snoopy58 wrote:My sister-in-law's Grandmother worked with Jack Benny in a vaudeville act, and one night he was broke and needing money. Jack Benny sold his violin to the Grandmother for thirty dollars. The Grandmother has kept the violin just like Jack Benny gave it to her, in the originial case. My sister-in-law inherited it. She is wanting to know how much it is worth and how she would go about selling it. Any info would be appreciated. Thank you PS. My sister-in-law took it to Chicago to have it autheticed and it is Jack Benny's violin. We believe it is one of his first violins he used.
LLeff wrote:snoopy58 wrote:My sister-in-law's Grandmother worked with Jack Benny in a vaudeville act, and one night he was broke and needing money. Jack Benny sold his violin to the Grandmother for thirty dollars. The Grandmother has kept the violin just like Jack Benny gave it to her, in the originial case. My sister-in-law inherited it. She is wanting to know how much it is worth and how she would go about selling it. Any info would be appreciated. Thank you PS. My sister-in-law took it to Chicago to have it autheticed and it is Jack Benny's violin. We believe it is one of his first violins he used.
Hi Snoopy,
Interesting story. Can you tell us more about your sister-in-laws grandmother? Did she and Jack actually work together in the same act, or were the just on the same bill? What was her name and what did she do in her act? Do you know about what year this would have been? Any photos of her and Jack together? What additional information was used to authenticate the violin? Any information would be helpful.
snoopy58 wrote:Jack Benny sold his violin to the Grandmother for thirty dollars.
bboswell wrote:But seriously, has anyone heard more about this violin? This is a great story!
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