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Sotheby’s to sell Jagger’s love letters

<p>Associated Press File</p><p>Mick Jagger, lead singer of The Rolling Stones, sings during a free, five-hour concert in 1965 before nearly 250,000 fans in Hyde Park in London, England. Handwritten letters from the Rolling Stones frontman to his former lover, Marsha Hunt, will be auctioned in London next month. Hunt is an American-born singer who was the inspiration for the Stones’ 1971 hit “Brown Sugar” and bore Jagger’s first child.</p>

Associated Press File

Mick Jagger, lead singer of The Rolling Stones, sings during a free, five-hour concert in 1965 before nearly 250,000 fans in Hyde Park in London, England. Handwritten letters from the Rolling Stones frontman to his former lover, Marsha Hunt, will be auctioned in London next month. Hunt is an American-born singer who was the inspiration for the Stones’ 1971 hit “Brown Sugar” and bore Jagger’s first child.

<p>Marsha Hunt</p>

Marsha Hunt

<p>The Associated Press</p><p>This letter, made available by Sotheby’s, shows a letter from Mick Jagger addressed to American-born singer Marsha Hunt.</p>Buy Photo

The Associated Press

This letter, made available by Sotheby’s, shows a letter from Mick Jagger addressed to American-born singer Marsha Hunt.

LONDON (AP) — Handwritten letters from Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger to his former lover Marsha Hunt will be auctioned in London next month.

Hunt is an American-born singer who was the inspiration for the Stones’ 1971 hit “Brown Sugar” and bore Jagger’s first child.

Sotheby’s said Saturday that Hunt has tasked the auction house with selling 10 letters written from the set of Jagger’s film “Ned Kelly,” which was shooting in Australia.

Hunt said the letters chronicling their “delicate love affair” and secret history touch on subjects such as the first moon landing and John Lennon and Yoko Ono.

“When a serious historian finally examines how and why Britain’s boy bands affected international culture and politics, this well-preserved collection of Mick Jagger’s hand written letters will be a revelation,” she said in a statement distributed by the auction house.

Sotheby’s books specialist Gabriel Heaton said the letters sent in the summer of 1969 show a “poetic and self-aware” 25-year-old Jagger.

“They provide a rare glimpse of Jagger that is very different from his public persona: passionate but self-contained, lyrical but with a strong sense of irony,” Heaton said.

Sotheby’s said the collection, which includes song lyrics and a Rolling Stones playlist, is expected to fetch between 70,000 and 100,000 pounds ($111,300 and $159,000) and will go under the hammer on December 12.