
Barbara and Bob Crown bid $1 million for the coveted Staglin lot.
|
|
Wine Auctions Feel Recession's Squeeze
Monday, November 24, 2008 |
|
|
Tough Economy Hits Hospices de Beaune Auction
Monday, November 17, 2008 |
|
|
Fighting Faux Wine
Wednesday, November 12, 2008 |
|
|
Third-Quarter Wine Auctions Send Mixed Signals
Tuesday, October 14, 2008 |
|
|
32 Rare South African Gems
Friday, September 19, 2008 |
|
|
Fight Against Counterfeiting Goes Atomic
Thursday, September 11, 2008 |
Naples Wine Auction Rakes in $14 Million for Charity
The top lot went for $1 million, helping make the total amount raised the second-highest in the history of the auction
Jennifer Fiedler
Posted: Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Last Saturday, local teenagers from the Barron Collier High School drum line performed on the lawn of the Ritz Carlton Golf Resort in Naples, Fla., to get the Naples Wine Festival off to a rousing start. And the energy level never flagged. Bids totaled $14 million during the live auction, the second-highest total for the eight-year-old event, which placed first on Wine Spectator's Top 10 U.S. Charity Auctions list for 2007.
The theme this year was "Inspiring Tomorrow's Heroes," a nod to the work the Naples Children & Education Foundation, the beneficiary of the auction, performs with at-risk and low-income children in the local community. On Friday, guests at the three-day event took buses to a charity in Immokalee, Fla., to meet kids supported by money raised in the auction. Festival chairman Don Gunther cited this trip as one of the event's highlights. "I cried so much during the 45 minutes while the children were talking [about their lives] that my shirt was wet," he said. Since its inception, the foundation has donated more than $69 million to local children's charities.
"We're very fortunate that this year we had 23 new winning bidders. That's a good sign—new people that are interested. Says a lot about our staying power," said Gunther.
Handheld noisemakers and volunteers waving brightly colored star cutouts kept spirits high throughout the auction. Bidding was especially fierce for an elaborate package that combined walk-on roles on the TV shows Desperate Housewives and Back to You; tickets to the Oscars; and a trip to Cabo San Lucas. Staglin Family Vineyards put together the lot, which brought in an astounding $1 million from bidders Barbara and Bob Crown.
The top wine lot of the event was a 30-bottle vertical of Shafer that went for $240,000. A set of 75 bottles of 2000 Bordeaux, including offerings such as the Château Pavie St.-Emilion Grand Cru and Château Peby Faugeres St.-Emilion Grand Cru, sold for $180,000.
Other highly competitive lots included a 2009 Bentley Brooklands Coupe, and two Screaming Eagle motorcycles, which ended up going for $450,000 and $240,000, respectively.
Gunther said that energy in the tent and the camaraderie at the auction helped boost the bids. "Everybody congratulates everyone on contributing," he said. "People are trying to get to heaven, not to get something for a good value."
Currently on Wine Spectator Online:
- Wine Talk: K.D. Lang
This Canadian chanteuse indulges her love of wine and food through world travel - Tasting Highlights: California Rhône
Nine exceptional new Syrahs and Grenaches from Santa Barbara and Paso Robles - Unfiltered: Napa's Copia Shuts Its Doors, for Now at Least
Plus: Drinking wine to feed hungry children and an Elvis sighting in Paso Robles - Health Research Looks to Grapes
Scientists hope to unlock the potential of compounds found in grapes and wine - Wine Shipping Restrictions in Massachusetts Ruled Unconstitutional
Both in- and out-of-state wineries may now ship directly to Massachusetts residents; volume caps struck down
Advertisement

