Man sells giant autograph collection for daughter
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this Monday, Oct 22, 2012 photo, Julie Susi checks her medications at her Davie, Fla. home as she talks about her father and the upcoming auction. Susi suffers from a rare autoimmune disease that makes her bones dangerously brittle and causes her bodys defenses to attack her own blood vessels. Her father, Ken Kallin, hopes to sell off his entire 120,000-piece memorabilia collection that includes photographs signed by Muhammad Ali and Neil Armstrong at an auction to benefit Julie. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter)(Credit: AP)OAKLAND PARK, Fla. (AP) — Three decades ago, Ken Kallin began amassing the 120,000 pieces in a memorabilia collection that includes photographs signed by Muhammad Ali and Neil Armstrong along with rare books and trading cards. By the end of Saturday, he’s hoping to have gotten rid of nearly all of it — at an auction to benefit his ailing daughter.
Kallin’s daughter suffers from a rare autoimmune disease that makes her bones dangerously brittle and causes her body’s defenses to attack her own blood vessels. Her treatments are expensive and can involve powerful chemotherapy drugs often used to treat cancer patients.
A memorabilia expert who’s not involved in the sale described Kallin’s collection as “once-in-a-lifetime” and expects the auction to attract big spenders.
“It’s for a higher purpose,” said the 67-year-old Kallin.
His daughter, 43-year-old Julie Susi, suffers from mixed connective tissue disorder, or MCTD, which shares features with lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. Her brittle bones make it difficult to get around. She walks with a boot on her broken right foot and takes a dozen pills a day to help relieve back and joint pain. She also received chemotherapy treatment for vasculitis, an inflammation of blood vessels.
She can’t work and said she and her husband are struggling financially. They have two children, she pays $2,200 a month for their insurance and her deductible is $1,250.
“I’m in a lot of pain,” Susi said. “Some days are better than others.”
But she also sees the sale as a chance for her father’s private collection to have a public debut that shows the value of his years of collecting. The sale is taking place at a warehouse outside Fort Lauderdale with J. Sugarman Auction Corp.
“I had never looked at this to benefit me. I just want to see my father make it,” she said.
Susi said she didn’t bother turning down her father’s offer. He wouldn’t have listened to her anyway.
Kallin says he began collecting memorabilia after meeting actress Bette Davis in 1980. By the end of the evening, Davis had given Kallin five photographs with her signature on each.
From there, he pieced together his collection by attending golf tournaments and other celebrity appearances, often carrying head shots and other glossy photos to be signed. He scoured garage sales for collectibles. He even bought some items from friends.




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