Buyers of Liza Minnelli memoir claim it was not signed by hand
Buyers of Liza Minnelli's memoir, "Kids, Wait Till You Hear This!", are seeking refunds, claiming the "hand-signed collectibles" are not genuinely signed by the artist. Fans have noted the unnatural uniformity of the signatures across hundreds of copies, leading to speculation they were produced by an autopen device rather than by hand.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedBuyers of Liza Minnelli's memoir, "Kids, Wait Till You Hear This!", are seeking refunds, claiming the "hand-signed collectibles" are not genuinely signed by the artist. Fans have noted the unnatural uniformity of the signatures across hundreds of copies, leading to speculation they were produced by an autopen device rather than by hand. Autograph experts have examined examples and concluded they do not appear to be human-signed. This issue has arisen with premium editions costing up to $250. While publishers have previously stated the books were signed by the author, Minnelli's representatives and publishers have not commented on the recent claims.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedCEO of AutographCOA Justin Steffman stated none of the examined signatures appear to have been signed by a human hand.
Autograph collector Gareth Brown stated Liza Minnelli is 'far too frail' to have signed hundreds of books accurately.
Buyers of Liza Minnelli's memoir are seeking refunds due to suspected fake signatures.
Signatures on 'hand-signed collectible' editions of the memoir appear unnaturally identical, suggesting autopen use.
Grand Central Publishing previously told Radar Online that all copies of the memoir had been signed by the author.