Las Vegas Review-Journal

Signed, sealed, legitimate, Grad says “P

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

Stars” is the link between Las Vegas and the most relevant baseball document in history.

The show’s signature-authentica­tion expert, Beckett Authentica­tion Services’ Stevegrad , has verified the signatures on the first contract Jackie Robinson signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Grad also has verified the signatures on Robinson’s first contract with the Dodgers to play for their top minor league affiliate, the Montreal Royals, in 1945.

Those documents were appraised at $36 million in 2015. They’re being auctioned online in October (specific date not yet announced) by Goldin Auctions, with the Jackie Robinson Foundation’s approval. The auction closes Nov. 16. The contracts would be among the most valuable ever sold if they fetch the appraised value.

The Robinson documents are historical­ly significan­t and extraordin­arily rare: Just three contracts were signed by Robinson, Major League Baseball Commission­er Ford Frick and Dodgers General Manager Branch Rickey. One contract went to the Dodgers, another to the league office. Those two have vanished.

The lone copy is held by the auction consignor, Collectors Cafe, which purchased the document in 2013 for an undisclose­d sum. Robinson held the contracts originally, but they were purchased by the Brooklyn Historical Society. An anonymous financier then purchased the documents, and Collectors Cafe made its purchase four years ago.

Grad reviewed and authentica­ted the signatures a few weeks ago at what he described as a “lockdown facility” in New York City.

“You look at these documents, and they are really part of history,” Grad said Saturday in a back office at Gold & Silver Pawn. “It’s just amazing that this contract is the only one to have survived.”

Grad has been featured on “Pawn Stars” since 2013, appearing on 96 episodes entering the series’ 15th season, which is filming at the store at Pawn Plaza. He uses a nifty device, a Proscope Mobile that attaches to an ipad, to view detailed images of autographs.

The idiosyncra­sies, style, texture and pressure applied to an autograph usually indicate whether a subject signed a piece. Grad has noted inconsiste­ncies in such signatures as Joe Dimaggio (a frequent forgery) and Roberto Clemente (who often assigned clubhouse employees to sign memorabili­a under his name).

Grad doesn’t always break hearts. He reviewed an authentic piece of history brought into Gold & Silver years ago expressly to have it on the TV show: The Beatles’ first management contract with Brian Epstein, signed by all parties in 1962.

“They didn’t want me touching it, or handling it, at all,” Grad said. “I can understand why. That is real history.”

The Space is jazzed

Las Vegas jazz fans now have a weekly hang with top local artists. The Space announced a Tuesday night series that starts at 9 p.m.

Oct. 3 with John Abraham & Old Skool Kool. Oct. 10 it’s Michelle Johnson, followed by Charles Mcneil on Oct.

17, Pepe Jimenez & Groove Culture on Oct. 24, Uli Geissendoe­rfer on Nov. 7, Ronnie Foster Trio on Nov. 14, Naomi Mauro on Nov. 21, Glasses on Nov. 28 and Jonathan Karrant on Dec. 5.

The series features the city’s top jazz performers. Johnson is establishe­d as the city’s “First Lady of Jazz” and is also headlining at Myron’s Cabaret Jazz at 8 p.m. Friday with “Tapestry Unraveled,” her tribute to Carole King. Sax great Mcneil has backed Boz Scaggs and Lyle Lovett. Jimenez, the drummer for Santa Fe & The Fat City Horns, toured and recorded with Carlos Santana from 2013-15. Foster, a famed soul-jazz organist, has backed George Benson and appeared on Stevie Wonder’s landmark 1976 album “Songs in the Key of Life.” Keyboard master Geissendoe­rfer directs the UNLV Latin Jazz Ensemble and was music director on “Viva Elvis” at Aria.

Cover for these shows is just $10, a value in the “ridiculous” range.

John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @ Johnnykats­1 on Instagram. As of 9 p.m. Sunday:

1. Roommates’ fight over eggs sends one man to hospital

What began with a few beers, some eggs and an insult turned into a fight between roommates resulting in one man hospitaliz­ed and another accused of attempted murder, according to an arrest report.

2. Las Vegas bookmakers know a fix when they see one

The 1994 Arizona State point-shaving scandal was one of several uncovered over the years with the help of Las Vegas bookmakers.

3. Memo to Nevada motorists: License plates aren’t optional

License plates aren’t an optional decoration. They’re a requiremen­t so that your vehicle legally can hit the road in Nevada and every other state.

4. Lotus of Siam likely to remain closed longer than first thought

When chunks of Lotus of Siam’s ceiling caved in Friday night, the owner thought the famed Thai restaurant would be closed for just a week. Now it’s uncertain if the restaurant will be open by November.

5. Raiders K Giorgio Tavecchio still chasing dream after 6 NFL camps

The Raiders kicker gets a game ball after a history-making performanc­e in his NFL regular-season debut.

 ?? John Katsilomet­es ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats Steve Grad examines a signature from late astronaut Neil Armstrong at Gold & Silver Pawn on Saturday.
John Katsilomet­es Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats Steve Grad examines a signature from late astronaut Neil Armstrong at Gold & Silver Pawn on Saturday.
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 ??  ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Artist Mallory Dawn just finished a project for The Cosmopolit­an.
Las Vegas Review-journal Artist Mallory Dawn just finished a project for The Cosmopolit­an.

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