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Ned Scott: Hollywood Film Industry Still Photographer

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Ned Scott (April 16, 1907-November 24, 1964) was an American photographer who worked in the Hollywood film industry as a still photographer from 1935-1948. As a member of the Camera Club of New York from 1930–34, he was heavily influenced by fellow members Paul Strand and Henwar Rodakiewicz.

While living in New York and visiting the Camera Club, Ned Scott began commercial work with still lifes and x-ray tubes. He experimented with light and form during this period. Unfortunately little survives except that which he saved for his own personal collection. His other photographic efforts during this time included a study of La Iglesia de San Francisco in Ranchos de Taos, New Mexico.

Ned Scott spent the latter half of 1934 working for Paul Strand on location in Alvarado, Mexico to produce the Mexican protest film, Redes.  Fred Zinnemann, who also worked on this film, referred to Ned Scott's stills as "classics" in his autobiography.

Ned Scott arrived in Hollywood in February, 1935 and took up residence with Fred Zinnemann and Henwar Rodakiewicz in a studio apartment complex at 7900 Honey Drive, North Hollywood. With his New York experience and recently finished film effort in Mexico, Ned Scott began free lance work as a still photographer. He was soon to come to the notice of producers David Loew and Walter Wanger for whom he photographed films in the latter half of the 1930s and early 1940s. Most notable are the two Walter Wanger films "Stagecoach" 1939 and "Long Voyage Home" 1941. Both of these films were directed by John Ford. Some of his most recognizable work was yet to be created, however. In March 1945, Ned Scott signed a contract with Columbia Pictures, becoming a contract employee for the first time since entering Hollywood. Over the next three years Ned Scott worked with such stars as Rita Hayworth, Glenn Ford, Humphrey Bogart, and Janet Blair.

Ned Scott married Gladys Matthews, daughter of Presbyterian minister Reverend Mark A. Matthews of Seattle, in 1936. They lived for four years on Mesa Drive in Santa Monica Canyon, California and then moved to La Cañada where he raised a family including one daughter and son.

There is an archival site that continues to keep his work alive:

http://www.thenedscottarchive.com/

Here are some examples of his work that do not appear on his website, so no doubles.

Ann Miller

Joan Bennett

Rhonda Fleming

Hedy Lamarr

Jinx Falkenburg
 
Leslie Brooks
 
Adele Jergens

Evelyn Anders
 
And many of the great Rita Hayworth:
 
With Charles Vidor







The above is what appeared on the back of the last photo.

A closer look at Scott's stamp.
 

Bud Fraker, famous Audrey Hepburn "Breakfast at Tiffany's" Photographer among other stars

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Bud Fraker was born in 1916 in Altoona, Pennsylvania. He became interested in photography and decided to go California to pursue a career. In 1934 he studied photography at Los Angeles City College and began working part-time at the Columbia Studios stills laboratory under his brother William 'Bill' Fraker, who was the director of the department.  Following his brother's death, Fraker was hired by Hollywood photographer A. L. 'Whitey' Schafer at Columbia.

Soon after he became the Director of Still Photography at Columbia Studios and took many photos of the stars in the late 1930s.

He moved on from there with Schafer in 1942 to work for Paramount studios in the Publicity Photography Department and assisted in the portrait gallery.  Upon Schafer's death he became the studio's own Director of Still Photography, which he did in the 1940s to the 1960's.

Among the films he did still photography on included "Twentieth Century," with Carole Lombard, "King Creole" with Elvis Presley and "Breakfast at Tiffany's" with Audrey Hepburn.  He took the famous portrait photos of her with the long cigarette holder, Tiffany diamond jewelry and black dress.

After that he decided to leave Paramount and he began doing freelance work for other studios while running his own photo lab. He retired in 1979.  He passed away in 2002.


Anita Ekberg
 
Anna Magnani
 
Anne Baxter
 


Barbara Stanwyck
 

Betty Hutton
 
Marlon Brando
 
Carole Lombard and John Barrymoore
 
Dean Martin
 
Elvis Presley
 
Clark Gable
 
Ginger Rogers
 
Tragic star Inger Stevens
 
Lizbeth Scott
 

Paulette Goddard
 


Sophia Loren
 
Rosemary Clooney
 
Jane Russell
 
Shelly Winters
 
Sylvia Lewis
 
Elizabeth Taylor
 
Vera Ellen
 
William Holden
 
The photographer had a great relationship with Grace Kelly as well as Audrey Hepburn as you can see below:
 




 



 
Grace below with Fraker:
 
The famous sessions with Audrey during filming and publicity shots made for the filming of "Breakfast at Tiffany's"
 





 


 
 






 
Audrey's great love of animals shown below:




 
Filming 'Tiffany's':
 







 
 Other shots of Fraker taking photos of Audrey:
 


 
 His famous photos of Audrey with the long cigarette holder have influenced many art illustrators as shown below:
 


 


Go to Deviant Art for more.  A great place to find art of all kinds.

Still Photographer During the 1930s for RKO Fred Hendrickson

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Unfortunately, there is not much known about this photographer.  However, I will add things to each entry as I find them.  Here is what is known:

Born Humphrey Grylls in June 25, 1984 in New Vernon, New Jersey.  He later changed his name to Fred Hendrickson.

He began working for RKO studios in the 1930s first doing a variety of things: as a camera crew member, doing land rush scenes and still photography for the film "Cimarron."

He mainly worked as a uncredited still photographer on such films as "The Public Defender," "Girl Crazy," and "The Gay Divorcee."

