Carrie Fisher's Star Wars costume expected to fetch up to $2.7 million at auction

Carrie Fisher's Star Wars costume expected to fetch up to $2.7 million at auction
Princess Leia's outfit, which late actress Carrie Fisher wore in 1977's Star Wars: Episode IV, will go under the hammer at the Propstore Auction.
PHOTO: Facebook/Star Wars

Carrie Fisher's Star Wars costume is expected to fetch up to US$2 million (S$2.7 million) at auction.

The late actress' all-white outfit she donned as Princess Leia in 1977's Star Wars: Episode IV — A New Hope is going under the hammer with Propstore Auction and is expected to fetch a huge sum at the end of the three-day sale, which runs from June 28 to 30.

More than 1,400 items of memorabilia from 300 films and TV shows will be part of the auction, with other lots including Batman's Batpod, Chris Pratt's light-up Star-Lord helmet from Guardians of the Galaxy, the clown doll from 1982 classic film Poltergeist, and Daniel Radcliffe's distressed costume from Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, with the latter expected to fetch at least US$75,000.

The Batpod, used by Christian Bale in The Dark Knight and The Dark Knight Rises, is expected to attract bidding as high as the Princess Leia costume.

Earlier this month, Carrie's daughter, Billie Lourd, paid a touching tribute to the late star — who died in December 2016 — on Mother's Day, admitting even though she's now a mum to Kingston, two, and five-month-old Jackson, she sees the day as being to honour her late mum instead of herself.

The 30-year-old actress, married to Austen Rydell, wrote on Instagram: "Even though I've been a mum for almost three years and now have two kids of my own, the first thing I think of when I hear happy Mother's Day is her. Even though it's been over six years since she died, when I first wake up, this still feels like her day — not mine.

"But as the day goes on I remember it is my day too now. I am a mother to two magical little creatures that I adore to my core and there is nothing that brings me more joy than being their mother.

"And even though she's not here, it's still her day. It's our day now. And that is both sad and weirdly beautiful at the same time. With the magic of life comes the reality of grief. It is all intertwined."

ALSO READ: On Star Wars day, Carrie Fisher receives posthumous star on Walk of Fame

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