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Thanks for the Memories, Guitarist Laments : Theft: Tony Romano of Dana Point and his guitar spent 50 years playing for Bob Hope. Now a thief has plucked an important part of his life away.

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Somewhere, Tony Romano’s guitar is gently weeping.

And Romano, 77, was weeping for his guitar on Tuesday.

The Dana Point resident mourned the loss of a guitar he had played while spending the past half century in Bob Hope’s backup band. The guitar was stolen Sunday at the Holiday Inn in Burbank, where Romano was staying while taping Hope’s 90th birthday special at NBC studios.

Romano set the guitar case on the sidewalk in the hotel parking lot, then walked over to get his car.

“When I came back, the guitar that played about 8 jillion nights with Bob Hope was gone,” Romano recalled, sobbing. “I couldn’t say anything but, ‘Oh my God.’ ”

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Romano had played his customized 1929 Gibson L-5 everywhere Hope entertained soldiers in USO tours. They played together from 1942 to 1992, in an estimated 4,000 performances from Australia to Tunisia, Italy to Hawaii. Korea, Vietnam and the Persian Gulf too.

Romano bought the guitar in 1931 at Sherman and Clay in Los Angeles with a hard-earned $175, and he customized it over the years. A small brass plaque engraved with Romano’s name is mounted on the neck of the instrument, which was inside a black case engraved with his name.

“Playing my guitar has been my life since I was wee boy,” he said.

Romano began performing with Hope in 1941 in Los Angeles in a group called the Four Gypsies.

When the United States entered World War II, Hope invited Romano to accompany him to Alaska to entertain troops for the USO.

“When Hope called, I told him, ‘I’m not going. I have enough ice cubes at home,’ ” Romano said. Hope persuaded him to go, saying it would only be two weeks.

That two weeks led to four years of continuous touring in World War II and hundreds of trips years later.

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Their venues included aircraft carriers and stadiums. Once, on a refueling stop in Alaska, Romano and Hope stood on a log and gave airmen an impromptu performance in minus-42-degree weather.

In all their travels, the guitar was always safe, until last weekend when Romano traveled 50 miles to Burbank.

“We have no clues, no suspects,” said Sgt. Ed Skvarna of the Burbank police. “Someone just snatched it.”

Romano estimated the guitar’s value at $20,000. Guitar experts said it was probably far less, perhaps about $5,000.

“This isn’t the most valuable Gibson guitar,” said George Gruhn, a nationally known expert on rare guitars and owner of Gruhn Guitars in Nashville. “It probably had much more sentimental value.”

Both Gruhn and Skvarna agree that such a customized and well-known guitar has lost nearly all its value once stolen.

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“It loses all value as a collector’s item,” Skvarna said. “A pawnshop would shy away from this. Somebody who knows guitars wouldn’t want this.”

“The thief could probably only get $100 for this on the street,” Skvarna said.

It bothers Romano that the thief probably has no idea about the guitar’s history.

“Damn it, I hope the guy who stole it knows what it is,” Romano said. “If someone stole it from me, I could understand. But not knowing who, what, or where gets to me.”

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