Marlon Brando’s Rolex From ‘Apocalypse Now’ Resurfaces - 2 minutes read
Marlon Brando’s Rolex From ‘Apocalypse Now’ Resurfaces
Then, in 2017, Paul Newman’s famous Rolex Daytona made headlines when it resurfaced, and was auctioned off for charity for a staggering $17.8 million. The Fischers heard about the sale and realized the value of their own piece of horological history. “I just feel like it’s lost in our drawer at home,” Ms. Brando Fischer, 47, said from her home in London, where she is a lawyer and mother of two.
In December, the Brando Rolex will be auctioned off by Phillips in New York, with a portion of the proceeds funding a new charitable foundation for children suffering abuse, hardship and neglect. Ms. Brando Fischer said that would be a fitting tribute to her father’s activism on behalf of the disenfranchised. (At the 1973 Academy Awards, Brando famously sent a young Apache woman named Sacheen Littlefeather to decline his best actor Oscar for “The Godfather,” as a protest of Hollywood’s portrayal of Native Americans.)
“He put himself at risk for all his beliefs,” she said. “He hated oppression. He despised racism. I think he was really before his time.”
While Brando generally eschewed the trappings of Hollywood, he did have a thing for nice timepieces. The two-time Academy Award winner flashed a number of Rolexes over the years, including the gold Datejust seen in “Last Tango in Paris.” In a 1989 interview with Connie Chung, he wore two watches at once: a Rolex GMT (not the “Apocalypse Now” watch) on one wrist, and a two-tone Tag Heuer on the other.
Source: The New York Times
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Keywords:
Marlon Brando • Apocalypse Now • Paul Newman • Rolex Daytona • Horology • London • Rolex • New York City • Suffrage • 45th Academy Awards • Marlon Brando • Apache Woman • Sacheen Littlefeather • Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama • Academy Awards • The Godfather • Cinema of the United States • Native Americans in the United States • Oppression • Racism • Marlon Brando • Cinema of the United States • Academy Awards • Last Tango in Paris • Connie Chung • Watch • Rolex • Greenwich Mean Time • Apocalypse Now • Watch • TAG Heuer •
Then, in 2017, Paul Newman’s famous Rolex Daytona made headlines when it resurfaced, and was auctioned off for charity for a staggering $17.8 million. The Fischers heard about the sale and realized the value of their own piece of horological history. “I just feel like it’s lost in our drawer at home,” Ms. Brando Fischer, 47, said from her home in London, where she is a lawyer and mother of two.
In December, the Brando Rolex will be auctioned off by Phillips in New York, with a portion of the proceeds funding a new charitable foundation for children suffering abuse, hardship and neglect. Ms. Brando Fischer said that would be a fitting tribute to her father’s activism on behalf of the disenfranchised. (At the 1973 Academy Awards, Brando famously sent a young Apache woman named Sacheen Littlefeather to decline his best actor Oscar for “The Godfather,” as a protest of Hollywood’s portrayal of Native Americans.)
“He put himself at risk for all his beliefs,” she said. “He hated oppression. He despised racism. I think he was really before his time.”
While Brando generally eschewed the trappings of Hollywood, he did have a thing for nice timepieces. The two-time Academy Award winner flashed a number of Rolexes over the years, including the gold Datejust seen in “Last Tango in Paris.” In a 1989 interview with Connie Chung, he wore two watches at once: a Rolex GMT (not the “Apocalypse Now” watch) on one wrist, and a two-tone Tag Heuer on the other.
Source: The New York Times
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Marlon Brando • Apocalypse Now • Paul Newman • Rolex Daytona • Horology • London • Rolex • New York City • Suffrage • 45th Academy Awards • Marlon Brando • Apache Woman • Sacheen Littlefeather • Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama • Academy Awards • The Godfather • Cinema of the United States • Native Americans in the United States • Oppression • Racism • Marlon Brando • Cinema of the United States • Academy Awards • Last Tango in Paris • Connie Chung • Watch • Rolex • Greenwich Mean Time • Apocalypse Now • Watch • TAG Heuer •