Brando's doodles among personal effects for sale

US: Before there was Don Corleone, there was this, scrawled on the back of a script: "Through the nose"; "High voice"; "Nose…

US: Before there was Don Corleone, there was this, scrawled on the back of a script: "Through the nose"; "High voice"; "Nose broken early in youth to account for difficulty". Marlon Brando, it turns out, was a jotter.

Also a doodler, a book lover, and a bit of a packrat, at least when it came to sun-hats and baseball caps.

A trove of the legendary actor's personal effects is to be auctioned next week at Christie's in New York. To glance through the catalogue is to feel a voyeur's sense of poking through the closets and drawers at the late actor's Mulholland Drive home.

There are childhood school yearbooks and summer camp medals, correspondence from co-stars and directors such as Karl Malden, Elia Kazan and Francis Ford Coppola. There are three pages of facial caricatures Brando doodled back in the 1980s, along with handmade furniture, bongo and conga drums, harmonicas, boxing gloves and a foosball table.

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Among the more mundane trophies: two California driver's licences, priced from $300 to $500, and six shop cards and charge cards for $300 to $500 (who knew Brando shopped at Montgomery Ward and the Price Club, or belonged to AAA?) There's also a collection of approximately 25 sun-hats and baseball caps, including two novelty solar-powered fan caps that Brando wore while on location in Australia during the filming of The Island of Dr Moreau, $400 to $600.

One item speaks volumes about the reclusive side of the Oscar-winning actor's lifestyle.

Brando's son Miko chuckled as he recalled the warning sign that hung for years outside his father's home, which was recently purchased by Brando's neighbour, Jack Nicholson. The sign, red letters on a white background, read: "Do not leave car. Sound horn. Attack guard dog on property."

"We had those dogs up there, and if you didn't know them or they know you, you would have to wait in your car until someone escorted you to the house," the son recalled. "A 200lb mastiff and a big Rottweiler would greet you at the top of the driveway. If they didn't know you, you'd be sitting in your car all day."

The sign, with an estimated value of $800 to $1,200, is Lot No 197 of 320.

Helen Bailey, head of pop arts at Christie's, estimates the auction could bring in $400,000 to $500,000, conservatively. But she said Marilyn Monroe's artefacts sold for more than $12 million at Christie's in 1999, after being pegged at $2-$3 million.

Ms Bailey said some items would start at $100. But others are likely to lure more serious collectors. "There are two scripts from The Godfather," she said. "One is un-annotated, and the other is annotated with notes in the margins as he goes through the script."

Christie's is also selling some 3,600 books from the actor's library. "He was an avid reader," Miko Brando recalled. "He would write notes to himself in the books."

Also up for auction are two of Brando's cars - including the 2003 white Lexus LS430 (with just less than 14,000 miles on the odometer) that Miko Brando said his father drove to the Santa Ynez Valley to visit pop star Michael Jackson at Neverland ranch. The actor and the singer spent considerable time together in the months before Brando died on July 1st, 2004.

Other items on the block include Brando's Oscar nomination certificate for 1954's On the Waterfront, estimated value, $7,000 to $9,000; and a collection of handwritten notes on Mutiny on the Bounty showing Brando exploring themes, the subtext and plot of the story.