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Saturday, November 16, 2024 |
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No bidder found for letters by 'Peanuts' creator |
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Some of the romantic letters and drawings the late Peanuts creator Charles Schulz sent to a young woman 23 years his junior, who infatuated him. The love notes from 1970-1971 were offered for sale at Sotheby's in New York by the family of Tracey Claudius, who the auction house says is ill at her home near Philadelphia. It was estimated they'll bring $250,000 to $350,000 at the Dec. 14 auction. AP Photo/Sotheby's.
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NEW YORK (AP).- A rare archive of letters and drawings by "Peanuts" creator Charles Schulz did not find a buyer at a New York City auction.
Sotheby's had estimated that the letters would sell for $250,000 to $350,000 at Friday's sale.
The cartoonist wrote the affectionate letters to a young woman in 1970-1971.
The 44 letters included 22 original drawings of some of the comic strip's characters, including Charlie Brown, Snoopy and Lucy.
Sotheby's called it the most significant collection of correspondence and drawings by Schulz to come to auction.
On 16 March 1970, 25-year-old Tracey Claudius accompanied a friend on an interview with Charles Schulz. Schulz, who was 48 and almost between his two marriages he was growing distant from his first wife, and they would divorce in 1972 was immediately smitten. Within a few weeks, the two had gone ice-skating, met at a book store in San Francisco, and shared dinner at the Fairmont Hotel. Claudius was as excited by the nascent friendship as Schulz, and the two quickly developed a warm and playful relationship.
Schulz commemorated the first six weeks of their relationship in a series of cartoon drawings, on construction paper, featuring Charlie Brown and Lucy Van Pelt as stand-ins for him and Claudius on the first sheet, a smiling Charlie Brown simply asks, Remember? The remaining seven sheets chronicle their encounters to-date, with captions such as On April 8th we dined alone for the first time. Many other letters in the present archive of which there are 44 in total are about phone calls and books, and frequently list the features that Schulz finds most attractive about Claudius. He variously comments on her sweet voice, her nose and beautiful profile, her prettiness, her beautiful eyes, her fascinating weirdness, her deeply musical laughter, her golden eyes, her soft hands, and her marvelous face. More often than not, Claudiuss name is written in longing triplicate: Tracey Tracey Tracey.
What may be most fascinating about the archive is that the daily Peanuts strips that Schulz was drawing at the time began to reflect the language and themes of his letters to Claudius. Lucy playfully beeped Snoopys nose in a 1970 comic, and in one of the later letters in the sequence Schulz writes Beep!
Wake up! I love you! In two letters that must date from late June or early July 1970, he laments that his many long-distant phone calls to Claudius had been found out, and that he must stop them in the 15 July strip of that year, Charlie Brown forbids Snoopy from going out to see that girl beagle he met, and yells at him to stop making those long-distant phone calls!
Schulz died in 2000 at age 77.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
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