The Denver Post

You can buy Hemingway’s typewriter. But would you use it?

- By David Waldstein

You never know what can be found in a famous person’s typewriter. Joe Dimaggio’s old machine contained the cutup shards of his expired bank card. Steve Soboroff, who bought the New York Yankees Hall of Famer’s typewriter in 2011, found the little pieces underneath the keys while cleaning it.

Soboroff also unearthed childhood photos of Ernest Hemingway in the writer’s 1926 Underwood Standard Portable. But Soboroff’s greatest discovery with these machines — and others, including typewriter­s belonging to Maya Angelou, Tennessee Williams, John Lennon and Shirley Temple — was a historical connection to great people.

“These are really hard for me to give up,” Soboroff said on a video call last week.

After 20 years of assembling what may be the greatest typewriter collection in the world, Soboroff is putting all 33 of his beloved machines up for auction. Owning them has been a privilege, he says, and each comes with a unique back story that helped fuel Soboroff’s passion.

Like when Soborof f backed out of a deal with actress Angelina Jolie, refusing to part with Hemingway’s typewriter after she agreed to pay $ 250,000 for it. While reports at the time indicated Jolie was the one to walk away, Soboroff said he canceled the transactio­n when he learned that she intended to give the machine to her husband, Brad Pitt, for him to use. Soboroff might have allowed Pitt to bang away on Harold Robbins’ or Mae West’s machines, he said, but Hemingway’s typewriter was sacred.

“At that time, I could have used the money,” Soboroff said. “But nobody’s touching that one. Ernest Hemingway’s typewriter? No chance.”

Now someone else will get the chance to own it, because after two decades bearing the responsibi­lity of protecting, insuring, exhibiting and shipping the typewriter­s all over the country to promote their legacies, Soboroff, 75, no longer has the energy for it. And he could still use the money.

Some of the proceeds will be donated to the Jim Murray Memorial Foundation, which honors the former Los Angeles Times sports columnist by issuing scholarshi­ps to journalism students. Soboroff is a lifelong fan of the Los Angeles Dodgers and revered Murray’s writing. His was the first typewriter Soboroff bought, at auction, in 2005. From there, collecting them became a devotion.

A Los Angeles- based entreprene­ur and former commission­er of the Los Angeles Police Department, Soboroff bought most of the typewriter­s at auctions, though a few were acquired directly from family members or the previous owner.

Tom Hanks, a renowned collector himself, gave Soboroff his own Hermes 3000 after the two met and discussed their shared love of typewriter­s. And in 2012, not long after the journalist Andy Rooney died, Soboroff hired a Connecticu­t real estate agent to go to the family garage sale at Rooney’s old house and offer $ 5,000 for Rooney’s beloved 1929 Underwood Model 5.

The man Soboroff hired turned out to be a retired CIA agent, and despite a three- hour line to get into the sale, he insinuated himself inside and secured the machine. Soborof f said that hours later, he received an offer of $ 125,000 from CBS, Rooney’s former employer. He turned it down.

Typewriter­s are imperfect little engraving machines, Soboroff likes to say, requiring more physical interactio­n than today’s laptops. Some exude a personalit­y, a mechanical soul, like a vintage car or a maestro’s violin. The connection to their original owners adds to the mystique.

“They are really hard to find because some heirs don’t want to give them up,” Soboroff said. “They’ll sell the clothes, pictures. They won’t sell the typewriter.”

There is no telling yet the full value of the collection. Heritage Auctions is handling the sale, which goes to gavel Dec. 15 in Dallas, and the items will be sold separately. Last year, Soboroff donated six of his typewriter­s to the Smithsonia­n. They had belonged to John Lennon, Elia Kazan, Jerry Siegel ( co- creator of Superman), Orson Welles, Dimaggio and Angelou and were appraised at an average of about $ 250,000 apiece.

“I shouldn’t own Maya Angelou’s typewriter,” Soboroff said. “That’s for the people of America. I shouldn’t own John Lennon’s typewriter.”

He did, however, allow Pierce Brosnan, the actor, to type on Lennon’s machine in exchange for a $ 5,000 donation to the Murray foundation. And he lent Siegel’s to comic book convention­s, where people lined up for hours to write short notes on the same typewriter used to create Superman’s dialogue.

In making his permanent gif t, Soborof f allowed the Smithsonia­n to choose from his collection. It passed on typewriter­s owned by Greta Garbo, John Updike, Philip Roth, Jack London and Gore Vidal, as well as the Braille machine owned by Andrea Bocelli. It declined the Hemingway model because it already owned one. Whoever buys this Hemingway will also get the photo negatives, the prints and the original envelopes stashed inside the case.

When Soborof f f irst spotted the negatives, he mistook them for ancient strips of bacon. The first one he touched turned to dust, so he scooped the rest up with a spatula and took them to a restorer, where the shots were revealed.

Sandra Spanier, an English professor at Penn State University and the editor of the Hemingway Letters Project, called the photograph­s a “pretty extraordin­ary find.”

“Finding negat ive s from the early 20th, when Hemingway was a small child at his family cottage, inside a typewriter, is a pretty solid link to Hemingway,” she said.

Soboroff said experts from the John F. Kennedy Presidenti­al Library and Museum, which is home to a vast collection of Hemingway’s archives, matched the typeface to confirm it was the author’s typewriter. He said the forensic investigat­ion showed evidence of desperate words pounded into the roller. He believes they could be some of Hemingway’s final typed thoughts, before he died by suicide in 1961.

One of the typewriter­s Soboroff probably won’t miss is the 1968 Montgomery Ward Signature Portable 440T owned by Ted Kaczynski, aka the Unabomber. He may have used it to write some of his manifesto before he was captured and handed four life sentences.

Soboroff bought the machine from the U. S. government, in part because the proceeds went to the victims and their families. He then wrote a letter to Kaczynski in prison on the same typewriter, asking him three questions about it. One related to the whereabout­s of the carrying case, which Soboroff knew Kaczynski had used to make a bomb. Kaczynski replied — “in that creepy handwritin­g,” Soboroff recalled — that he would only answer the questions after verifying Soboroff’s identity.

Two months later, Soboroff received another card that read: “You are not who I thought you were. Tough luck.”

“I’m sitting at the Palm in Beverly Hills,” Soboroff said. “He’s serving 665 years in max security, and he’s saying tough luck to me? I decided I didn’t want any more prison pen pals.”

Soboroff has made most of the collection available for display at museums, universiti­es and special events and asks buyers to also show the typewriter­s publicly. He tapped out the written requests — typos included — on his own Monarch 101 from 1937.

The machine has no delete buttons, no cut- andpaste. Just the click- clack of history.

“This is emotional for me,” he said. “I hope it will be for the people who buy them, too.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY DESIREE RIOS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Steve Soboroff, a former commission­er of the Los Angeles Police Department, with his typewriter collection, at Heritage Auctions in Dallas, Dec. 6.
PHOTOS BY DESIREE RIOS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Steve Soboroff, a former commission­er of the Los Angeles Police Department, with his typewriter collection, at Heritage Auctions in Dallas, Dec. 6.
 ?? ?? A 1961 Smith- Corona Electra 110 that belonged to the novelist Truman Capote.
A 1961 Smith- Corona Electra 110 that belonged to the novelist Truman Capote.
 ?? ?? A 1887 Crandall New Model typewriter.
A 1887 Crandall New Model typewriter.

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