LOT #90018 |
Sold on Apr 5, 2020 for: Sign-in
or Join (free & quick)
Depeche Mode Autograph Set in a Matted Display....
Click the image to load the highest resolution version.
Sold on Apr 5, 2020 for:
$159.00
Bid Source: HA.com/Live bidder
Get one of these:
Explore Available Items
Description
Depeche Mode Autograph Set in a Matted Display. The cut signatures of Depeche Mode members David Gahan, Martin Gore, and Alan Wilder, each in blue ballpoint ink, matted in grey with a reproduction of the cover of the Synth Pop act's third album, Construction Time Again, to an overall 12" x 18 1/2". Very Fine condition. COA from Heritage Auctions.More Information: RDR began collecting autographs in the boroughs of NYC in the mid-1960s. The first autograph collected was Sherman Plunkett of the NY Jets football team. Later on, RDR branched out to the entertainment celebrity field. The first autographs collected were Alan Alda and Johnny Olson at the taping of a game show in NYC. The first singer obtained was Paul Simon of Simon and Garfunkel who was a big favorite of his.
In the early 1970s, RDR collected with a bunch of older NYC collectors. At that time, RDR began to purchase autographs weekly from four of them that they had obtained in person. RDR collected autographs with them outside of hotels and on Broadway. At that time, many celebrities saw shows each night as audience members. Autographs of the cast members were also collected both before and after their performances.
RDR waited for autographs with them at NBC's Live at Five local newscast. Also taped there were Tom Snyder's Tomorrow Show, the first version of David Letterman, and Saturday Night Live. Rehearsals were earlier in the week. Also, for a short period, Howard Cosell's Saturday Live was taped there.
Back in those days, there was also a group of music fans that RDR hung out with outside of hotels in NYC. Basically, there were a number of hotels in those days where the majority of singers and groups stayed including the Plaza, the Regency, the Pierre, the Sherry Netherland, the Barbizon Plaza, the St. Moritz, the St. Regis, the Warwick hotel (where RDR obtained Cary Grant and the cast of Happy Days in the same day), and the Waldorf Hotel and Towers.
In those days before computers made it so much easier to find out information on tours and record store appearances, RDR scoured the Village Voice, a weekly NYC paper, the moment it come out late Tuesday night or Wednesday. The Village Voice listed advertisements for the music clubs and theaters from the smallest to the largest arenas enabling one to know when those acts were in town prior to the appearances.
Besides hotels, RDR collected autographs at various rehearsals (soundchecks) of music acts at clubs like The Bottom Line, The Palladium (where they had double and triple bills), Max's Kansas City and other clubs where New Wave and Punk groups performed all over the city, and the Lone Star Café. Many music acts playing downtown stayed at the Gramercy Park Hotel and the Iroquois Hotel, amongst other hotels.
Sometimes acts were on radio shows on stations like 99X where RDR obtained Elton John for the first time on November 27, 1974, as Elton was there being E.J. the D.J. His drummer Nigel Olssen also showed up.
Record stores had artists signing autographs. Tower Records back then allowed one to get anything signed. REM at a very early stage signed autographs at J&R music store near NY's City Hall.
RDR considered himself an archivist purchasing some major collections of autographs, including the Joe Forrest, a collection from four dealers that had purchased them at an auction a few weeks earlier. This collection was in autograph page books and went from the 1950s to the 1990s. It includes actors, politicians, and many music groups with original members on one page at the time they first had hits. Also included were priceless doo-wop groups, soul, R&B, rock, pop groups, and basically all genres.
Later, RDR started to collect at shows like Live with Regis Philbin and the more modern version of The David Letterman Show at NBC, which moved to CBS and taped at the famous Ed Sullivan Theater. Stephen Colbert taped there after he took over for Letterman . Good Morning America, the Today Show, and the first version of After Breakfast on FX were amongst other locations where RDR collected.
From the early days of Rap music, RDR collected outside the radio station WLIB which had on-air live visits on some of their daily and weekly shows.
RDR collected infrequently at the airports, (Kennedy and Newark), including The Night of 100 Stars One and later The Night of 100 Stars 2. It was at the airport that RDR obtained none other than Sid Vicious of The Sex Pistols leaving the country.
RDR obtained most country music stars going to Nashville starting in the early 1970s for Fan Fair. Later on, RDR went to the November country award week waiting at studios where nationwide morning radio shows were taped, at the fairgrounds, and at the celebrity country music softball games, and at the Nashville airport.
RDR collected at many concerts he saw in the summer months of the 1970s. He waited before and after the shows for the acts that performed at the Shaffer Music Festival in NY's Central Park. Back in those days, it was quite easy to obtain autographs. It was very informal, unlike later on, especially after the events in September 2001.
In the days before the 2000s, the stars spoke for themselves, unlike in the last twenty years, where a publicist or agent spoke for them. Stars such as Bette Davis or Waylon Jennings, for instance, would spend more time with fans after being told "no they couldn't." The biggest superstars like Cary Grant, Grace Kelly, or Alfred Hitchcock decided when they would sign. In the colder weather, the stars would invite the autograph hounds inside a hotel regardless of whether the hotel staff put up a fuss, saying they were their guests (LOL).
Heritage Auctions provides as much information as possible but strongly encourages in-person inspection. Condition statements are offered as general guidance only, not as complete representations of fact, and do not constitute a warranty or assumption of liability by Heritage. Some condition issues may not be noted but may be visible in the photos, which are considered part of the condition report. Lots estimated at $1,000 or less are not de-framed for inspection, and we may be unable to provide additional details for lots valued under $500. Heritage does not guarantee the condition of frames and is not liable for damage to frames, glass/acrylic coverings, original boxes, display accessories, or artwork that has shifted in the frame. All lots are sold "AS IS" under our Terms & Conditions of Auction.
Auction Info
2020 April 4 - 5 Entertainment & Music Memorabilia Signature Auction - Dallas #7217 (go to Auction Home page)
Auction Dates
April, 2020
4th-5th
Saturday-Sunday
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 11
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 680
Buyer's Premium per Lot:
25% on the first $300,000 (minimum $49), plus 20% of any amount between $300,000 and $3,000,000, plus 12.5% of any amount over $3,000,000 per lot.
Shipping, Taxes, Terms and Bidding
Sales Tax information
Terms and Conditions | Bidding Guidelines and Bid Increments | Glossary of Terms
Important information concerning Sales Tax and Resale Certificates. Learn More
Terms and Conditions | Bidding Guidelines and Bid Increments | Glossary of Terms