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Auction archive: Lot number 43

Freddie Mercury's white 'Mercury Wing' catsuit and bolero by Wendy de Smet, 1975-1976

Estimate
£50,000 - £70,000
ca. US$62,762 - US$87,867
Price realised:
£127,000
ca. US$159,417
Auction archive: Lot number 43

Freddie Mercury's white 'Mercury Wing' catsuit and bolero by Wendy de Smet, 1975-1976

Estimate
£50,000 - £70,000
ca. US$62,762 - US$87,867
Price realised:
£127,000
ca. US$159,417
Beschreibung:

Freddie Mercury's white ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuit and bolero
a two-piece stage outfit comprising a catsuit and bolero of white [now aged to ivory] stretch satin by Wendy de Smet, worn in the 'Bohemian Rhapsody' promotional video, 1975, and on stage when touring A Night At The Opera, 1975-1976
The catsuit with deep-cut zip-fastening front from waist to curved stand collar, the long narrow sleeves zipped at the cuffs and embellished with four quilted panels terminating in points to resemble bird feathers (matching the design seen in the 'Bohemian Rhapsody' video); the slightly flared trouser legs similarly applied with quilted bird-wing adornments, these wrap-around trouser leg panels graduating in width from their apex below the knee to their widest point at the foot, each trouser leg, with a stirrup of ribbed webbing at the base – it has been confirmed by Wendy de Smet that the stitching of the winged leg panels and the stirrups to the trouser legs was executed by Freddie Mercury himself - the unlabelled catsuit with an orange paper cleaning ticket with typescript date details: ‘Apr 13 77’ attached inside at the base of the neck by a large safety pin;
The corresponding quilted bolero tailored to resemble bird wings, the front with curved lines of stitching extending to the open edges to create ten feather-shaped panels either side, nine of which terminate in points; the back shaped as two wings with lines of stitching creating three long panels either side simulating the back of wings, labelled inside at base of the neck ‘Wendy de Smet’ - the stitching on the reverse of the bolero identifies it as the one seen in the 'Bohemian Rhapsody' video.
(qty 2)
Freddie was closely involved in the design of his ‘Mercury Wing’ stage costumes. In September 1975 he approached Wendy de Smet, who had trained as a fashion designer, to create his outfit: “Freddie wanted to look like the God of Mercury…he bought fabric from Borovick’s in Broadwick Street in London. You could buy stage fabric there. It was a stretch satin, skin tight, with a low neck and a zip. The sleeves were long and tight, and I made little padded wing on the cuff. And the wings on the heels were Velcroed on so they were detachable. They were quilted, like a bird’s wing and attached with Velcro on the front. He had the ideas and we worked on them together. I made [...] three or four of the white ones, but one of them shrank and I had to unpick it.” 
He had approached Wendy de Smet with a pencil sketch of what he wanted, which was based on an idea of a character from Richard Dadd’s intricate masterpiece ‘The Fairy Feller’s Master-Stroke', the inspiration behind Freddie's song of the same name. Freddie wanted his stage persona to resemble a Mercurial god-like figure and once he and Wendy had worked together on this idea, she was given free rein to design the costume. It was Wendy who suggested adding winged panels to the cuffs and trouser legs, and to balance these out with a wing-shaped bolero (boleros are included in lots 43 and 151). Freddie provided the designer with the high-quality stretch satin fabric she was to use in the construction of these significant stage outfits.
Three ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits and one winged bolero were made in the autumn of 1975 to coincide with the start of the album tour. A second bolero and a replacement third white catsuit (either lot 150 or 151, the predecessor having shrunk when Freddie sent it to the drycleaners) were made at a later date, either before the end of the UK Tour in December 1975 or before the start of the US Tour in late January 1976. It seems probable that Freddie wore a pair of white leather platform shoes with this outfit (lot 171). In June 2023 Wendy Edmonds [nee de Smet] confirmed her account of how her design for Freddie’s famous ‘Mercury Wing’ costume came about – originally published in ‘Queen in Cornwall’ by Rupert White, first edition, 2011
The 'Bohemian Rhapsody' video which featured Freddie wearing this ‘Mercury Wing’ ensemble had a profound impact on the future of music industry promotion. As Freddie himself said: “We decided to put 'Rhapsody' on film and let people see it. We didn’t know how it was going to be looked upon or how they were going to receive it. To us it was just another form of theatre. But it just went crazy, and since then everybody’s been doing it…We realised that a video could get to a lot of people in a lot of countries without you actually being there, and you could release a record and a video simultaneously. It became very fast and it helped record sales greatly…”