He took photographs of stars such as Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire, Irene Dunne, Carole Lombard and Richard Dix among others.

Unfortunately, Hendrickson died at the age of 52 in July 14, 1946 in Los Angeles California. 

Here is a sample of his works:


Simone Simon
 

Carole Lombard
 
Colleen Moore
 
Irene Dunne
 

Barbara Stanwyck
 
Wynne Gibson
 
Fredrickson taking a photo of Joan Fontaine

His stamp for RKO
 
 

Edward Cronenweth: Candid, Still and Cheesecake Photographer

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Not much could be found on this photography artist but, as usual, I'll keep digging and add things as I find them.

Cronenweth was born on March 20th 1903 in Pennsylvania.

He worked as uncredited still photographer on such films as,  "The Gorgeous Hussy,"  "The Lady From Shanghai," and "Ensign Pulver."

He took photographs of Rita Hayworth, Joan Crawford, Glenn Ford, Lucille Ball, William Holden, Robert Stack, Gia Scala, and Cliff Robertson.

Corbis mentions this as being on the back of one of Cronenweth's photos:

Original caption:4/14/1941-Hollywood, CA: The "still photographer" comes to his own in Hollywood. He is the unsung cameraman who makes the pictures that are used for display and publicity purposes. In the still photo show of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Ed Cronenweth came out with first prize for his action still of Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney.  (Seen Below).

He is well-known for his photograhs taken during the filming of "The Lady From Shanghai" including the photos of Hayworth and Orson Welles against a backdrop of mirrors.  His photos were also used for publicity for the movie poster and other items for the film as well.

Died June 26, 1990 at age 87 in Los Angeles, California. 

Here is an example of his work:

Cliff Robertson

Joan Crawford
 
Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland
 
Ann Miller

Cleo Moore

Jinx Falkenberg
 

Lucille Ball
 

Myrna Loy



Candids of Marilyn Monroe
 
The many photos of Hayworth taken during the making of "The Lady From Shanghai."
 


 






This one shows the Cronenworth taking a shot of Rita.
 
The famous 'mirror' pix.
 



 
Other pix of Hayworth with the fabulous dress:
 







 
The posters that the photos prompted:
 




 
 
Two examples of his stamps.

The Classics and "Ginger Rogers" photographer John Miehle

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John Miehle was born on August 7, 1902 in Los Angeles, California.   Being born so close to Hollywood Miehle went to work as an assistant camera man on the 1931 movie "Delicious" starring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell. 

He then worked exclusively in the Camera and Electrical Department doing uncredited still photography on some of the best known films, such as "What Price Hollywood?," "Rain," "Little Women," "Top Hat," "Kitty Foyle," "Rope" and "Portrait of Jennie."

He photographed many of the greats as well including Constance Bennett, Joan Crawford, Irene Dunne, Ginger Rogers, Ann Harding, William Powell, Joel McCrea, Katherine Hepburn, Joan Bennett, Delores Del Rio, Randolph Scott, James Stewart, Cary Grant, Jean Arthur, Ruth Hussey, Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotten, Ethel Barrymoore, Laraine Day, Franchot Tone, Ann Blyth, Farley Granger, and Dana Andrews.

He did many films with the great Ginger Rogers including many with Fred Astaire, and he worked on two Hitchcock films, "Rope" and "The Paradine Case."

The film "Portrait of Jennie" was a flop at the time but has become a famous classic in the fantasy romance genre.  He did many fine photos for the film.

In addition, he did many publicity shots of such stars as Carole Lombard, Marilyn Monroe, and Lucille Ball.

He died at the young age of 49 on February 19, 1952 in Los Angeles, California.

As usual, when I find more on any of the photographer's listed, I will add the new information on each one. 

Here are some examples of his work:

Barbara Stanwyck



Carole Lombard







Many great images of Joan Crawford for "Rain."
 















 
The many faces of Ginger Rogers.
 
 




 
Dancing alone and with Fred Astaire above.
 
Shirley Temple and her newborn.
 



Jean Arthur
 
Jennifer Jones

Lucille Ball

Marilyn Monroe

Gloria Swanson
 
Alida Valli
 
Hitch directing "The Paradine Case."


 
Two copies of his stamp.
 
 
 
 

Not to be missed: A New Article on the Classic Hollywood photographers and their Impact on Film

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I felt compelled to include this great article I recently found on the web.  It comes from another terrific site: http://ladailymirror.com/

Here is the article reprinted:

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Bert Longworth and ‘Hold Still, Hollywood’


JoeEBrown
In the last forty years, movie collectors and photography connoisseurs have recognized the art and value of Hollywood still photography, most particularly in the gloriously lit and composed portraits of glamorous stars. For decades, however, many people, including industryites, failed to recognize the skill and talent of the many photographers shaping the public’s perception of celebrities through their skillful work behind the camera.

Early motion picture stills were just that, freeze frames of the actors posing in scenes from a feature film. These early shots, mostly 5×7 images, were photographed by the film’s cinematographer. Studios and stars arranged for publicity portraits with such people as Fred Hartsook, Albert Witzel, Nelson Evans, Melbourne Spurr, etc., for images to be employed by newspapers and magazines in promoting actors.

By the 1920s, some major stars employed their own stills photographers. William S. Hart hired Junius “June” Estep, and Mary Pickford exclusively used K. O. Rahmn, for example.

