Harry Belafonte to auction unknown papers of MLK

NEW YORK (AP) – An original handwritten outline for Martin Luther King Jr.’s first speech condemning the Vietnam War is going on the auction block tomorrow, Dec. 11.

Sotheby’s will offer the previously unknown document, along with two others: the scribbled notes for a speech King planned to deliver in Memphis, Tenn., three days after he was assassinated; and a letter of condolence from President Lyndon B. Johnson to King’s widow, Coretta Scott King.

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Image courtesy ABC News Now.

LiveAuctioneers.com on ABC News Now

Image courtesy ABC News Now.

Image courtesy ABC News Now.

How hot is pop culture? ABC News’ digital news arm, ABC News Now, wanted to know, and invited LiveAuctioneers’ CEO, Julian Ellison, to discuss the topic. Julian appeared on the network’s What’s the Buzz program and provided the answers to a number of compelling questions about “Hollywood’s most iconic artifacts.”

Julian spoke about collectors who buy pieces as investments and stressed the value of provenance, noting that enthusiasts research items through past auction prices realized. Several important objects soon to be offered through LiveAuctioneers were featured in the segment, including Indiana Jones’ fedora from Temple of Doom, Christian Bale’s Batman cowl, and the late Heath Ledger’s suit of armor worn in A Knight’s Tale.

Julian also plugged his personal favorite item from the upcoming sale: a vintage Mercedes-Benz automobile from Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Click here to view the interview video on ABC News Now.

Julian Ellison, CEO, LiveAuctioneers.com. Image courtesy Fox News.

VIDEO: LiveAuctioneers.com CEO discusses collectibles on Fox News Strategy Room

Julian Ellison, CEO, LiveAuctioneers.com. Image courtesy Fox News.

Julian Ellison, CEO, LiveAuctioneers.com. Image courtesy Fox News.

The business and financial sector is paying close attention to the dynamic prospects for Internet live bidding in 2009. On Wednesday, Dec. 3, LiveAuctioneers’ CEO, Julian Ellison, was a special guest on Fox News’ Strategy Room Lite Lunch with Jill Dobson.

Julian talked about LiveAuctioneers.com to Jill and a panel of commentators, and spoke with particular interest about the strength of celebrity and entertainment memorabilia in the marketplace. As an example, he mentioned the Beatles’ first signed contract with manager Brian Epstein, which sold online last weekend through LiveAuctioneers for $211,597.

Julian also tipped the unique Hollywood memorabilia – including the actual Star Wars lightsaber used by Mark Hamill in his role as Luke Skywalker – soon to be auctioned through LiveAuctioneers. The iconic prop is estimated at $150,000-$180,000.

Click here to watch the Fox News segment.

On Monday, December 8, Ellison will appear on ABC News Now at noon Eastern, as well.

Image courtesy Fame Bureau.

Ticket to Ride – Fame Bureau sells signed Beatles contract for $211,597

Image courtesy Fame Bureau.

Image courtesy Fame Bureau.

LONDON (ACNI) – When the Beatles recorded Can’t Buy Me Love, one of their early no. 1 hits, they could not have imagined that a fan would someday spend a fortune to own the signed document that launched their musical careers. The Beatles’ first contract, signing on with manager Brian Epstein in 1962, has sold online for $211,597 in an auction conducted by the Fame Bureau, a British auction company specializing in rock ’n’ roll memorabilia.

The price, inclusive of the buyer’s premium, represents the highest amount ever achieved through LiveAuctioneers by an auction house outside the United States. The historic document sold to an Internet bidder at the Fame Bureau’s auction Nov. 27.

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Image courtesy Mercedes-Benz USA.

Nov. 20 auction of Mercedes-Benz McLaren SLR Roadster to benefit St. Jude’s

Image courtesy Mercedes-Benz USA.

Image courtesy Mercedes-Benz USA.

NEW YORK – In an exclusive offering featured in Saks Fifth Avenue’s 2008 holiday catalog, Mercedes-Benz is giving shoppers the chance to own a piece of history on Nov. 20 by bidding on a McLaren SLR Roadster­-among the last of this model built for the U.S. market. The starting bid on the car is set at $529,500, and all additional funds raised above this amount will be donated to the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital’s Thanks and Giving® campaign.

St. Jude’s is a world-renowned pediatric cancer research center, dedicated to finding cures for juvenile cancer and other catastrophic diseases through research and treatment. St. Jude is the only pediatric cancer research center where families never pay for treatment over and above their own insurance coverage, if such coverage exists. No child is ever denied treatment because of the family’s inability to pay.

The Mercedes-Benz McLaren SLR Roadster will be offered via an exclusive online auction on November 20, 2008, from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. EST.  Interested parties are invited to place their bid at https://www.liveauctioneers.com/catalog/17643.