During both the European and US legs of the 1975-76 Queen tour, Mercurial White Wing ensembles representing the good ‘White Queen’ were worn for the first half of the show, their evil counterparts the ‘Black Queens’ (lots 45 and 152) for the second half of the show . The visual contrast between black and white was central to Queen's visual image in the early years of their career. It symbolised a struggle between good and evil that was at the core of the fantasy elements of Queen's early lyrics, epitomised by two tracks on the band’s Queen II album, May's 'White Queen' and Mercury's 'March of the Black Queen'. The album itself was divided into 'Side White' (predominantly written by Brian May) and 'Side Black' (all songs by Freddie Mercury) - see lot 115. Freddie and the band’s devotion to this visual juxtaposition continued throughout the 1975 tour, and Freddie’s collaboration with Wendy de Smet meant his spectacular stage costumes were a perfect manifestation of the strong theme.
The wrap-around bird wing adornments on the trouser legs of the three White Queen catsuits in the auction are no longer removable but firmly stitched onto the trouser legs. On seeing the three auction catsuits recently, Wendy de Smet confirmed that the stitching of the leg panels to the trouser legs would have been done by Freddie himself. She suspects that Freddie required a greater security for the attachment that sewing would provide over the Velcro. Freddie had also added the stirrups of ribbed webbing sewn to the foot of each catsuit trouser leg himself. He had studied fashion design at Ealing College for a time and was very hands-on with the construction of his stage costumes. Freddie knew what he wanted and would make any practical amendments or embellishments he felt necessary and could do himself without consultation with the designer.
Wendy visited Freddie at his Holland Road apartment for fittings: “Freddie always just wanted them really tight! It was great fun doing the costumes. They had my label ‘Wendy de Smet’ inside. I’ve still got the original newspaper pattern.”
This and the two almost identical ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits, and their two ‘Black Queen’ counterparts, are confirmed as being the earliest examples of what was to become Freddie’s signature look in the mid to late 1970s.
Photographs of Wendy Edmonds’ original paper pattern for this quilted bolero show stitching lines for the quilting drawn on to it. The designer commented on the other examples that: “I changed the stitching on the back …but both fronts are the same”. 
A swatch of the original stretch satin fabric Wendy used to make the white ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits and boleros has been donated by the designer to illustrate its original bright white hue and will be present at the auction view. Photographs of the swatch will also be available to view on request.
The ‘Mercury Wing‘ catsuits were worn on stage both with and without boleros. Freddie is also photographed wearing a ‘Mercury Wing’ bolero with a sleeveless black diamante studded catsuit (lot 162) on stage in January 1977, a combination which also featured on the cover of the U.S. music magazine Creem in May 1977.
A swatch of the original stretch satin fabric Wendy used to make the white ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits and boleros has been donated by the designer to illustrate its original bright white hue and will be present at the auction view. Photographs of the swatch will also be available to view on request.
LITERATURERupert White, Queen In Cornwall, Antenna Publications, 2022, 2nd Edition, pp.276-277 & photographs of Queen performing in Liverpool the evening after shooting the video for 'Bohemian Rhapsody' in Elstree Studios, 14 November 1975, showing Freddie wearing the ‘Mercury’ ensemble, illus. pp. 277 & 279 (illus.) Killer Queen, The Official Limited Edition: Mick Rock Photographs, Genesis Publications, 2003, pp.120, 166 and 167 (illus.)Freddie Mercury – The Great Pretender, A Life In Pictures, Welbeck, 2012, p.66 (illus.)Phil Sutcliffe with Peter Hince, Mick Rock, Reinhold Mack and Billy Squier, Queen The Ultimate Illustrated History of The Crown Kings of Rock, Voyageur Press, 2009, pp. 70. 84 & 91(illus.) and pp. 102-3
SPECIAL NOTICENo right to reproduce or commercially exploit the copyright or other intellectual propertyor image rights in any lot is included with the sale of the lot (including but not limited tosong lyrics, sketches, drawings and garment designs). Queen Productions Limited, QueenMusic Limited and other rights holders reserve all their rights. No right to exhibit in public or reproduce this lot is included with the sale of this lotwithout the prior written consent of Queen Productions Limited, who shall act in good faithto consider any such requests.