Soon, studios set up their own portrait galleries and hired their own exclusive photographers to shoot scene stills. Roman and Jack Freulich worked and led Universal’s studio gallery, Clarence Sinclair Bull headed Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s, assisted by Ruth Harriet Louise, Donald Biddle Keyes and Eugene Robert Richee shot portraits and stills at Paramount, Max Munn Autrey was employed by Fox Films.

As the studio system came into place with the advent of talkies, studios hired many stillsmen to take scene stills, off-camera images, and candids of both above and below the line talent. Photographers took massive amounts of stills around the lot, at public events, premieres, at homes, in posed shots, to be widely distributed to magazines and newspapers for free publicity promoting upcoming films, new talent, and established stars. The journals, fan magazines, and newspapers splashed these images throughout their pages, building awareness and star popularity.

Bert “Buddy” Longworth was one of the stills photographers taking these images. Longworth began his career shooting scene stills at MGM for Greta Garbo’s first three films, including “Flesh and the Devil,” with Longworth capturing the passion of Garbo and John Gilbert as they fell in love. He was employed for a short time at Paramount, but from 1929 on, he worked at Warner Bros. as an action specialist, working on Busby Berkeley’s spectacular musicals, crime pictures, off-set candids, as well as portraits. Scholar David Shields calls him “Hollywood’s foremost expressionist, often using unusual perspective, occasional use of multiple exposures.”

One of Longworth’s dreams was to publish a book of his still photography called “Hold Still, Hollywood,” something virtually unheard of for film and Hollywood photography at the time. He sent letters to friends and various stars he worked with over the years, asking for a $10 subscription to a limited run of these monographs. One such person he approached was actress Wynne Gibson, inquiring whether she would help him publish his work. Each edition would be leather bound, consisting of 95 pages of photographs, an introduction page (some signed), a foreword by Mervyn LeRoy, and a biography of Longworth, with the subscriber’s name stamped in gold leaf on the cover.

Hold Still Hollywood
This was basically the first time that a photographer was displaying his output as a work of art to the general public, demonstrating the hard work and artistry involved in creating glamorous and sexy gods and goddesses of the silver screen. “Hold Still, Hollywood” also pointed out to actors how much their onscreen personas and public perceptions were shaped by Hollywood’s lenses.

In late 1937, Longworth published a limited first run edition of 1,000 books, 500 numbered and signed, bound in soft leather. “International Photographer,” the trade journal of Hollywood’s still community and Local 659, noted the book’s release with an excellent review noting his outstanding work. “This achievement by the veteran stillsman, who is known particularly to the folks of the Warner’s lot, serves to bring out in sharp contrast the results obtained under favorable conditions by the expert Hollywood still photographers and the usual experience of the average worker under the present still photography setup in the major studios.”

The article went on to say that there was room for improvement in general stills photography if publicity departments worked more closely with photographers, allowing them a voice in how to print and crop the images and how they should be used.

Longworth hoped to win studio photographers greater recognition and regard for their work. He chaired a committee for Local 659 that presented the first stills exhibit and ball at the Blossom Room of the Roosevelt Hotel on February 21, 1939. John Leroy Johnston, chair of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences publicity committee, followed up on this idea by convincing the Academy to host a stills show to honor the outstanding work of photographers in a variety of categories, as a way to improve the work and equipment of the photographers and as a way to publicize the entertainment industry. The Academy Stills Show occurred in 1941, 1942, 1943, and 1947, with the winning photographers in each category receiving gold medals for their work.
 
I work at the Los Angeles Times



This entry was posted in Books and Authors, Film, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory, Photography. Bookmark the permalink.
 
I will be adding more of the above photographers to posts (if they haven't been already) soon and I will include one on Longworth as well.
 
So stay tuned for more on the Hollywood Great Stills Photographers!         

Updates: Clarence Sinclair Bull and Ruth Harriet Louise

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As I have stated before, I will update any new information I find on them in books, articles, ect.

Today I have recently updated two of the all-time greats, Clarence Sinclair Bull and Ruth Harriet Louise.

Here are the links:

http://vintagemoviestarphotos.blogspot.com/2011/02/great-hollywood-photographer-clarence.html

http://vintagemoviestarphotos.blogspot.com/2011/02/first-great-hollywood-woman.html

The new info comes from a wonderful book called "Glamour of the Gods" (showcasing The John Kobal Collection)  which discusses a lot of the Hollywood photographers from many different studios including, MGM and Paramount among others. A highly recommended book!

So be sure to check this out.  I will continue to update as I can. 

Another Update: George Hurrell


Taking Over For Hurrell: The Talented and Likable Ted Allan

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Born Theos Alwyn Dunagan in Clifton, Arizonia on September 8, 1910, Allan changed his name during a brief fling at acting. He acted in several Cecil B. De Mille movies in the 1930s.  When De Mille called on someone to take some portraits, Allan stepped forward and, on seeing the results, De Mille encouraged him to follow a photography career.

He even got to take a photo of friend, Cecil B. De Mille.


In addition, as a teen-ager, he enhanced stars' photographs with oil paint for display in theater lobbies. The experience stuck with him, and years later stars praised his ability to retouch their images.

Also, while still in his teens Allan opened a photographic concession in a dime store on Hollywood Boulevard, where he photographed many actors and aspiring movie stars. These pictures led to employment as a photographer for several large film studios including MGM. Allan took over Hurrell's gallery at MGM, where his nickname was ‘Rembrandt’ - and stayed for four years until 1937. Allan replaced Hurrell in 1933 after photos from TARZAN AND HIS MATE, especially those of his mate, Jane (Maureen O’Sullivan) were seen by the Tarzan producer.

