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Ann-Margret Opens Personal Archives for Julien's Auctions, Sale Launches June 23

Ann-Margret, 85, is partnering with Julien's Auctions to bring a curated selection of personal keepsakes, household items, and stage costumes to market, with bidding opening June 23. The collection spans more than six decades of the actress and entertainer's career, anchored by a custom 1997 Harley-Davidson Sportster XL883 Hugger and several Bob Mackie-designed gowns.

By Priya NairNewsroomJune 21, 20262 min read
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Ann-Margret, 85, is partnering with Julien's Auctions to bring a curated selection of personal keepsakes, household items, and stage costumes to market, with bidding opening June 23. The collection spans more than six decades of the actress and entertainer's career, anchored by a custom 1997 Harley-Davidson Sportster XL883 Hugger and several Bob Mackie-designed gowns.

Crown Lots: A Harley and a Historic Gown

The motorcycle is among the sale's most closely watched consignments. Ann-Margret's custom 1997 Harley-Davidson Sportster XL883 Hugger — finished in a mauve-and-daisy design — served as her personal ride for more than two decades. The star told Fox News Digital she has ridden since her childhood in Sweden, where her uncle first put her on a motorcycle and took her to the Norwegian border.

A second headline lot carries distinct historical weight. An ivory-and-orange gown with a low V-neck, worn by Ann-Margret on "The Ed Sullivan Show" in 1963, is also included. The same dress was on stage at New York City's Waldorf Astoria Hotel that year when she performed for President John F. Kennedy. "I had the audacity to sing 'Baby, Won't You Please Come Home' [to the president]. I was very, very young," she said.

Bob Mackie Costumes and the Schwarzenegger Connection

Multiple Bob Mackie-designed costumes are listed in the sale — pieces that helped define Ann-Margret's image as a Hollywood sex symbol across her peak decades. The collection also includes a signed 1979 copy of "Arnold's Bodyshaping for Women" by Arnold Schwarzenegger, a keepsake from the pair's collaboration on the 1979 comedy "The Villain."

Ann-Margret credited Schwarzenegger's discipline but noted that matching his dinner schedule remains out of reach. "The one thing that I can't really keep [up with Arnold] is having dinner by seven o'clock," she said.

The Seller: A Six-Decade Rider With No Intention of Stopping

The "Bye Bye Birdie" and "Viva Las Vegas" actress has ridden motorcycles since the 1960s, crediting continuous movement for her longevity. Photographer Douglas Kirkland captured her in 1971 on a Las Vegas highway dressed in a patriotic showgirl ensemble and knee-high boots — an image now closely associated with her public persona.

Ann-Margret described riding as pure freedom, a word she repeated three times when asked by Fox News Digital what motorcycles mean to her. Fear, she said, has never entered the picture. She attributed her energy not to any regimen but to the disposition her parents instilled — no negativity, no complaints, just consistent engagement with the things she loves. The Julien's Auctions sale opening June 23 puts that history directly in front of collectors.

About this story

Filed by the newsroom of MarketPR on June 21, 2026. Source: MarketPR. Indicative figures are not investment advice.

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