Auction archive: Lot number 43
Auction:
Datum:
6 Sep 2023
Auction house:
Sotheby's
34-35 New Bond St.
London, W1A 2AA
United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 7293 5000
+44 (0)20 7293 5989
Beschreibung:

Freddie Mercury's white ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuit and bolero
a two-piece stage outfit comprising a catsuit and bolero of white [now aged to ivory] stretch satin by Wendy de Smet, worn in the 'Bohemian Rhapsody' promotional video, 1975, and on stage when touring A Night At The Opera, 1975-1976
The catsuit with deep-cut zip-fastening front from waist to curved stand collar, the long narrow sleeves zipped at the cuffs and embellished with four quilted panels terminating in points to resemble bird feathers (matching the design seen in the 'Bohemian Rhapsody' video); the slightly flared trouser legs similarly applied with quilted bird-wing adornments, these wrap-around trouser leg panels graduating in width from their apex below the knee to their widest point at the foot, each trouser leg, with a stirrup of ribbed webbing at the base – it has been confirmed by Wendy de Smet that the stitching of the winged leg panels and the stirrups to the trouser legs was executed by Freddie Mercury himself - the unlabelled catsuit with an orange paper cleaning ticket with typescript date details: ‘Apr 13 77’ attached inside at the base of the neck by a large safety pin;
The corresponding quilted bolero tailored to resemble bird wings, the front with curved lines of stitching extending to the open edges to create ten feather-shaped panels either side, nine of which terminate in points; the back shaped as two wings with lines of stitching creating three long panels either side simulating the back of wings, labelled inside at base of the neck ‘Wendy de Smet’ - the stitching on the reverse of the bolero identifies it as the one seen in the 'Bohemian Rhapsody' video.
(qty 2)
Freddie was closely involved in the design of his ‘Mercury Wing’ stage costumes. In September 1975 he approached Wendy de Smet, who had trained as a fashion designer, to create his outfit: “Freddie wanted to look like the God of Mercury…he bought fabric from Borovick’s in Broadwick Street in London. You could buy stage fabric there. It was a stretch satin, skin tight, with a low neck and a zip. The sleeves were long and tight, and I made little padded wing on the cuff. And the wings on the heels were Velcroed on so they were detachable. They were quilted, like a bird’s wing and attached with Velcro on the front. He had the ideas and we worked on them together. I made [...] three or four of the white ones, but one of them shrank and I had to unpick it.” 
He had approached Wendy de Smet with a pencil sketch of what he wanted, which was based on an idea of a character from Richard Dadd’s intricate masterpiece ‘The Fairy Feller’s Master-Stroke', the inspiration behind Freddie's song of the same name. Freddie wanted his stage persona to resemble a Mercurial god-like figure and once he and Wendy had worked together on this idea, she was given free rein to design the costume. It was Wendy who suggested adding winged panels to the cuffs and trouser legs, and to balance these out with a wing-shaped bolero (boleros are included in lots 43 and 151). Freddie provided the designer with the high-quality stretch satin fabric she was to use in the construction of these significant stage outfits.
Three ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits and one winged bolero were made in the autumn of 1975 to coincide with the start of the album tour. A second bolero and a replacement third white catsuit (either lot 150 or 151, the predecessor having shrunk when Freddie sent it to the drycleaners) were made at a later date, either before the end of the UK Tour in December 1975 or before the start of the US Tour in late January 1976. It seems probable that Freddie wore a pair of white leather platform shoes with this outfit (lot 171). In June 2023 Wendy Edmonds [nee de Smet] confirmed her account of how her design for Freddie’s famous ‘Mercury Wing’ costume came about – originally published in ‘Queen in Cornwall’ by Rupert White, first edition, 2011
The 'Bohemian Rhapsody' video which featured Freddie wearing this ‘Mercury Wing’ ensemble had a profound impact on the future of music industry promotion. As Freddie himself said: “We decided to put 'Rhapsody' on film and let people see it. We didn’t know how it was going to be looked upon or how they were going to receive it. To us it was just another form of theatre. But it just went crazy, and since then everybody’s been doing it…We realised that a video could get to a lot of people in a lot of countries without you actually being there, and you could release a record and a video simultaneously. It became very fast and it helped record sales greatly…”
