Sunday, February 08, 2009

Ackerman Sci-Fi, Horror Collection Up For Sale

I sure hope all of Forry's stuff finds a good home. It would be cool if it could all be put in some sort of monster/sci-fi museum.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — He always vowed that he wouldn't die unless he could take it with him.

But now that Forrest J Ackerman really is gone, the grand old man of science fiction's memorabilia collection is on the auction block.

Thousands of items, including the Count Dracula ring worn by Bela Lugosi in the 1931 horror classic "Dracula," the vampire cape Lugosi wore for decades — even the actor's outfit from the "worst film ever made," Ed Wood's cheesy "Plan 9 from Outer Space" — are going up for bid.

So are such notable pieces as a signed, first-edition copy of Mary Shelley's novel "Frankenstein" and a first-edition copy of Bram Stoker's "Dracula" that was signed not only by Stoker but also Lugosi, Boris Karloff and numerous other horror film notables.

The auction, tentatively scheduled for the last week of April, is expected to raise $500,000, said Joe Maddalena, president of Profiles in History, which is handling the sale.

Ackerman, the science-fiction writer, editor and literary agent widely credited with coining the term sci-fi, spent a lifetime collecting tens of thousands of pieces, ranging from the junky to the very rare. He died last December at age 92.

"I'm holding that stuff in my hand and I'm just like, 'Wow, these are his most iconic treasurers,'" Maddalena said when he was invited by Ackerman's estate to auction the collection. He said Ackerman's will stipulates that his estate's share of the profits be divided among his friends.

At one time Ackerman had a collection of 300,000 pieces of science-fiction film memorabilia, 50,000 books and the complete sets of 200 science-fiction magazines. During his final years he contributed many pieces to museums and sold some others, but held on to thousands more.



2 comments:

plasticfetish said...

God, I swear... if I had a few million dollars, I'd buy all that stuff just to keep it in his old house.

I've regretted for years that I never took a tour of the Ackermansion when I had a chance, and now I'll probably look back at it as one of my biggest mistakes.

JH said...

it should be in a museum!, i watched a special on his tours. lord it is history, not a price tag...

hopefully those get a piece of it, know what they have... i am sure they will!

thanks!
jh