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Date: Fri 01-Dec-1995

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Date: Fri 01-Dec-1995

Publication: Bee

Author: KAAREN

Quick Words:

Claire-Bannister-antiques

Full Text:

w/photo Shop Marks A New Chapter In Claire Bannister's Life and Career

B Y K AAREN V ALENTA

"The first time I saw Newtown, I fell in love with it. Main Street says hello

and wraps itself around you."

For Claire Bannister, Newtown was the perfect spot to build the new American

headquarters for Gordon Fraser, the English greeting card company, in the late

1960s. Now, years later, she has opened another business, Claire Bannister

Collection, Antiques Consignment, at 85 South Main Street, next to Galerie

Van-Os, in the white frame house which formerly was the site of the Fashion

Exchange before that business relocated earlier this year.

A lot has happened since Claire Bannister left Gordon Fraser in 1989 when the

business was sold to another English card company. She began designing a

greeting card collection for an American company, C.R. Gibson, and built her

dream house in Brookfield, a house that was featured in the June 1995 issue of

Victorian Home magazine.

But a near-fatal automobile accident in 1993 left Claire Bannister in a coma

with a traumatic brain injury which required years of rehabilitation, first at

the Gaylord Rehabilitation Institute and then at Datahr.

"The doctor told my children that I wouldn't make it," Ms Bannister recalled.

"My children told the doctor, `You don't know our mother.'"

Now fully recovered except for an errant eye which she fashionably conceals

with sunglasses, Claire Bannister is enthusiastic about her future. Her

flamboyant personality - she starred in radio soap operas - and 23 years of

experience with Gordon Fraser mesh well with her new career.

"I wanted to keep myself active and involved," she said. "I like antiques

shops. In my travels around the world with Gordon Fraser, I always went into

the shops I saw. Now I have one of my own."

Besides consignment antiques, the shop stock includes classic reproductions,

gift items and cards. A dining room table in the front showroom is set with

china and crystal; the walls are filled with mirrors, needlepoint, and framed

and unframed prints and paintings. Dresser sets, silk flowers, old tins,

intricately carved and inlaid boxes, candlesticks, antique and reproduction

silver accessories and jewelry, statuary and other treasures fill the rooms on

both floors of the building.

"Not pricey but tasteful," Ms Bannister says, describing the stock which

includes such bargains as gold and mirror-encrusted pens priced at just $2. "I

have greeting cards and gifts but I'm not in conflict with Gordon Fraser - I

wanted to do something different from what I did for so many years with that

company."

"I used to go to England every year but haven't been there since the

accident," she said. "While I was at Datahr, one of my therapists was Patrick

Mahoney, a young man who is now my associate here. We're having a good time

starting this business. We laugh a lot - laughter is a very good thing."

Claire Bannister Collection, Antiques Consignment, is open Tuesday through

Saturday from 10 am to 5 pm and Sunday from noon to 5. Closed Monday. For

information, call 270-6255 or fax 740-8905.

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