Yep, I get that problem watching the RedHot freeviews tooCaractacus wrote: the screen would turn blue
every two seconds and I would have to keep switching the channel
just trying to watch it and my wrist got so tired.
Private Fight Film Collectors
Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
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Hannibal Barca
- Super Welterweight
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
I remember the Craig Long post well. I posted about it on ESB.
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pound per pound
- Heavyweight

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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Did the police Cappo sell the collection? I just realized this thread started years ago.evrenb wrote: ↑16 Apr 2015, 19:44Thanks Mikeymikeycapp wrote:Hello Evren,
I am not sure how to get in contact with Fosco's family I heard this through another party, however I can bet they are at the same address which is where interested parties with the money to barter for the collection can probably get a list of what Fosco had. Supposedly they are asking $250,000 for the entire collection and I am told they will not sell peace meal it is the entire collection or nothing!
Sincerely
Mikey Capp
What's the news with Sal??
Evren
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DavidKehler
- Editor

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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Does anyone know what became of Tony's collection? He and I traded with each other in the early 1990s, when I was an avid collector.mikeycapp wrote: ↑17 Apr 2015, 22:11mikeycapp wrote:Hello Evren,
I am not sure how to get in contact with Fosco's family I heard this through another party, however I can bet they are at the same address which is where interested parties with the money to barter for the collection can probably get a list of what Fosco had. Supposedly they are asking $250,000 for the entire collection and I am told they will not sell piece meal it is the entire collection or nothing!
Sincerely
Mikey Capp
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pound per pound
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Ah yes, the late captain Tony Fosco collection. Can someone post a list of what he had?
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DavidKehler
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
When I knew him in the early 1990s, the late Neil Terens, who died in February, was single and living in Brooklyn. Neil had a great collection of boxing films, with a focus on the 1950s and 1960s and obtained from Jim Jacobs, and some terrific VHS tapes, also from 1950s bouts, that he got through me via the late Philadelphia Eagle Pete Retzlaff, who, at the time, owned the Telesports Digest archive. Neil had some very rare stuff, Gene "Ace" Armstrong and Johnny Persol bouts, for example. Does anyone know what happened to Neil's collection?
Last edited by DavidKehler on 03 May 2023, 05:43, edited 1 time in total.
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DavidKehler
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Tony collected everything that he could. He particularly liked films of boxing from the early 20th century, and he had material from bouts held in Chicago in the 1950s. When I knew him, he prioritized collecting films rather that videotapes, and he liked to get kinescopes, too. He was a very aggressive collector with a big range of contacts and had really a lot of material.pound per pound wrote: ↑02 May 2023, 15:16 Ah yes, the late captain Tony Fosco collection. Can someone post a list of what he had?
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pound per pound
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Thanks Dave. Can a list of the films that his family sold or that he owned be posted here. Who was the winning bid?DavidKehler wrote: ↑03 May 2023, 04:04Tony collected everything that he could. He particularly liked films of boxing from the early 20th century, and he had material from bouts held in Chicago in the 1950s. When I knew him, he prioritized collecting films rather that videotapes, and he liked to get kinescopes, too. He was a very aggressive collector with a big range of contacts and had really a lot of material.pound per pound wrote: ↑02 May 2023, 15:16 Ah yes, the late captain Tony Fosco collection. Can someone post a list of what he had?
The late Luckett Davis who some know here left his entire collection to the public. It is massive! He was a chief research guy in boxing, maybe the best of his time.
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DavidKehler
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Nick Beck, a childhood friend of Jim Jacobs, had a significant collection. He lived in Los Angeles, and he passed away in 2017. Does anyone know what became of his collection?
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DavidKehler
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Steve Lott, who had a significant collection and had worked with Jim Jacobs, died in Las Vegas in 2021. Does anyone know what became of his collection? It is not at the Nevada Boxing Hall of Fame, which he once led.
Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Shame that nobody has any info. I would love to know what these guys had.
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DavidKehler
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
J. J. Johnston, a major collector who lived in Chicago, died in November. Does anyone know what happened to his significant collection? He was a close pal of the late Tony Fosco's, and, in the early 1990s, I traded with both of them, working through Tony. Of particular significance was J. J.'s relationship with the UCLA archive. J. J. was an actor (he once appeared on Broadway in a two-man show with Al Pacino), and he was able to get copies of at least a few rarities from UCLA.
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pound per pound
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Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
It sounds like a conspiracy of recently deceased old fight collectors. J.J Johnson is dead, Steve Compton is dead, and Tony Fusco dead.DavidKehler wrote: ↑18 Jul 2023, 12:22 J. J. Johnston, a major collector who lived in Chicago, died in November. Does anyone know what happened to his significant collection? He was a close pal of the late Tony Fosco's, and, in the early 1990s, I traded with both of them, working through Tony. Of particular significance was J. J.'s relationship with the UCLA archive. J. J. was an actor (he once appeared on Broadway in a two-man show with Al Pacino), and he was able to get copies of at least a few rarities from UCLA.
Which leads me to the question, who is the greatest living fight collector?
Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
I didnt know I was dead 
Re: Private Fight Film Collectors
Are any of the Zivic-Armstrong bouts on film ?