Who owns the original Rudolph puppet?

Attention fans of the classic Christmas special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: two of the original stop-motion puppet figures from the 1964 television film are coming to auction on November 13, and are expected to fetch between $150,000 and $250,000.

Offered by California auction house Profiles in History, the figurines were created by Japanese puppet-maker Ichiro Komuro for the perennially beloved stop-motion animation movie.

“These were hand-made. They weren’t toys,” pop culture memorabilia appraiser Simeon Lipman told PBS in 2006, when Santa and Rudolph turned up on Antiques Roadshow. “They had mechanisms to make them move, to make them come alive almost. No mass manufacturer of toys, especially in the 1960s, made things like that. It was made to be on film.”

At some point in the 1970s, the puppets came to Barbara Adams, a longtime secretary at the production company that made the film. She used them as decorations around the Christmas tree, and let her nieces and nephews play with them.

Most of the figures ended up melting in a hot attic, but her nephew brought the survivors, Santa and Rudolph, to the roadshow, where they were valued at $8,000 to $10,000.

A toy aficionado, Keith Kriess, owner of Time and Space Toys, purchased the puppets—reportedly for quite a bit more than that appraisal.

He then spent another $4,000 to have the rare collectibles painstakingly restored by a team from stop-motion animation studio Screen Novelties and Atlanta’s Center of Puppetry Arts. Before that, Rudolph had lost his nose, and Santa was missing half his yak-hair mustache.

Today, Santa and Rudolph are in great shape, according to current owner Peter Lutrario, a Staten Island pop culture collector.

“Not only can you move the arms, the legs, the head, you can move the fingers, the thumbs,” he told the Associated Press.

Who owns the original Rudolph puppet?

The original Rudolph reindeer puppet from Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Photo courtesy of Profiles in History.

The Santa doll stands at 11 inches tall, while the young Rudolph is a diminutive six inches high, made from cloth and leather with lead wire and wooden armatures.

At least one museum has already expressed interest in purchasing the duo: Castle Noel, a private Christmas memorabilia museum in Medina, Ohio, run by Mark Klaus.

Who owns the original Rudolph puppet?

Castle Noel’s attractions include windows from the famed Christmas displays at New York’s Bloomingdales department store, like this one from 2013. Photo courtesy of Castle Noel.

The museum is the “largest year-round indoor Christmas museum in North America” and home to “the largest privately held collections of Christmas movie props and costumes in the world,” Klaus wrote on a Go Fund Me page to fund the acquisition, which has raised close to $12,000 to date.

Without crowdfunding, the pre-sale estimate “would be an impossible number for us,” Klaus admitted. But he is hopeful that the public will help make his dream of owning the “holy grail of Christmas props” a reality.

“My hand shakes a little as I am writing this,” he added. “Could it actually happen?”

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Who owns the original Rudolph puppet?

CNN  — 

The stop-motion cuteness of one of the most beloved Christmas movies ever can be yours in time for the holidays.

The original Rudolph and Santa puppets from the classic 1964 film “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” are going up for auction, Hollywood memorabilia dealer Profiles in History announced this week.

But Rudolph, Santa, the sleigh and the misfit toys will cost a pretty penny. The rare and iconic figures in American pop culture will be sold together for an estimated $150,000 to $250,000 on November 13 in Los Angeles.

“Finally, after all of these years, (the owner) has decided to pass ownership of these enormously famous characters to a new owner,” said Profiles in History President and CEO Joe Maddalena. “It is with great pride and enthusiasm that we make this special offering as we usher in the 2020 Holiday Season.”

Crafted by Japanese puppet maker Ichiro Komuro, the puppets are made of wood, wire, cloth, leather and yak hair and stand less than 1 foot tall. They were filmed in stop motion “Animagic” at Tadahito Mochinaga’s MOM Productions in Tokyo, according to the auction house’s press release.

Following production in Tokyo, the puppets were housed at the Rankin/Bass Productions offices in New York until the early 1970s when they were passed down to a series of owners. Producer Arthur Rankin, Jr. gifted the puppets to his secretary, who eventually passed them to her nephew. The nephew went on to sell the puppets to a collector in 2005, the release states.

In 2006, both Santa and Rudolph were lightly restored, replacing a side of Santa’s yak mustache and white fur ball on the end of his hat along with Rudolph’s nose bulb and some electrical wiring allowing his nose to continue glow.

What happened to the original Rudolph puppets?

Most of the figures ended up melting in a hot attic, but her nephew brought the survivors, Santa and Rudolph, to the roadshow, where they were valued at $8,000 to $10,000.

How much did Rudolph sell for?

LOS ANGELES (CBSNewYork) -- Two figures from the Christmas classic "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" have a new owner. The pair were sold by collector Peter Lutrario, of Staten Island, for $368,000 during an auction in Los Angeles.

Did the original Rudolph the Red

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is a 1964 Christmas stop motion animated television special produced by Videocraft International, Ltd. ... Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (TV special).