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Teeritz's comments in the New Member thread got me thinking about the influence well-known people have on typewriter collector. Did their choice in typewriters have any effect your own buying habits?
I thought it would be interesting to start a thread on public figures and their typewriters, especially the ones who have influenced your purchase (or search) of a specific machine.
Here are a few of mine:
Ernest Hemingway
I'm a big fan of Hemingway's work and the idea of owning a typewriter model that he used to write with would be something special.
Typerwirters: Corona 3, Underwood Noiseless Portable, Royal Arrow, Royal P, Halda portable model P
Ian Fleming
Okay, I'll admit that I'm a James Bond junkie and that owning a Fleming typer would be a novelty.
Typewriters: Royal portables, Triumph Gabriele (1950s)
Dashiell Hammett
The Thin Man series and Hammett's other detective books such as The Maltese Falcon are a lot of fun to read, so an example of the typewriter he was known to use was a must buy.
Typewriter: Royal De Luxe
Günter Grass
An author that I have a lot of respect for, Grass wrote with - and swore by - a legendary machine, although I still don't understand how he wrote anything of length on one.
Typewriter: Olivetti Lettera 22 (1954)
T.E. Lawrence
Having read Seven Pillars of Wisdom, it was imperative that I own the same model as was used by Lawrence to write his landmark book with.
Typewriter: Royal 5
Hunter S. Thompson
Brilliant in his own way, owning a Thompson typer meant a leap into a genre that I swore I'd avoid: Electric typewriters. Still, his choice of machine is now an icon design of the electric age and the day will come when I wasn't able to resist its call. By the way, Thompson for some reason had a fondness for shooting defenceless Selectric typewriters in the wild. No one could ever accuse the man of being boring.
Typewriter: IBM Selectric (1961-71 in red)
Last edited by Uwe (23-3-2013 10:36:13)
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Not that I have any particular interest in John F. Kennedy, this webpage that shows the Underwood that he used is pretty interesting.
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Growing up, I was a big fan of the children's writer, Enid Blyton. She was very fond of the Imperial Good Companion:
I nearly bought one, when I was on holiday in England last year, but it had feeding-issues which made me think twice about it. The paper didn't go in properly and wouldn't come out properly. Shot feed-rollers, I reckon.
One day, I'd like to own one. I just think they're cute!
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This is an interesting photo of poet Charles Bukowski clutching an Underwood portable of some kind. Looks like it might be a Champion to me...
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It seems that the Los Angeles politician, Steve Soboroff, is partial to celebrity-owned typewriters. His collection includes machines by Ray Bradbury, Ernest Hemingway, Jack London, George Bernard Shaw and John Lennon.
Last edited by Stevetype33 (02-4-2013 13:15:17)
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Here's another. William Faulkner and his Underwood (a three-bank?).
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Agatha Christie's Royal 10, at her room at the Pera Palace Hotel in Istanbul:
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Gorgeous!
Last edited by Hemingway (05-4-2013 22:50:47)
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One of my favourite authors was the late, great Brian Jacques. He passed away a couple of years back at the age of 71, I believe. He was very famous for his fantasy and history novels. He was equally famous for the fact that he typed all his stories on a typewriter. Sadly, it's not recorded anywhere, what model of typewriter he used. Not even his official website.
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Uwe wrote:
This is an interesting photo of poet Charles Bukowski clutching an Underwood portable of some kind. Looks like it might be a Champion to me...
Those chrome strips on the front are typical of the Universals... but they might have also appeared on the Champions.