Hi and a question about using PERSONAL
Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2010 2:30 am
Hello everyone,
I'm new here and am also new to autograph collecting. My collection is very small. But there is one I'm dying to get.
He's an actor that really hasn't done much in the past 10 years. In fact, I think he's basically retired from the industry. He used to attend conventions and autograph signings all the time. I had always hoped to attend one and get an autograph but it just didn't work out that way. Now, I understand he's not doing conventions any longer. So there goes my chance. The only hope I have is to get a letter to him through his agent.
Now, I realize most times, writing to the actor care of the agent usually gets your letter read by a poorly paid, overworked intern, and if you're lucky, a photo with a stamp version of the autograph, not the real thing.
Many, many years ago, I was home sick from work and was channel surfing daytime TV. I happened on an Oprah segment where she had an autograph collector on. He mentioned this same scenario, of the intern and the autograph stamp, and that's what made me pause. He stated if you write your actor, artist, or writer care of the agency who represents them and put PERSONAL on the front of the envelope, it will go straight to that actor, artist, or writer without being opened by the intern.
Now, I'm not talking a handwritten PERSONAL with hearts and flowers or whatnot. But a professional looking business envelope. This also means including a bit more of a letter than the standard "Hi, my name is _ and I'm (age) and live in _ Please send me an autograph" type letter. If you're going to get in front of said famous person, make your letter worthwhile but don't be over-bearing, with too much detail, or obnoxious. (OMG I just LOVE U!!!! type stuff.)
I've had success with this in the past and even received personal letters in response to mine along with real autographs in return but I haven't tried it in a long time. I was just wondering if it's now a known fact that doesn't work any longer or if it's still one of those secrets. I've done some searching on the internet but haven't found anything useful, so I'd thought I'd pester you folks and see what everyone thought.
So, what do y'all think? Ever tried it? Success or no?
Cheers,
Kat
I'm new here and am also new to autograph collecting. My collection is very small. But there is one I'm dying to get.
He's an actor that really hasn't done much in the past 10 years. In fact, I think he's basically retired from the industry. He used to attend conventions and autograph signings all the time. I had always hoped to attend one and get an autograph but it just didn't work out that way. Now, I understand he's not doing conventions any longer. So there goes my chance. The only hope I have is to get a letter to him through his agent.
Now, I realize most times, writing to the actor care of the agent usually gets your letter read by a poorly paid, overworked intern, and if you're lucky, a photo with a stamp version of the autograph, not the real thing.
Many, many years ago, I was home sick from work and was channel surfing daytime TV. I happened on an Oprah segment where she had an autograph collector on. He mentioned this same scenario, of the intern and the autograph stamp, and that's what made me pause. He stated if you write your actor, artist, or writer care of the agency who represents them and put PERSONAL on the front of the envelope, it will go straight to that actor, artist, or writer without being opened by the intern.
Now, I'm not talking a handwritten PERSONAL with hearts and flowers or whatnot. But a professional looking business envelope. This also means including a bit more of a letter than the standard "Hi, my name is _ and I'm (age) and live in _ Please send me an autograph" type letter. If you're going to get in front of said famous person, make your letter worthwhile but don't be over-bearing, with too much detail, or obnoxious. (OMG I just LOVE U!!!! type stuff.)
I've had success with this in the past and even received personal letters in response to mine along with real autographs in return but I haven't tried it in a long time. I was just wondering if it's now a known fact that doesn't work any longer or if it's still one of those secrets. I've done some searching on the internet but haven't found anything useful, so I'd thought I'd pester you folks and see what everyone thought.
So, what do y'all think? Ever tried it? Success or no?
Cheers,
Kat