In his time at MGM he has said: "Later on, when I worked elsewhere, though I made more money I never felt as secure as I had at Metro."  And of his image work at MGM he said: "Because the 8 x 10 negative was so necessary to the inexpensive mass printing needed by the studios, there was no such thing as custom enlargements or recomposing.  It was essential to compose directly onto the negative.  The weightless camera and the ball-and-socket head (built especially for me by the MGM engineering department) allowed me to view the posing, lighting, and compostiton on the ground glass as I moved and adjusted the camera to sit the subject.  To create dimenson, it was necessary to control the planes of illumination.  The conventional method then was to shoot with a high-key single-source floodlight or soft skylight illumination.  The MGM studio engineering department built a set of portable boom lights for me.  I used them for back and side line-lights and found it helpful to swing a free-wheeling boom light across a face to find the most interesting angle of light for the subject.  In my portraits I have a small area of pure white that allows the skin tones to be printed darker and with definition."

During those years he was Harlow's primary portrait photographer.  He said of Harlow that "When I first auditioned for the job of replacing Hurrell as exclusive photographer for Jean Harlow--Russell Ball and Tom Evans were also trying out--the first requisite was that I present her as more of a lady.  I insisted that her hair be toned down into what Jack Dawn (head of MGM's makeup and hairdressing department) termed brownette.

Of all the people I thought wouldn't feel self-conscious when posing--after all, the whole basis of her personality on the screen was outgoing and freewheeling--it was Jean.  Yet when it was time for the stills, she was--terribly shy.  When she arrived I already had everything set up in the four corners of the room, so that I could go zing-zing-zing, because she'd change so fast.  While she did that, I'd change the four spots and set up a new series.  It was very rapid, and she loved that.  One of these photographs was a sort of 'end of the pier' scene, with fishnets hanging down.  She went over and threw a fishnet over her shoulders and then suggested that it would show up better if there was bare skin beneath it, since the net was the same color as the knit suit she was wearing.  I went back to the camera to adjust things, and when I looked up she was walking around with this thing wrapped around her and nothing underneath.  I thought 'Wow,' and tried to stand between her and her hairdresser, who might come through the door any minute.  But it didn't bother her at all.  It was more as if she were playing a part, calculated to get me on her side.  She figured that if I were turned on, I'd take better pictures.  And she'd go on during the sitting as long as I would.  Her limousine would be out there waiting all day.  After she'd had a couple of drinks, she'd get into the mood and begin to enjoy posing.  Then she'd go like wildfire.  I realized then that she always needed something personal--the feeling of being liked.  It make her feel secure."

Allan also had a particularly good rapport with male stars. Unlike Hurrell and Bull, whose reputations rest with women, Allan brought an appealing masculinity to subjects as diverse as Robert Taylor, James Stewart and the wacky Marx Brothers. 

(Laszlo Willinger became Ted Allan's successor at MGM.)

Allan's photography was so popular that when he worked as a still photographer with Mae West when she starred in "Belle of the Nineties" his portraits of Ruby Carter (West), and her gaudy retinue, were used on lobby cards and other promotional material for Paramount Pictures.  But mostly, from his career (around 1934 to 1965) he was often an uncredited still photographer on several films.

Allan quickly moved behind the still camera when he established his own portrait studio in Hollywood in 1933.  Over the years he photographed such stars as Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, James Stewart, Spencer Tracy, Shirley Temple, Helen Hayes, and John, Ethel and Lionel Barrymore.

However likeable Allan was, there was one particular star who made it hard to shoot her and that was difficult actress Norma Shearer.  She was very particular about her portrait photographers as she was about her cameramen.  Allan photographed her in 1935 when she was playing Juliet to Leslie Howard's Romeo.  "I was concerned about Miss Shearer's very close-set eyes.  An improvised gallery was set up in the center of a bare stage.  The circumstance, with its lack of intimacy, was as cold as the star's attitude.  Miss Shearer had arranged for a large full-length mirror, I certainly wasn't getting it in my camera, which was several feet to the side.  She was concentrating on her mirrored image, and I made the mistake of saying, 'I'm over here, Miss Shearer.'  The sitting ground to a halt.  During lunch I audaciously scraped an area of silver off the mirror and finished the sitting through the mirror.  After that I never heard from her again."

A good deal of a photographer's success, then, depended, in Allan's words, on "getting them (the stars) to relax and enjoy themselves.  They could cross you up completely by being stilted and uncomfortable."

After MGM, he worked for several studios including Fox until he opened the Ted Allan Film Studio in 1952 and worked mainly on shooting documentaries and low budget feature films. Ted Allan’s Studio was infamous for giving Ed Wood his magnum opus with Bela Lugosi BRIDE OF THE MONSTER, which Tim Burton immortalized in ED WOOD.

But he never left photography behind and shot photos for many of Frank Sinatra’s films and was one of the first to go into television, shooting stills for CBS Productions for a number of years.  While working for CBS Radio, he got to work with De Mille again on De Mille's 'Lux Radio Theatre'.  He later worked for ABC television and several film productions, including "The Sand Pebbles" and "Von Ryan's Express."

Allan, according to a catalogue entry during a 1987 show at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, "adhered to the portrait photographer's mandate, to make mere men and women into objects of fantasy . . . with poses and dramatic lighting . . . and retouching."