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First edition of 1916 Yeats poem auctioned in Ireland

DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) – A “terrible beauty” has been sold.

A rare first edition of one of William Butler Yeats’ most political poems, Easter 1916, was sold Wednesday at Adam’s auctioneers in central Dublin to an anonymous bidder for $9,600 – roughly double the forecast price.

Auction house director David Britton said the original copy of the poem – one of just three known to exist worldwide – received exceptional interest from bidders because it appealed to enthusiasts both of Yeats and of Ireland’s independence struggle from Britain.

Yeats wrote the poem in the months following the Easter rebellion of 1916, when guerrillas seized key Dublin government buildings for a week before surrendering to British forces.

The poet distributed only 25 copies of the work at first, for fear that wider publication might stir violence. Just three copies are known to remain today; the other two are in the National Library in Dublin and the British Library in London.

The Dublin public initially condemned the rebels for bringing ruin to the capital, but turned fiercely anti-British when the rebellion’s commanders were executed within days. A new wave of rebels eventually secured independence for the predominantly Catholic south of Ireland in 1922, then fought a self-destructive civil war over the terms of the treaty with Britain.

The poem reflects Yeats’ own deep ambivalence to his countrymen’s willingness to resort to violence against Britain. It also gives an insight into the far greater bloodshed that lay ahead.

Its most famous concluding lines lament that, through Britain’s decision to put the rebel leaders to the firing squad, Irish hearts had been hardened beyond repair.

“Now and in time to be,

Wherever green is worn,

Are changed, changed utterly:

A terrible beauty is born.”
___

On the Net:

Full text of poem, http://www.online-literature.com/yeats/779/

James Adam & Sons Auctioneers, http://www.jamesadam.ie/

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-10-22-08 1216EDT

Image courtesy Library of Congress.

Last Titanic survivor selling mementos

Image courtesy Library of Congress.

Image courtesy Library of Congress.

LONDON (AP) – As a 2-month-old baby, Millvina Dean was wrapped in a sack and lowered into a lifeboat from the deck of the sinking RMS Titanic.

Rescued from the bitterly cold Atlantic night by the steamship Carpathia, Dean, her brother and her mother were taken to New York with nothing but the clothes on their backs. Before returning to their homeland of England, they were given a small wicker suitcase of clothing, a gift from New Yorkers, to help them rebuild their lives.

Now, more than 95 years later, Dean – the last living survivor of the disaster – is selling the suitcase and other mementos to help pay her private nursing home fees, which are not covered by Britain’s National Health Service.

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Reports: Beckham staff arrested over alleged theft of memorabilia

LONDON (AP) – British newspapers are reporting that two people who worked for soccer star David Beckham and his wife were arrested after some of the couple’s possessions were spotted on an Internet auction site.

Both the tabloid Sun and the Daily Mirror say in their Oct. 14 editions that two housekeepers at the Beckham’s mansion northeast of London were arrested and questioned by police last week.

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Geppi’s Entertainment launches new Web site for its family of companies

YORK, Pa. – Geppi’s Entertainment has launched a new Web site, www.GeppisEntertainment.com, which serves as a gateway to its family of companies’ existing websites. The site is now live.

Offering the latest news on company activities, profiles of projects and employees, and a review of press coverage of Geppi’s Entertainment company activities, this new site showcases the diverse array of entities focused on documenting, promoting, and delivering vintage pop culture collectibles to the collecting public and informing the general public about the industry.

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Yankee Stadium, 1923. Image courtesy Library of Congress.

Guernsey’s Oct. 18 auction of historical documents a tribute to Yankee Stadium

Yankee Stadium, 1923. Image courtesy Library of Congress.

Yankee Stadium, 1923. Image courtesy Library of Congress.

NEW YORK (ACNI) – On Saturday, Oct. 18, Manhattan auction house Guernsey’s will auction the Baker Collection, a grouping of historical documents pertaining to the New York Yankees and Yankee Stadium. The auction will be held at Madison Square Garden, and is a fitting tribute to the 85-year-old landmark home of the “Bronx Bombers,” who will move into their new ballpark across the street for the 2009 Major League baseball season. The blue-lettered sign spelling out “New York Yankees” will be hoisted into place by crane today, at Gate 4, 161st Street and Jerome Avenue in the Bronx.

Guernsey’s auction includes 160 architectural drawings from which Yankee Stadium was constructed; the building was officially opened on April 18, 1923. Other auction highlights include the actual insurance policy the Yankees took out to protect the well being of legendary sluggers Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth.

The sale lineup also features a number of Yankees World Championship rings, a baseball given by Don Larsen to a photo editor on the day his perfect game, and many unique items signed, worn or used by Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio and Mantle. The Yankees’ archenemy, the Boston Red Sox, is represented in the sale by the World Series Trophy they won in 1912 against the New York Giants.

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