We should buy this for the WS Dancing thread!
The multi-coloured dancefloor where a white-suited John Travolta strutted his stuff in Saturday Night Fever is to be auctioned.
The cult item of memorabilia from the 1977 movie has been saved from a doomed Brooklyn nightclub.
Organisers of the auction are expecting bids of more than 80,000 dollars (£42,000) for the piece of Hollywood history.
The 24-feet by 16-feet dancefloor, which came to symbolise the 70s disco craze, has more than 300 coloured flashing lights under a Perspex surface.
The club where the dance floor had been a fixture since the movie was made closed last week after being sold to a real estate investment company.
The cult item of memorabilia from the 1977 movie has been saved from a doomed Brooklyn nightclub.
Organisers of the auction are expecting bids of more than 80,000 dollars (£42,000) for the piece of Hollywood history.
The 24-feet by 16-feet dancefloor, which came to symbolise the 70s disco craze, has more than 300 coloured flashing lights under a Perspex surface.
The club where the dance floor had been a fixture since the movie was made closed last week after being sold to a real estate investment company.
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1293627.html?menu=
The multi-coloured dancefloor where a white-suited John Travolta strutted his stuff in Saturday Night Fever is to be auctioned.
The cult item of memorabilia from the 1977 movie has been saved from a doomed Brooklyn nightclub.
Organisers of the auction are expecting bids of more than 80,000 dollars (£42,000) for the piece of Hollywood history.
The 24-feet by 16-feet dancefloor, which came to symbolise the 70s disco craze, has more than 300 coloured flashing lights under a Perspex surface.
The club where the dance floor had been a fixture since the movie was made closed last week after being sold to a real estate investment company.
The cult item of memorabilia from the 1977 movie has been saved from a doomed Brooklyn nightclub.
Organisers of the auction are expecting bids of more than 80,000 dollars (£42,000) for the piece of Hollywood history.
The 24-feet by 16-feet dancefloor, which came to symbolise the 70s disco craze, has more than 300 coloured flashing lights under a Perspex surface.
The club where the dance floor had been a fixture since the movie was made closed last week after being sold to a real estate investment company.
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1293627.html?menu=