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I was browsing on Ebay yesterday, looking around the upcoming Elvis memorabilia auction being conducted by Graceland under the auspices of their "Graceland Authenticated" appraisal service, and found this:
The inscription is on a 1975 tour promotional photo.
Here's the full listing: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Elvis-Presley-Signed-and-Inscribed-1975-Sou...
It's a good example of an Elvis signature --but not by Presley himself. It has numerous features indicative of a secretarial proxy signature... The smoother flow, the separation of the "P" from the "s", and the glaringly obvious large, loopy "y" at the end that almost appears like a fat, cursive "g".
Examples of proxies like this show up all the time, and are usually the result of an item that had been mailed to Graceland by a fan in hopes that Elvis could sign it, which he only periodically did, while the bulk of the requests were filled by his secretarial staff...This is more than clearly one of them. (Side note-- these items are not coming from Graceland's own collection, rather they're from private collectors who have arranged their listings to be part of the auction) And unfortunately, as years go by and these make it to market, it's also obvious many of the owners who obtained them have gone all this time actually thinking they got back a true Presley signature.
What I'm really puzzled by is how this slipped by the estate's own authenticators, especially given the fact that in this same auction there are numerous genuine samples that show how starkly different this one is; even a non-expert could pick this out ...yet here it is, being offered with a start bid of $1,500 and their estimate of value at $3,000 - $5,000.
Just putting this out there for thoughts, and to see if anyone knows who Graceland commissions to do their evaluations --it likely isn't Mr. Epperson or Mr. Consola --they'd laugh this off, I'm sure.
How sad is it that the people responsible for conserving Elvis' own estate would allow an error this clear to take place?
Lot#61 is the Army cap -- it still is listed on both the main auction site and EBay, however Lot#21 the "Million Dollar Quartet" guitar is showing "withdrawn" on the main site, but still listed at EBay . There is another guitar, Lot#147, supposedly signed by Elvis and Col.Parker that has not been pulled at all, but does look genuine overall to me.
As I said above, it appears whatever has been pulled from auction is delayed for some reason and still is visible on Ebay.
Great news. Kudos to them for doing this.
GREAT work! It would have been a real shame and really hurt Graceland's image to sell a lot of these so called signed items.
Mark
In connection with the current situation at Graceland Auction I have question about one item from previous auction (The Auction At Graceland January 2015, lot #44). What do you think about this? History says, that this is checkbook from Mike L. Moon collection (friend of J.D. Sumner). This is looks like on Elvis's handwriting? I'm interested in opinions of people, who studied Elvis's handwriting. Maybe someone here can help me...
http://auction.graceland.com/elvis_presley_s_personal_checkbook_reg...
Thanks a lot!
Thanks. I compared first stub #132 with letter to Nixon and found many similarities (little things, which could not knew Joe Esposito, Charlie Hodge, Marty Lacker or Sonny West, I mean tiny nuances of handwriting). But maybe you're right, I know that Elvis very rarely wrote in his life.
I asked Larry Geller about it (Elvis's very close friend and his barber) and he said: "He always signed checks".
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