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Ernest Hemingway

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:25,000.00 - 30,000.00 USD
Ernest Hemingway

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Auction Date:2018 Jul 11 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Spectacular grouping of three TLSs from Ernest Hemingway, each signed “Ernie,” four total pages, dated between 1953 and 1955, each on Finca Vigia, San Francisco de Paula, Cuba letterhead and addressed to his personal trainer, boxing coach, and friend George Brown, the owner of a gymnasium on West Fifty-seventh Street in Manhattan. The earliest letter, May 12, 1953, in part: "How are you kid? Mary sends her best. We are fine and in very good shape and think of you often. Were out on a trip together on the boat for two weeks and we go to bed every night after it gets dark and have plenty of time to talk and to sleep good. Get up every morning at daylight and out in the little boat. Caught lots of fish. All kinds.” Hemingway offers news of his sons, including that of his youngest son Gregory, or "Gig," who had begun to distance himself from his father: "I am sorry I spoke against Gig since he is a friend of yours and used to be of mine as well as my favorite son. But he changed very strange very fast. As bad as though the devil was managing him. I couldn't ever see him again; not even to go and see him hanged. But if he seems good to you, O.K. I haven't heard from him since last November when he came of age. At that time he was writing letters that would make Mary sick every time one would come in the house. Being wild is one thing. But when a boy writes letters calling his step-mother a whore (spelling it out) and saying how sorry he is for her having to suffer living with a c––– s––– like his father (spelling it out) and writing screw-ball letters about what a lousy writer I am and that the last book was like a mess of vomit on a bar-room floor and how he is going to beat me up when he sees me and silly stuff like that you have to tell him to quit writing. I know I was a big disappointment to my parents in my conduct and I was a pretty wild boy. But I just shoved off from home and I never wrote my family nasty or psycho letters. But maybe it is just something Gig has to go through.”

The second letter, August 18, 1955, written on the eve of the Brown’s visit to Cuba and while preparations are being made for the filming of The Old Man and the Sea, in part: “George you can't have any confidence in any of those characters. They are all tighter than a hogs ass in fly time That Goldwyn kid was nice as could be when it was a question of seeing us and thus becoming an old pal of old Ernie. But when something came up later where he could have been helpful he included himself out because it might have involved him paying a taxi. This to keep under the hat that Englishman sat on because we may still need him.” The final letter, November 25, 1953, begins with Hemingway writing the first paragraph in pencil: “Please forgive the pencil but am in bed and have to stay there for 10–20 days more. Went to the Sports Palace here to be decorated for some unknown reason.” Transitioning to type, Papa notes that preparations were still being made for the film, and that he was making an effort to get Brown involved in getting Spencer Tracy in shape: "I am very sorry about [Peter] Viertel [the film’s screenwriter] behaving so carelessly. He is a very selfish boy but I think he has a little bit of an excuse in that he was with Zinneman on the script and was expecting you out there. While Zinneman was down here we discussed the whole thing about your getting Spencer in shape and agreed it was absolutely necessary and we spoke about it again on the long distance phone.” Hemingway makes emendations in his own hand to the two 1955 letters. In overall fine condition. Accompanied by an original mailing envelope, addressed in Hemingway's own hand.