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ABOVE: The sequined 'ruby slippers' worn by Judy Garland in the Wizard of Oz. BELOW: The slippers commemorating the legendary movie made by Harry Winston, comprising 1,350 carats of rubies and 50 carats of diamonds.



  Judy Garland's ruby slippers still cast a magic spell, even if the rubies aren't real


March 9, 2012


A pair of ruby slippers from the 1939 movie The Wizard of Oz has been acquired by a consortium of movie personalities led by Leonardo DiCaprio and presented as a gift to the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles. The slippers are believed to be the ones Judy Garland wore when she filmed the scene on her return from Oz to Kansas.

The shoes were reportedly discovered on the MGM lot in the early 1970s and sold in 1988 to a private collector. It is the not the only pair in existence. Another is on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of History in Washington, a second is in the hands of a private owner and a third was stolen in 2005 from the Judy Garland Museum in Grand Rapids, Minnesota.

No figure was released regarding the price paid by DiCaprio and others in the consortium, who reportedly included movie director Steven Spielberg and Terry Semel, former chairman and CEO of Warner Brothers and Yahoo! But the auction house Profiles in History, which handled the sale as part of its Hollywood Icons auction, had estimated earlier that the slippers would sell for between $2 million to $3 million.

The problem is that the shoes do not include actual rubies, but rather sequins sewn onto white silk that had been dyed red. There is real pair of ruby slippers, but they were created in 1989 by Harry Winston, having been crafted by Javiar Barerra, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the original release of the legendary movie.

The Harry Winston pair includes 4,600 rubies with a total weight of 1,350 carats, and just for good measure includes another 50 carats of diamonds. When they were unveiled for the first time at Manhattan's Trump Towers by Harry Winston's then-chairman Ronald Winston, they were described as the world's most expensive shoes.

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