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Thanks for the comedy
03/09/2008 10:03 - (SA)
Alex Dobuzinskis
Los Angeles - His theme song was Thanks for the Memory, and now Bob Hope fans will get a chance to say their own "thanks" of a charitable kind in an auction of golf mementos and other memorabilia once owned by the comic legend.
Five years after his death at age 100, nearly everything in Hope's office in his Los Angeles home will be sold in an auction set for October 18-19 in Beverly Hills that is expected to gather between $200 000 and $400 000, organisers said.
Through the Bob and Dolores Hope Charitable Foundation, the sale will benefit US veterans. Hope befriended many US presidents throughout his life, and his wartime shows organised by the United Service Organisations cheered soldiers from World War II to the Gulf War in the 1990s.
Born in 1903, Hope and his family came to the United States from England when he was four years old. He got his start in vaudeville and later became a major personality on radio and television.
As a comedian, his "road" movies with Bing Crosby thrilled audiences. Oscar-winning filmmaker Woody Allen credited the Hope and Crosby films with inspiring him to be a comedian.
"He and the country grew up (together)," his daughter Linda Hope said. "There was no electricity when dad was starting out his life, and the Wright brothers made their first flight in 1903."
Nearly 700 items for sale
Julien's Auctions is selling 188 items from Hope's office, and Linda Hope recently gave Reuters a tour ahead of the sale.
There are a total 680 items in the sale including memorabilia that had been in storage, said Darren Julien, founder of the firm handling the auction.
But the home office houses many of the prized items. Hope worked from an office with a ceiling high enough to swing a golf club and a table long enough to seat his writers.
Mementos from friends, many of them signed, crowd shelves. On his desk, Hope placed a rattlesnake in a clear stand and in one glass case, there were decades-old golf balls.
"I can see him here with his glasses on, going over the jokes," Linda Hope said of her father's desk.
This week, Hope fans can see the memorabilia up close by cruising on the Queen Mary 2. In Ireland, where Hope had a home, there will be an exhibition of some of the items on September 19 to October 5, at Newbridge Silverware in County Kildare.
- Reuters
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