His work has also been exhibited at the New York Museum of Modern Art, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, and in London and Venice, Italy.

It was Frank Sinatra who placed Ted in the limelight for all time. Frank made Ted his personal photographer, and Ted went on all of "Old Blue Eyes’" films. By then Frank had given Ted his own "Rat Pack" nickname of ‘Farley Focus.’ Ted Allan was dazzled, referring to all this as "the best time a man could have in this life."

(The veteran photographer was under personal contract to Sinatra for nine years in the 1960s and 1970s, taking pictures of the singer at recording sessions, during film productions and on world tours.)

David Del Valle who knew him said:

I knew Ted and his wife Jeanne so well they became my second family as did Laszlo (Willinger) and his wife Yvonne. (She had been a Music Hall favorite in her youth and helped introduce a very young Julie Andrews to English audiences.) Jeanne Allan used to love to tell me how Carman Miranda kept her cocaine in the heels of her shoes for that emergency when the “South American Bombshell” might need a special lift!! These two couples were close friends as John (Kobal) kept them all very busy with exhibits and a very lucrative endeavor known as “portfolios’” of their respective photography.

Ted Allan was the most likeable as he wanted everyone to like him. Ted just needed to have some time away from his wife and daughter since they all lived together in a jungle-like abode below the Hollywood sign in exile and frustration, having lived in an era once filled with travel and glamour, longing for the lost style of better days.

Ted Allan got his wish and is remembered as one of the best-liked studio photographers. He also had a reputation as a master printer and printed extensively from his and other photographers’ negatives for John Kobal’s exhibitions and was respected for his superb darkroom technique.

He died December 20, 1993 in Los Angeles, California.  Allan, who lived in the Hollywood Hills home he built in 1929, died on a Monday at St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank after a long illness.

Allan was survived by his wife of 64 years, Jeanne, a daughter, Holly Allan-Young, a granddaughter and two great-grandchildren.

The family has asked that any memorial donations be made to the Motion Picture and Television Fund in Woodland Hills.

Special thanks to:  The Los Angeles Times, The books Glamour of the Gods and The Art of the Great Hollywood Portrait Photographers 1925-1940, The National Portrait Gallery and David De Valle for their help with the research for this article.

Tarzan and his Mate, Johnny Weismuller and Mareen O'Hara

Many of Allan's work was used in Lobby cards like the one of Mae West here.
 
Jean Harlow with and without Clark Gable. 
 
With Cary Grant



 
Barbara Stanwyck
 
Eleanor Powell--"She liked my pictures so much that she proposed marriage," he told The Times. "I said, 'That's all well and good, but I don't think my wife would understand.' "  Below Allan with Powell:
 
 
Allan said of James Stewart: "Two years after Stewart had been with the studio, we still didn't know what to do with him.  Was he a comedian, or a romantic leading man? We tried photographing him outside, leaning over fences, working with a shovel, with a tennis racket--but while that worked with Robert Taylor in helping to make him more athletic, it didn't work with Stewart.  There was no problem in making him look handsome--he had great eyes and a generous mouth, but in the time I worked with him, I wouldn't have guessed he'd become a star."
Look closely and on certain photos you can see Allan's signature to the bottom right hand side.  One of his early trademarks.
 

James Stewart
 
Lionel Barrymoore
 
Madeleine Carroll. 
 
The Marx Brothers
 
Robert Taylor

Shirley Temple
 
Spencer Tracy
 
Carole Lombard--"Carole Lombard was a favorite of mine," Allan told The Times in 1987. "She was real down to earth. She was the first movie star I ever heard use a four-letter word."
 
Carmen Miranda
 
Dean Martin

Orson Welles

Myrna Loy

Frank Sinatra and below with Mia Farrow.

 
Ted Allan photographing "The Rat Pack."
 
Ted on the set with the Rat Pack.
Ted in back on the set of "Four for Texas."

He did many photos for "The Thin Man" series.  He took the photo above.
 

Notice Marilyn Monroe in these photos taken by Allan.

 
 
Steve McQueen
Allan with McQueen.

John Barrymoore
 
Later in the 60s he took these photos on a contact sheet of Raquel Welch:
 
 


 
 
Ted Allan young and older.
 
His Stamp.
 

Laszlo Willinger: The Great European Movie Still Photographer

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Laszlo Willinger was born on April 6, 1909 in Budapest, Hungary.  His father was owned a news agency and he was taught photography by his mother, also a photographer, Willinger established photographic studios in Paris and Berlin in 1929 and 1931 respectively, and at the same time submitted his photographs to various newspapers as a freelance contributor.

A note about his photography in Germany is that between 1933 and 1937 he was unable to obtain the necessary permits, (because Adolf was in charge? not sure) so any photographs reproduced in German photo annuals during this period were credited to his mother, Margaret Willinger.

 At that time, he worked as a freelance photojournalist for BerlinerIllustrierte, Hamburger Illustrierte, and Munchener Illustrierte, stringer for London DailyExpress and Keystone View, and at Talbot Studio, Paris, as advertising and portrait photographer. Subjects include Josephine Baker, President Paul Doumer, Sacha Guitry, and Yvonne Printemps

He left Berlin in 1933 when Adolf Hitler became Chancellor, settling and working in Vienna where he began to photograph such celebrities as Hedy Lamarr, Pietro Mascagni, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and Max Reinhardt.  He then established himself in European film studios as one of the foremost photographers of the period, taking photos of Marlene Dietrich, Emil Jannings, Isa Miranda and Zarah Leander.

