Antiques Roadshow: Pair amazed at funeral effigy valuation
Antiques Roadshow star Bunny Campione has announced the tragic death of her husband.
The 77-year-old BBC One host confirmed Major Iain Grahame, whom she’s been married to for 21 years, has died aged 91.
Bunny married Major Grahame in 2002, years after their first chance meeting, where they drove into each other going around a corner on a country lane.
Iain was married twice before. He married his first wife, Susan d’Esterre Curteis, daughter of Captain Sir Gerald Curteis, on 12 November 1960.
He then married for a second time to Diana Mansfield, daughter of Captain Edward Gerard Napier Mansfield and Joan Worship Byron, on 29 August 1972.
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Iain was born July 1 1932, to Lewis Gretton Grahame of Claverhouse and Eira Grey Wigan.
He was educated at the prestigious Eton College.
And later gained the rank of Major in the King’s Royal Rifle Corps.
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Born Carolyn Fisher in 1946 to Squadron Leader Francis Colborne Fisher and Iris Stewart, Bunny got her unusual nickname after she was given a coat that had a hood with rabbit ears on it.
Bunny joined Antiques Roadshow in 1987. On the show, she specialises in automata, birdcages, costume and textiles, corkscrews, dolls, dolls’ houses, pre-Victorian miniature furniture and soft toys.
Prior to her television career, she worked at Sotheby’s for 23 years and Christie’s in London.
In 1992 she started her own company, Campione Fine Art and Antiques Consultancy.
Last month Bunny valued a doll on the Antiques Roadshow that she claimed was the “most interesting and unusual doll” she had seen in her 36 years on the show.
The doll which stood two feet tall was owned by two sisters who said it had been in the family for over 50 years.
But Bunny surprised the duo by telling them their item wasn’t a doll after all but a funeral effigy, which she had dated to around 1715.
Giving the sisters more information on the funeral effigy, she told them: “The three-year-old son that died of the Duke of Buckingham and he was the first Marquess of Normanby and he died in 1715.
“So, in those days, the monarchy and aristocracy would make wooden and wax effigies to put on the funeral cask going to the funeral.”
And the surprises weren’t over there, Bunny went on to reveal that the doll was worth between 10,000 and £20,000, leaving the sisters in shock as they believed it was only worth a couple of hundred pounds.
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