Anita Manning

Anita Manning (born 1 December 1947) is a Scottish antiques expert and television personality from Glasgow.[1] She is well known for her appearances since 2010 as an expert and presenter on the BBC's Bargain Hunt, Flog It! and the Antiques Road Trip. She is claimed to be the first female auctioneer in Scotland.[1]

Anita Manning
Born (1947-12-01) 1 December 1947
Glasgow, Scotland United Kingdom
OccupationAntiques expert,
television personality
Years active1979–present
Television Antiques Road Trip

Career

Manning's father used to take her to auctions on Sauchiehall Street, in Glasgow and she grew to love antiques. She first got into the antiques business in the 1970s after buying a bed from an Irish dealer. He offered her a job as a buyer.

After studying physical education and specialising in dance at Aberdeen and Edinburgh, Manning was a teacher before she got married and had children. As a young mother, she developed a knowledge of antiques by buying furniture from auctions. After her first visit to Glasgow as a buyer, she bought and sold furniture in England and Ireland for about three years, driving all around the country in a truck.[2]

Along with her daughter Lala, Manning has run the Glasgow auction house Great Western Auctions since 1989.[3] Manning's son lives in Hong Kong, while her mother lived in Australia for the last 35 years of her life.[1]

In 2016 Manning set a new record for the largest profit on a single item on the Antiques Road Trip. A Buddha statue she had purchased for £50 sold for £3,800, a 7,500% profit.[4] This record was broken in September 2017 when Paul Laidlaw bought a Chambre Automatique De Bertsch sub-miniature camera for £60 and sold it at auction for £20,000.[5]

gollark: Many of them are used for internal purposes.
gollark: Thus, orbital food railguns WHEN?
gollark: Per second.
gollark: GTech™ produces several undecillion bees per second. However, that doesn't mean that everyone ever has whatever several undecillion bees divided by 7 billion is.
gollark: No, it's a distributional issue.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.