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Few items of fictional clothing are more iconic and easily recognisable as the ruby slippers
worn by Judy Garland in the 1939 classic, The Wizard of Oz. Thanks to a combination
of human error, poor record keeping and a sticky fingered ne’er-do-well, these simple
pieces of footwear are now considered one of the most valuable film props in history.
Figuring out exactly how much the slippers are worth is no small feat because there are
currently only four pairs known to exist and they very rarely appear at auctions. To make
things even more difficult, one of the pairs was stolen from the Judy Garland Museum in
Minnesota in 2005, meaning there are only three pairs currently in existence that we
know the whereabouts of.
One of these pairs currently resides at a permanent exhibit in the Smithsonian where
they’re displayed amongst other treasures from pop-culture history like one of Mr Rogers’
sweaters (made by his mother), one of Michael Jackson’s hats, and one of Tony Hawks’
skateboards. This particular pair were given to the museum by an anonymous donor who is
believed to have bought them in an MGM auction in 1970 for $15,000 (about $88,000 today).
A second pair is currently in the possession of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences who acquired them in 2012 when a collection of Hollywood bigwigs including
Leonardo DiCaprio and Steven Spielberg pooled their pocket change together to buy them at
auction. The price they paid has never been revealed, but it’s rumored to be around
the $3 million mark.
The third known pair were purchased by a private collector called David Elkouby in 2000 from
an auction at Christie’s for $666,000 (Almost $1,000,000 today). Elkouby has yet to display
the slippers and seemingly has no desire or need to sell them.
The final, stolen pair has been missing since 2005. However, in the years since, an anonymous
and apparently very wealthy fan of the movie has put up a million dollar reward for information
leading to their return.
As for how many pairs of the slippers existed in the first place, according to the film’s
producer, Mervyn LeRoy, between 5 and 10 pairs were made, each sporting slight variations
to better accommodate the lighting and look of different sets. For example, several pairs
had a thin layer of orange felt along the sole to muffle the sound of steps and dancing.
The pair reserved for close-ups didn’t need this felt and due to their minimal use, are
in amazing condition, sporting only slight scuffs from Garland clicking her heels.
All of the shoes were created by legendary costume designer Adrian Adolph Greenberg who
crafted them from plain white pumps that were dyed a deep shade of red before being coated
in dark “reddish-orange” fabric, onto which thousands of sequins and eventually
a large bow were attached.
Adrian coated the pumps in dark red sequins instead of bright red ones because the Technicolor
process would have made bright red shoes look orange on screen. Likewise, the sparkling
effect seen throughout the movie was added in post-production using optical effects.
For this reason, surviving examples of the shoes are kind of underwhelming compared to
how they look on screen.
Speaking of Technicolor, in the original Wizard of Oz novel, the shoes Dorothy wears are silver.
However, the film’s screenwriter, Noel Langley, decided to make them bright red to better
take advantage of Technicolor; he felt that silver shoes wouldn’t stand out against
the bright yellow road Dorothy would be standing on for nearly half of the movie.
Although a great deal of care was put into making the shoes, after filming wrapped, the
known surviving pairs were shoved into a wardrobe somewhere deep in MGM’s expansive costume
department where they remained until the aforementioned 1970s bulk auction.
Seemingly the only person aware of the value of the shoes was a man called Kent Warner,
an MGM costumer designer who quietly pilfered hundreds of items from MGM over the years,
including a pair of the ruby slippers which he took while helping catalogue items for
the 1970 auction.
Warner kept the best pair of the ruby slippers for himself, never displaying or sharing them
with the public until he sold them in 1981 (this is the pair currently believed to be
in the hands of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences).
Interestingly, until the 1970 MGM auction, it was believed that only one copy of the
shoes existed and they belonged to a woman called Roberta Bauman who won them by placing
second in a movie trivia contest in 1949. Bauman’s pair is considered to be the least
valuable since they are believed to have belonged to Judy Garland’s stunt double, Bobbie Koshay,
who had slightly larger feet. This is the pair purchased by Mr. Elkouby in 2000 for
$666,000.