Orson Welles’ camera, other items up for auction

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PHOENIX (AP) — The youngest daughter of director and
writer Orson Welles is giving film buffs a chance to buy some of his
personal possessions, including a camera, scripts and photos from the
set of "Citizen Kane."
Beatrice Welles discovered the relics last
year in boxes and trunks and decided to put them up for auction. She
said her father would have preferred making the memorabilia available to
film buffs and fans as opposed to sending them to a museum.
"It’s
about the last thing he would’ve wanted. He just did not believe in
schooling, he did not believe in academic things," Beatrice Welles said
in a telephone interview from her Sedona, Ariz., home. "And museums kind
of have that connotation and I thought ‘No, this is not right for
him.’"
In all, she is handing more than 70 items over to Heritage Auctions, which will stage the auction on
April 26.
Margaret
Barrett, director of entertainment-related auctions, declined to
speculate on any possible bidding amounts but said she expects all the
lots to fetch decent bids.
"People are still talking about him
decades after his death," Barrett said. "One of the enduring signs of
fame is when young people know who someone is — someone who might have
passed away decades ago."
Barrett said she thinks Welles’ old Bell
& Howell movie camera will be one of the bigger sellers. According
to his daughter, he used the camera for home movies. In fact, one of the
photos in another lot up for bidding shows Welles using the camera to
record a bullfight in Spain.
Other items are reminders of Welles’
more painful Hollywood experiences. Two scripts for "The Magnificent
Ambersons," a 1942 film he wrote and directed, reveal two different
endings Welles had in mind; neither ended up in the film. The movie,
which centers on a spoiled heir’s attempt to keep his mother from
marrying her first love, was famously re-edited by someone else.
"They
kept on changing his pictures around and not letting him finish them.
That hurt him," Beatrice Welles said. "The only one he was allowed to do
completely from start to end was ‘Citizen Kane.’"
Long considered
Welles’ masterpiece for its innovations in editing and cinematography,
the 1941 "Citizen Kane" follows the lonely life of wealthy publishing
magnate Charles Foster Kane.
Not among the auction cache is any
Rosebud-type childhood memento of Welles’. Rosebud was the name of the
sled mourned by the titular character in "Kane" that burns at the end of
the film. According to Beatrice Welles, director Steven Spielberg
bought a version of the sled in 1982, also at auction, and was later
teased by her father about its authenticity.
"My father and Steven
were having lunch and my father said ‘I hate to tell you something, but
there was only one sled in Citizen Kane. Do you remember the ending?’"
Nearly
30 years after Welles’ 1985 death, Beatrice Welles said she was finally
emotionally strong enough to sift through boxes of her famous father’s
possessions. Her mother, Italian actress Paola Mori, died less than year
after Welles. The double loss was devastating.
"When they died … I just couldn’t even look at the stuff," she said.
Celebrity
interactions and globe-trotting made up Beatrice Welles’ unconventional
upbringing, where her father’s "Moviola editing machine was like part
of our luggage."
By the age of 3, Beatrice Welles was getting an
education any film student would have loved. She often sat on her
father’s lap while he cut movies in the editing room. As she got older,
she even pitched in.
"I’d get the two pieces of whatever celluloid
film it is on the machine. … He would tell me where to cut and I
would cut and do it for him," Beatrice Welles said.
Her father wasn’t always comfortable with being revered as a film genius, she said.
"He
would say, ‘There are only probably three geniuses ever that existed,
one of them being Einstein. I don’t put myself in that category.’"
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