By the mid-1930s he was travelling through Africa and Asia before being invited in 1932 for his first visit to America on an assignment for Mercedes-Benz.  But while still in Vienna he met with Louis B. Mayer, who was looking for talent for MGM Studios. Willinger was asked by Mayer along with Hedy Lamarr – to come and stay permanately in Hollywood and hence, the two came to Hollywood together.  He then met up with another movie photographer at the time, Eugene Robert Richee who convinced Willinger to stay in the United States. After establishing a studio in Hollywood, California, Willinger became a frequent contributor to magazines and periodicals, providing magazine cover portraits of some of the most popular stars. Willinger was one of the first Hollywood photographers to experiment in the use of color.
Laszlo Willinger became Ted Allan's successor at MGM.  Hungarian-born Willinger came to MGM in 1937 as part of the studio's last European sweep for talent before the outbreak of the Second World War. He had already established himself as one of the foremost photographers of the period (while still in Vienna), taking photos of Marlene Dietrich, Emil Jannings, Isa Miranda and Zarah Leander.  So no wonder he ended up in Hollywood, California.  And by 1937, Hedy Lamarr and Luise Rainer were signed at the time to MGM. 

At first Willinger was reticent about speaking of the past because he felt there was little interest in the Hollywood of the 1930s and 1940s.  John Kobal--who was then working on a retrospective of several vintage Hollywood photographers--convinced Willinger that he was interested, and the two developed a friendship.

Willinger brought a fresh look to MGM and Hollywood photography--his prints have a crisp luminescence and his compositions often orient his subjects on the diagonal, which gives them a modern, European sophistication.  "I tried to make a photograph as dramatic as possible," Willinger wrote in 1986, "by lighting dramatically."  As he did with Hurrell, Kobal anxiously queried the veteran photographer about photographic practices.  Willinger recounted to Kobal, "Loads of photos were taken and the negatives were sitting around, but they were never used because the stars vetoed them."  Even though MGM's first lady, Norma Shearer, wanted Willinger to make all her portraits after 1937, and he did photograph her beautifully for Marie Antoniette (1937) and later films including 'The Women' (1939), that didn't guarantee the road would be easy.  "If Shearer liked 10 percent of a setting," Willinger told Kobal, "you were going great.  With Crawford you could figure 80 percent would be okay. The one I liked best to work with was Vivien Leigh.  She was a thorough professional."

Along with Leigh, Willinger photographed the new stars that MGM cultivated in the early 1940s to replace old-timers such as Garbo and Shearer who were retiring or Crawford who was being forced out of the studio.  Looking back on his career, Willinger wrote, "I photographed what there ought to be."  Stars hired by MGM in the 1940s, such as Donna Reed and John Garfield, gave him pretty good raw material.  So too did tireless cinema verteran Marlene Dietrich.  Willinger's 1942 portrait reveals that Paramount's great star of the 1930s had lost none of her authority with the camera.

Recalling the 30’s and 40’s, Willinger said he didn’t think there was any time in history when more people so talented on every level had ever been together as in the Hollywood of those decades. For those of us who didn’t live them, those years seem so glamorous and exciting, especially when reflected through the brilliance of this legendary Hollywood photographer.

Willinger acted as the art director when photographing the stars. The only thing expected of him was to make images that the press would choose to print over everyone else’s. There could be up to 5000 pictures available on any major star. To get printed, your photograph had to be the best. One thing he always kept in mind, regardless of the subject, is that the photograph has a purpose – and that’s to sell. Consider when someone thumbs through a magazine; he spends about 1/3 second on each page. If your photograph can make him look for three seconds – that’s one good shot! He felt that photographs had to stand on their own – without caption. If you had to explain it, it wasn’t good.

One known fact about photographs from Willinger’s time was that all photos of stars were heavily retouched. In its prime, MGM alone employed around 20 retouchers! Amazing if these actors were so good looking, why all the retouching? Willinger’s reply: “There’s always room for improvement. Also, don’t forget that in those days they used a water-based Max Factor make-up, which had to be applied thickly in order to be smoothed out properly. Unfortunately, it wasn’t good for the skin, and often created pockmarks. When you photographed actors who had been using it for 20 – 30 years, you were dealing with some terrible, ruined complexions.”
Until his resignation from MGM in 1944, he was the studio's top photographer, shooting all of their stars and replacing George Hurrell as personal photographer to Norma Shearer and Joan Crawford.  Although by the early 1940s Hollywood Glamour photography was entering its decline, Willinger brought a freshness and energy to his portraits and gave his subjects a quality of intelligence.  He described what it was like to work with the studio's leading stars:

"A sitting with Shearer, that was like the King of England traveling.  First there would be a great deal of diplomatic back and forth before I was even notified that she was available.  I'd get a stage, set up fifteen to twenty sets, and light them, so that all she had to do was to move from one set to another.  She had photos of the sets before she agreed. If that was okay, then you were finally told, 'Thursday, 11 a. m., Miss Shearer.'  Thursday I'd be there with a makeup woman, a hairdresser, a man from Publicity to keep her busy and see that she turned up, two or three electricians, depending on the size of the set, prop man and, a grip and a flower man... and my own two assistants.  After three or four last-minute cancellations (that's the way she operated--that's the way all stars operated), she would show up.  Then she worked.  And she would work hard.  Once you had her you tried to take as many pictures as you could because you knew you wouldn't have her for another six months.  A good session with her or Crawford would be two to three hours.  By that time everybody was pretty tired.  Changing clothes, which had to be done between each setup, is tiring.

