Joey Fatone Home Up for Auction

Former 'NSync singer Joey Fatone will auction his Orlando home on Sept. 11. It is currently listed for $6.5 million. The minimum bid for the auction is $3.7 million.
The 1999-built gated estate is on 4.4 acres of lakefront property. The 12,400-square-foot house has six bedrooms and 10 bathrooms. The home has a movie theater with stadium seating, a 10-car garage and a dock with a boathouse. The swimming pool has a grotto area with an enclosed spa and sushi bar, reachable by a small footbridge. There's also a 3,800-square-foot master suite that has a sitting room with a butler's pantry.

Fatone's Orlando

Tour Factory
Joey Fatone property in Orlando.
Mr. Fatone rose to fame as a member of the popular boy band 'NSync. In 2007, he placed second on "Dancing With the Stars" and he was the host of an NBC game show called "The Singing Bee." Through a representative, he said he's selling his house because he wants to be more centrally located in the downtown Orlando area with his family.
The home was originally listed about a year ago for $5.5 million. A spokesperson for the listing agency says the asking price was raised to match the appraisal price. Sally Andy and David Warren of Stirling Sotheby's International Realty have the listing. The auction will be handled by Worldwide Auction Realty Services.
Larry Gagosian Buys in LA
A Los Angeles home owned by David Bohnett, the philanthropist and technology entrepreneur, has sold to art dealer Larry Gagosian, according to public records. The home, which was originally built for actor Gary Cooper, was listed for $18.9 million. It could not be confirmed what Mr. Gagosian paid for the property.
The 1955-built modernist-style home in the Holmby Hills neighborhood was designed by architect A. Quincy Jones. The 5,700-square-foot house has four bedrooms and 4½ bathrooms. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlook a swimming pool, garden and wooded grounds. A representative said Mr. Gagosian couldn't be reached for comment.
Mr. Gagosian owns contemporary and modern art galleries and represents such artists as Jeff Koons and Damien Hirst.
Mr. Bohnett is the founder of GeoCities, which was later acquired in 1999 by Yahoo. Mr. Bohnett said he sold the home because he owns another place nearby, but declined to comment on the sale price or who purchased the home.
Linda May of Coldwell Banker Previews International had the listing.
Montana Ranch Asks $33 Million
A Montana ranch owned by the widow of Jay Call, the late founder and chairman of Flying J, a Utah-based fuel retailer, has hit the market for $33 million.
The property, known as Dancing Wind Ranch, is just outside of Livingston, Mont., in Paradise Valley, about a half-hour drive from Yellowstone National Park. It includes more than 1,750 acres of land and a 8,100-square-foot main house made of stacked stone and antique timbers. There are also a manager's residence and a guest house on property, as well as two barns.
Mr. Call died in a plane crash in 2003, and the ranch is now owned by his wife, Tamra Call.
Gwen Wagner, the owner of Legacy Lands in Livingston, Mont., has the listing.
—Email: privateproperties@wsj.com