Phil Collins’s Ex-Wife Is Auctioning Off His Gold Records for $100 Because They “No Longer Sparked Joy”


Phil Collins may have finally gotten his ex-wife Orianne Cevey out of his $40 million Miami mansion and sold the home to a new owner, but there’s still one thing left for the on-again, off-again couple to beef over: all of the musician’s stuff.

Now that Cevey and her new husband, Thomas Bates, have agreed to officially move out of the home she once seized via “an armed occupation and takeover,” according to Collins and denied by the couple, the jewelry designer has turned her attention to purgingunnecessary possessions from her life, including those that belong to her ex. Cevey partnered with Florida-based auction house Kodner to organize a sale set for February 3 with 10% of proceeds from select items being donated to the Never Give Up Foundation, a charity focused on spinal muscular atrophy in children.

Cevey will be auctioning off a few of the gold records gifted to the Grammy winner starting at $100, like Robert Plant’s The Principle of Moments which was presented to Collins because it was released by his record label Es Paranza, according to Page Six. She’s also selling a number of items out of her own closet, including Chanel bags and clothing, high-end sneakers, diamond jewelry, and several Rolex watches. A vintage stamp collection will also be put on the auction block starting at $50, as well as a carved skull necklace and an unset 10.35-carat diamond priced between $600k and $800k.


READ MORE HERE 

 

Music News