Crawford was a woman who worked with the photographer rather than saying, 'Show me what you can do.'  She would suggest things.  She was a harder worker than anybody I knew.  She loved being photographed.  And that shows.

Glamour was one of the few English words I'd never heard before I went to America.  I remember once talking to Howard Strickling, and he said, 'I want lots of glamour,' and I said, 'What's glamour?' And he said, 'You know, a sort of suffering look.'  So there wasn't much laughing in those photos.  You couldn't have happy sex.  Sex and earnestness--together those spelled glamour.

When I started out in Germany in the late 1920s, photograhers used either daylight or a very diffused light.  I never did.  I used spots--arcs, which give you a point source of light.

Dietrich lent herself to the dramatic lighting von Sternberg set up for her, and so did Crawford because her eyes were very large.  But you couldn't have used that won Sternberg lighting on Shearer--her eyes wouldn't have shown at all.  When Hedy Lamarr made her first film at MGM, they were specifically trying to make her into a new Dietrich, and they photographed her using the Dietrich lighting setup.  So this light doesn't quite work.  For one thing, her face was a little rounder.  So this light doesn't quite work for everybody--you need a specific kind of face for it."

Willinger also recalled the reaction of the head of the publicity department to his first day's work: "How many pounds of negatives have you done?  Is that all you've shot today?  This isn't heavy; usually we geet two or three pounds of negatives."

Doing art at the studio was another way the publicity department controlled things and got what they required.  Willinger, who photograhed countless campaigns, pointed out:  "The artists working in the advertising deparatment would make rough sketches of the billboards, with the logo on it, and I had to fit my pictures into the existing format.  The whole thing was planned precisely."  The studio tried to take most of its portraits, advertising, and expolitation art before the picture ever started, so that when the cameras began to turn, the unit photographer could concentrate on shooting production stills and timely publicity art.

Willinger said that when he got to Hollywood, you couldn't show cleavage.  "There was a whole group of retouchers at every studio who did nothing but take the cleavage out of breasts.  In those days the stars had a breast that stretched from shoulder to shoulder, creating a new breed of cyclops-chested women.  You couldn't show the inside of a thigh, Have you ever tried to photograph  a dancer and not show the inside of a thigh?  You can't.  When you shot doubles, there were very strict rules.  For instance, in clinches the man always had to be higher than the woman, because it wasn't  considered nice otherwise.  The men had to wear ties and jackets.  And if you shot a man in bathing trunks or a gymnasium outfit, there couldn't be any unseemly bumps, and the body hair had to be retouched."

But if a film failed, stars could put it off on the story, their co-star, or director, ect.  But in the gallery, they were alone.  Willinger eplains: "Suddenly you see the private person.  People become actors for the purpose of not showing their private selves, and when they don't have a role to hide behind, it's always a problem.  Especially for a pretty woman.  Men don't care as much; anyway, they don't dare admit it.  But women are more aware of age and of the younger girls coming up behind them."

Sometimes the stars acted like prima donnas and wanted their wish granted when they wanted it.  Willinger recalled:  "The night before Christmas, after the studio party, I went home.  I got a call saying Jeanette MacDonald wants you.  That was enough.  You weren't asked.  You were told.  I went back to the studio.  A complete camera crew was assembled on one side of the stage.  We were there for a couple of hours doing tests--on her eyelashes.  I never found out if she used the new ones--each eyelash was gluded to her lids separtely.  The absurdity of it--any time--but Christmas Eve!"

The problems could get worse if you had two prima donnas at the same time.  Willinger's assignments for The Women (1939 MGM) with two older stars and some other new ones.  Case in point, was the all-female cast of that film.  Arch rivals, Norma Shearer and Joan Crawford squared off.  It came to a ridiculous surface in Willinger's gallery.  Both stars wanted him to do their portraits and both had the right to reject photos they didn't like.  In shots of the two of them together, countless prints were rejected.  Willinger described what it was like:

"Shearer would look at the prints first and say 'Gee, this is a beautiful picture of me, but I really don't like the way Crawford looks."  And then Joan would have her turn and we'd have the same thing.  It's a wonder any pictures of them were released at all.

There were two on that film who were easy to work with--Paulette Goddard, because she was ambitious and Rosalind Russell, because she didn't give a damn.  As a result Goddard got practically 90 percent of the stuff that was published, because she made herself available.

One day the three principals took off from filming, just so we could shoot stills.  The call was for ten a. m. I'm up there ready--nobody.  It's ten-thirty, eleven--still nobody.  Finally Rosalind Russell turns up and says, 'Sorry I'm late.'  I told her 'You're not late.  You're the first one here.'  I walked outside around saw people waiting, including a flower man in case one of them wanted a flower.  (I couldn't give them the flower, because that would have been against union rules, and everybody would have walked off.)  Finally I saw Norma Shearer's car drive by.  It slowed down.  She looked out and continued driving around the block.  A little behind her was Joan Crawford, who also slowed down, looked out and drove on.  I thought 'What the hell's going on here?'  I called (publicity director Howard) Stricking and told him, 'There are two stars outside driving around the stage and not coming in.'  He said, 'Don't you know what they're doing?  Shearer isn't going to come in before Crawford and Crawford isn't goig to come in before Shearer.  The only thing I can do is to stand in the middle of the street and stop them.'  Which he did."

