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Fans Can Now Own Some Clint Eastwood Memorabilia Via Los Angeles Estate Sale

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Riki and Niki Buchanan of Diamond Estate Services are calling for Clint Eastwood fans to show up for their upcoming estate sale featuring some of the star’s prized possessions including cowboy boots, memorabilia, belts buckles from Western sets and many other valuables.

The event will take place at Clint’s former Beverly Glen neighborhood in Los Angeles, which was his first property since his first major TV role as Rowdy Yates in Rawhide. He lived there for two decades, and now more stuff he owned, like his impressive vinyl collection, gym equipment, and games, will find new owners.

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Inside Clint Eastwood’s memorabilia estate sale

Clint sold the property to his friend and Eastwood Films producer, Fritz Manes, in 1983 for a quarter of a million dollars. Fritz and his wife left Clint’s items untouched, even after Fritz’s death in 2011. The estate sale came about after Fritz’s wife passed away a few months ago, and the items for sale are undergoing review ahead of the three-day event.

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RELATED: Clint Eastwood Almost Died Trying To Visit His Love

Also available are framed movie set photos, vintage movie posters, and director’s chairs for anticipating buyers. “One of my favorite actors, and what a great actor he was,” a fan noted on social media. “Clint Eastwood’s estate sale is gonna go crazy,” someone else quipped excitedly.

TIGHTROPE, Clint Eastwood, 1984. ©Warner Bros./courtesy Everett Collection

Clint’s Hollywood run

Clint’s career took off with Jack Arnold’s Revenge of the Creature in the mid-50s, after which he starred in more productions like Francis In The Navy, Tarantula, and The First Traveling Saleslady, which was one of his biggest roles. This came after numerous unsuccessful auditions with the likes of Joseph Pevney and many other directors that considered him unproactive at the time.

RAWHIDE, Clint Eastwood, (1962). 1959-1966. TV Guide/courtesy Everett Collection

He then joined the CBS western series Rawhide as Yates, which gave him yet another big break in his career. By the ‘90s, he had become a director himself, with multiple award-winning productions to his credit. The 94-year-old is yet to retire but has his final film, Juror No. 2, in the works.

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