During both the European and US legs of the 1975-76 Queen tour, Mercurial White Wing ensembles representing the good ‘White Queen’ were worn for the first half of the show, their evil counterparts the ‘Black Queens’ (lots 45 and 152) for the second half of the show . The visual contrast between black and white was central to Queen's visual image in the early years of their career. It symbolised a struggle between good and evil that was at the core of the fantasy elements of Queen's early lyrics, epitomised by two tracks on the band’s Queen II album, May's 'White Queen' and Mercury's 'March of the Black Queen'. The album itself was divided into 'Side White' (predominantly written by Brian May) and 'Side Black' (all songs by Freddie Mercury) - see lot 115. Freddie and the band’s devotion to this visual juxtaposition continued throughout the 1975 tour, and Freddie’s collaboration with Wendy de Smet meant his spectacular stage costumes were a perfect manifestation of the strong theme.
The wrap-around bird wing adornments on the trouser legs of the three White Queen catsuits in the auction are no longer removable but firmly stitched onto the trouser legs. On seeing the three auction catsuits recently, Wendy de Smet confirmed that the stitching of the leg panels to the trouser legs would have been done by Freddie himself. She suspects that Freddie required a greater security for the attachment that sewing would provide over the Velcro. Freddie had also added the stirrups of ribbed webbing sewn to the foot of each catsuit trouser leg himself. He had studied fashion design at Ealing College for a time and was very hands-on with the construction of his stage costumes. Freddie knew what he wanted and would make any practical amendments or embellishments he felt necessary and could do himself without consultation with the designer.
Wendy visited Freddie at his Holland Road apartment for fittings: “Freddie always just wanted them really tight! It was great fun doing the costumes. They had my label ‘Wendy de Smet’ inside. I’ve still got the original newspaper pattern.”
This and the two almost identical ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits, and their two ‘Black Queen’ counterparts, are confirmed as being the earliest examples of what was to become Freddie’s signature look in the mid to late 1970s.
Photographs of Wendy Edmonds’ original paper pattern for this quilted bolero show stitching lines for the quilting drawn on to it. The designer commented on the other examples that: “I changed the stitching on the back …but both fronts are the same”. 
A swatch of the original stretch satin fabric Wendy used to make the white ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits and boleros has been donated by the designer to illustrate its original bright white hue and will be present at the auction view. Photographs of the swatch will also be available to view on request.
The ‘Mercury Wing‘ catsuits were worn on stage both with and without boleros. Freddie is also photographed wearing a ‘Mercury Wing’ bolero with a sleeveless black diamante studded catsuit (lot 162) on stage in January 1977, a combination which also featured on the cover of the U.S. music magazine Creem in May 1977.
A swatch of the original stretch satin fabric Wendy used to make the white ‘Mercury Wing’ catsuits and boleros has been donated by the designer to illustrate its original bright white hue and will be present at the auction view. Photographs of the swatch will also be available to view on request.
LITERATURERupert White, Queen In Cornwall, Antenna Publications, 2022, 2nd Edition, pp.276-277 & photographs of Queen performing in Liverpool the evening after shooting the video for 'Bohemian Rhapsody' in Elstree Studios, 14 November 1975, showing Freddie wearing the ‘Mercury’ ensemble, illus. pp. 277 & 279 (illus.) Killer Queen, The Official Limited Edition: Mick Rock Photographs, Genesis Publications, 2003, pp.120, 166 and 167 (illus.)Freddie Mercury – The Great Pretender, A Life In Pictures, Welbeck, 2012, p.66 (illus.)Phil Sutcliffe with Peter Hince, Mick Rock, Reinhold Mack and Billy Squier, Queen The Ultimate Illustrated History of The Crown Kings of Rock, Voyageur Press, 2009, pp. 70. 84 & 91(illus.) and pp. 102-3
SPECIAL NOTICENo right to reproduce or commercially exploit the copyright or other intellectual propertyor image rights in any lot is included with the sale of the lot (including but not limited tosong lyrics, sketches, drawings and garment designs). Queen Productions Limited, QueenMusic Limited and other rights holders reserve all their rights. No right to exhibit in public or reproduce this lot is included with the sale of this lotwithout the prior written consent of Queen Productions Limited, who shall act in good faithto consider any such requests.

Auction archive: Lot number 43
Auction:
Datum:
6 Sep 2023
Auction house:
Sotheby's
34-35 New Bond St.
London, W1A 2AA
United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 7293 5000
+44 (0)20 7293 5989
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