it won’t make any difference to us other than more people coming to the market,” he said.Andor actor Ebon Moss-Bachrach, of Girls and The Bear fame, recently spoke with The Playlist and discussed joining the Star Wars universe and more. He said many are reliving their youth, and regardless of whether the new series of “Star Wars” movies is a hit, the market for collectibles will keep growing. “’Star Wars’ memorabilia ranks at the upper echelon, it runs at the top, alongside ‘The Wizard of Oz’, ‘Citizen Kane’, and ‘Casablanca’,” Brian Chanes of Profiles in History, the California auctioneer, told Reuters.Įven Sotheby’s auctioneers, renowned for dealing in multi-million dollar paintings, is in on the act, offering the “Star Wars” miscellany of a Japanese collector on Dec 11.Ĭhanes said most of his buying customers are “private individuals with deep pockets”, but Bryan Goodall, chairman of Vectis, said his clientele come from all walks of life – from people who may spend a few hundred pounds to others who will spend thousands. What’s happened to the “Star Wars” collecting market is that it has gone from being unfashionable, when Stevens was able to pick up cases of stuff for peanuts, to becoming the source of some of the most sought-after items in the collector galaxy. “Once you get two people who are desperate for an item, then where do you stop?” she said. The company makes a 20 percent commission on sales. “We’ve been blown away by some of the prices,” said Vicky Weall, the managing director of Vectis, which is stacked to the rafters with collectible toys of all sorts, including dolls, stuffed animals, toy trains and the increasingly valuable “Star Wars” items. One of the oddest items at Vectis is an inch-long (2.5-cm) piece of plastic that is a prototype for a Boba Fett rocket, never produced, and estimated at 800-1,200 pounds. People even look at some of these cardbacks that we sell as works of art.” “It’s actually a way of life and a cultural thing. “It isn’t anything that’s just a toy,” she said. The most valuable toys are those that are sealed in their original packages from decades ago, having never been used, Kathy Taylor, Vectis’s “Star Wars” expert, said, adding: “It’s not a normal retail situation we’re in here.” Various collectors’ hoards of “Star Wars” memorabilia, from robots, to spaceships, “Death Star” pencil sharpeners and on to packaged figurines, are piled up in Vectis, which will hold another in a series of online auctions of about 700 pieces on Dec 8. “I’d like to say I had some kind of vision but I didn’t, I collected for myself,” Stevens told Reuters, adding that some items he had collected had been about to be thrown away. With the proceeds of that, and mainly other toys anyone could have purchased for pocket money at the time, Stevens and his wife bought a house – for cash. What collectible toys specialist Vectis Auctions Ltd sold in January on behalf of British collector Craig Stevens was a small plastic replica of bounty hunter Boba Fett, a cult character from “Star Wars” sequel “The Empire Strikes Back” (1980).
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