Movie memorabilia that survived bomb up for sale

A film poster for Groundhog Day. It features the name of the main actor Bill Murray along with the title of the film. Underneath, it reads: "He's having the day of life life...over and over again." On the left is a cock with Billy Murray's face in the middle. On the left is the actress Andie MacDowell.

Image source, Hansons
Image caption,

This poster from the Bill Murray classic Groundhog Day is expected to sell for between £50 and £100

  • Published

A lifetime collection of cinema memorabilia, much of which survived an IRA bomb blast, is set to go up for auction.

The haul of 2,500 film posters, lobby cards and autographs was built up over 70 years by film enthusiast Steve Ellison.

Some of his collection had been on sale at his shop in Manchester city centre when the bomb exploded on 15 June 1996.

The collection, including posters which featured in TV sets for Coronation Street and EastEnders, will be sold by Hansons Auctioneers on Saturday morning.

Mr Ellison's love of the big screen started as a young schoolboy, inspired by his father's work as a cinema projectionist.

He soon built a reputation for his encyclopaedic knowledge of films, as well as his growing number of posters and star-studded autographs.

A film poster for Shrek. It features the names of the cast, which includes Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz and John Lithgow, at the top of poster alongside the carton characters. In the middle of the poster, it reads: "The greatest fairy tale never told. Shrek."Image source, Hansons
Image caption,

This Shrek poster is one of about 50 film posters to go on sale

He was soon supplying props for some of the UK's biggest TV programmes.

"If any of the soaps need a poster for a particular set, they would call on dad," said Mr Ellison's daughter Jayne Maclean.

"If Coronation Street needed posters for, say, Dev's bedroom, or EastEnders needed a poster for the Queen Vic dad would supply it."

Mr Ellison was in his shop in the Corn Exchange when the IRA bomb exploded, injuring about 250 people.

Ms Maclean said: "Luckily dad wasn't hurt but he remembers the glass shattering everywhere and landing on his beloved posters."

A composite image of film posters for The Pack and Blue Sunshine. The Pack film poster includes the words: "Terror! When the familiar becomes the unknown. The Pack are hungry." It includes a black and white sketch of a man running away and screaming. The Blue Sunshine poster includes the words: "Terror! When man becomes beast. Blue Sunshine. A shocker". It features a knife with a woman's face in the blade. Image source, Hansons
Image caption,

The Pack and Blue Sunshine were sometimes shown together as a double feature in the 1970s

After the bombing, the shop – dubbed Steve's World Famous Movie Store – moved to Rochdale.

Eventually ceasing trading, he shipped the collection to his retirement bungalow in Wigan.

Ms Maclean said: "You couldn't move for film posters – they were everywhere, jammed in every room and every doorway."

Now the family have made the "painful decision" to sell the collection.

Auctioneer Steve Witts said: "I have never seen anything like it.

"There are boxes and boxes of some of the most iconic films ever made."

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