Toronto Star

Sale of Brown’s estate funds scholarshi­ps

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R&B legend James Brown’s estate has been sold for an estimated $90 million, enabling him to fulfil his dying wish to fund scholarshi­ps for children in need for perpetuity.

The scholarshi­p trust will help kids in South Carolina, where Brown was born, and Georgia, where he grew up, estate executor Russell L. Bauknight told the New York Times.

Primary Wave, which manages estates and song catalogues, purchased Brown’s musical assets.

“James Brown was one of the greatest musical entertaine­rs of all time, and one of the greatest legends of the music business,” Larry Mestel, the company’s founder, said. “That fits what we do like a glove.”

Brown died at age 73 on Christmas Day 15 years ago of congestive heart failure and a

huge funeral was held at a packed 8,100-seat capacity James Brown Arena in Augusta, Georgia, drawing the likes of Michael Jackson, Rev. Al Sharpton and Rev. Jesse Jackson.

Unfortunat­ely, over the past 15 years, more than a dozen law- suits were filed for a variety of reasons such as questionin­g the value of his estate and how his assets would be split. Tomi Rae Hynie, for one, claimed to have been married to him and want- ed a part of the estate, as did five of Brown’s children. Last year, a South Carolina Supreme Court judge ruled that since Hynie had not dissolved a previous marriage, she and Brown were not legally married and she had no right to any part of his estate.

Brown was dubbed the Godfa- ther of Soul and “The Hardest Working Man in Show Busi- ness” and became a legendary figure in music with classic hits like “I Got You (I Feel Good),” “It’s a Man’s Man’s World” and “Living in America.”

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