Media Relations
Press Release - January 31, 2023
Prepare to Be Spellbound As Heritage Auctions Offers Property from The Estate of Veronique and Gregory Peck
| Historic Feb. 23 event features scripts, awards, costumes, beloved keepsakes and significant artwork from the Oscar-winning actor and his philanthropist wife DOWNLOAD DIGITAL PRESS KIT
Among the auction's almost 250 offerings are five-time Academy Award nominee Gregory Peck's 1962 leather-bound, photo-filled To Kill a Mockingbird script, for which he won the Best Actor Oscar, and a 35th-anniversary copy of the novel inscribed by its author and the Pecks' dear friend Harper Lee. In fact, many of Peck's personalized book-bound screenplays are included here, with Roman Holiday, Duel in the Sun, Spellbound, Cape Fear and The Omen among the celebrated, storied lots. Each one represents a highwater mark in a career that defined Peck as "a popular movie hero who skillfully projected courage, wholesomeness and vulnerability," as The New York Times noted upon his death at 87 in 2003. Also included are the Golden Globe Awards presented to Peck as the "World Film Favorite of 1954" and for his performance in the 1998 television mini-series Moby Dick; and the H. Huntsman & Sons-made attire Peck wore as the titular character in The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. The suit was just one of the countless Huntsman custom-made for Peck, who almost exclusively wore the Savile Row clothier's bespoke designs for 50 years. This event is filled with gifts from presidents, including a Resistol hat presented to Gregory by Lyndon B. Johnson during a 1968 trip to the Johnson ranch and a photo album documenting the visit, presented to the Pecks and signed and inscribed by LBJ. Here's something, as well, from (entertainment) royalty: the poker table, chairs and chips given to the Pecks by Frank and Barbara Sinatra, who often joined Jack Lemmon, Angie Dickinson and other Golden Age greats for regular games Indeed, so filled was the Peck household with bold-faced names the couple kept guest books signed by the likes of the Sinatras, Barbra Streisand, Gene Kelly, Charlton Heston, Elizabeth Taylor, Sidney Poitier, Quincy Jones, French President Jacques Chirac, Michael Jackson and numerous other icons and legends. Three of those guest books are included in this auction, along with the Lladró Porcelain Pekin Vase that Jackson gave to the Pecks. A bronze bust of Gregory made by Veronique. Gregory's Stetson from I Walk the Line. His shoes, cufflinks, Huntsman overcoat, his boots and spurs. The ornate saddle gifted to Peck by director and longtime collaborator Henry King. The actor's personalized leather-backed director's chair. The aviator sunglasses he wore as MacArthur. The embroidered needlepoint Harper Lee gave to Peck on his 71st birthday. Veronique Peck (née Passani) was the perfect partner for such a man; little wonder Gregory often referred to her as his soulmate following their marriage on New Year's Eve 1955. They met in 1952, when she interviewed Peck for France Soir, and reconnected a short time later when he had some downtime while filming Roman Holiday. The couple, each style icons — Gregory in his gray Huntsman suits, Veronique in her bright Yves Saint Laurent and Courrèges outfits — could not have been better matched. Among her myriad accolades, Veronique was named the Los Angeles Times' Woman of the Year in 1967 after she and Gregory raised more than $50 million for the American Cancer Society. She was also an ardent support of South Los Angeles' Inner City Cultural Center, and following her husband's death took over producing the Gregory Peck Reading Series, during which their famous friends read from good books to raise money for the Los Angeles Public Library. It is the question Anthony is asked more often than any other: What was your father like? Which is a question one would expect posed to the son of Gregory Peck; it's the obvious one, after all, so inevitable. And each time, more or less, Anthony's response is the same. "My dad was exactly who you think he was," Anthony says. "Harper Lee once said the role of Atticus Finch gave Gregory Peck the chance to play himself. Because he was that man." There are, perhaps, younger audiences who may know Peck as the small-town Alabama lawyer tasked with proving the innocence of a Black man wrongly accused of rape. For generations, schoolchildren have been treated to English-class viewings of director Robert Mulligan and screenwriter Horton Foote's 1962 adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird. It served as our introduction to Peck and the kinds of roles to which he was drawn, for the most part — the stalwart, forthright, decent man. Or, the "pathfinder of the straight and narrow," as film historian David Thompson once called him. The man Thompson described as "lethally handsome" may still be the most-viewed actor in the history of middle-school English lit: Among his myriad book-to-big-screen adaptations, he most famously portrayed the loving father in 1946's The Yearling; a journalist determined to expose anti-Semitism in the 1947 adaptation of the novel Gentleman's Agreement; the doomed Harry Street in 1952's The Snows of Kilimanjaro; Captain Ahab in 1956's Moby Dick and, from the same year, the man in Sloan Wilson's The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. But of To Kill a Mockingbird, Peck once told The Los Angeles Times, "The movie is my little pipeline to an entirely other generation." Yet Peck's reputation as "the embodiment of American decency," per The New York Times, often obscures the breadth and depth of his filmography, which is filled with "swashbucklers and comedies and, of course, Westerns," as he once told an interviewer. Designing Woman with Lauren Bacall remains one of the most sophisticated romantic comedies ever made and deserves its due alongside Roman Holiday. Twelve O'Clock High ranks among the best films made about the tolls of war. The Guns of Navarone heralded the modern-day action film. Duel in the Sun remains the sexiest Western ever made; 1950's The Gunfighter portrayed the regretful killer long before Clint Eastwood had his first audition. "We wanted this to be meaningful to others and put something out there that, to us, has real value," Anthony says. "He was so true to himself. He didn't take a single job for the money. He did what he wanted to do and what interested him — and, honestly, that was helping others. It wasn't an act. It wasn't something he did for publicity. That's who he was. Greg had his head in the right place all the time, and the humility he showed in all those roles is really not around too much these days. And we are delighted to remind people of who he was, to us and the world." Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Geneva, Amsterdam and Hong Kong. Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet's most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 1,500,000 registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of five million past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit. For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases . Hi-Res images available: Robert Wilonsky, Communications Director 214-409-1887; RobertW@HA.com |