The men actors considered sitting for portraits 'sissy stuff' and complained about the amount of time it took to get all the photos the studio required.  Willinger says: "Spencer Tracy would cut a session down to ten minutes--moving his head from right to left and say goodbye.  He was less abrupt when Miss Hepburn was there though."

Willinger might have been happy to part company on portraits when it came to Norma Shearer.  Eric Carpenter, another great Hollywood photograher in his own right, said: "My first solo assignment --and this was a case of make or break--was to photograph Norma Shearer.  Willinger had been doing her portraits up until then, but I had heard that he wasn't happy just being her photographer, and she wanted someone loyal to her, so she was trying out new photographers.  If she approved, I as in.  Lucky for me she did."

Laszlo Willinger left MGM in 1944 to do various things for stock photography but he also did do some fine young starlet photographs.  Laszlo Willinger was also a photographer in Norma Jeane's early modeling career. Willinger was not the most complimentary person, as even after Norma Jeane became famous, as Marilyn Monroe, he said of her: "Marilyn Monroe is not a raving beauty, and her legs are too short for the rest of her."

Perhaps his best known Marilyn shot is a calendar photo of Norma Jeane as she was still known, in a gold bathing suit. He was responsible for many of her early magazine covers. In 1986 he told LA Style magazine that Marilyn responded to his inquiry as to why she had such chemistry with the camera, by answering, "It's like being screwed by a thousand guys and you can't get pregnant."

He also said of her: "She had a talent to make people feel sorry for her, and she exploited it to the best of her ability - even people who had been around and knew models fell for this 'Help Me' pose."

After that he shot exclusively for advertising and stock photography. For 40 years he was at FPG, an agency in New York where he had something in the range of 50,000 transparencies on file.
After many years of rivaling Hurrell and Bull, he turned his talents towards shooting animals, children, scenes, flowers, people, etc. and built a library of stock photography and had representatives in Europe, the United States and Asia – in addition to working with John Kobal and Edward Weston.

Ed Weston lived in Los Angeles and New York and Willinger in the San Fernando Valley so they were geographically close which enabled them to become well acquainted. Weston purchased many original vintage, period and signed Hollywood Glamour photographs, negatives and rights doing glamour posters and prints which Willinger signed in limited edition.

Willinger died of heart failure in 1989, leaving behind his wife Yvonne.  Upon Laszlo Willinger’s death, Ann and Edward Weston continued their relationship with Yvonne Willinger; help sell the Willinger home, advise her about legal documents and paperwork and aided her in moving back to England. Weston would meet with Mrs. Willinger in London over the years and her trips to Los Angeles - staying with both her own family and at the Weston’s house as well.

Mrs. Willinger was working on a book on Willinger’s career, which, unfortunately was never completed. It was to cover their love affair over 50 years, life in Germany during the Nazi period, Laszlo’s move to Vienna in the 1930’s, his famous photograph of Sigmond Freud and his meeting with Louis B. Mayer. The rest is history! Filling George Hurrell’s shoes wasn’t easy but talent will win out. But Willinger did a fine job of it.

Willinger's portraits have become collectible and are appreciated as fine art. His 1940 series of portraits of actors Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh are housed in London's National Portrait Gallery.

Here are some examples of his work:

Norma Shearer

 
Joan Crawford 



Crawford, Shearer and Rosalind Russell for "The Women."
 
Marlene Dietrich

Ann Sothern

Ava Gardner

Hedy Lamarr 
 
Lena Horne

Laurence Oliver

Maureen O'Sullivan
 
Myrna Loy 

Robert Taylor

Rosalind Russell
 
Spencer Tracy

Myrna Loy and William Powell in "The Thin Man" series.

Clark Gable
 
Tyrone Power
 
And here are some great and lovely photos of Vivien Leigh when she did the famous film "Waterloo Bridge."
 









 
 
 

Marilyn Monroe
 
His use of color:
Lana Turner

Rosalind Russell

Norma Jean AKA Marilyn Monroe

Paulette Goddard showcasing one of many cover shots he did.

Willinger himself at the studio and with other stars and alone as an elderly man.


 
 

 
His official Stamp
 
PS: In his early work he did do some professional nudes for magazines like this one:
 
 
And in his later years he did this photo of Sigmund Freud:
 
 

Eric Carpenter: Sexy Ava Gardner Photographer Among Others

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Eric Carpenter was born July 8, 1909 and as a young man he began working as a plasterer during the depression. 

Eric Carpenter worked at MGM, aside from a couple of short breaks, from 1933 to the 1960s.  Elevated from office boy, he succeeded Virgil Apger as Bull's assistant and continued in that capacity until he got his union card.

"(I did this) on the condition that I worked in the gallery and not as a still or publicity photographer, because that area was all sewn up.  I didn't have my own gallery, so I set up one on the set and shot there.  That was the end of 1939.

My first solo assignment--and this was a case of make or break--was to photograph Norma Shearer.  She was trying out new photographers at the time and she wanted someone loyal to her.  If she approved, I was in.  Lucky for me she did.  We did an outside session down by her beach house.  I had already learned a lot by watching Hurrell and Bull, but my 'style' was trial and error."

He finally became a portrait photographer at precisely the moment when MGM was cultivating a new crop of stars--Lana Turnerr, Esther Williams and the popular team Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney.  A decade later Carpenter photographed Marilyn Monroe when she made 'The Asphalt Jungle' (1950).  He 'photographed her,' wrote Kobal, 'in a pose and clinging dress similar to what he'd successfully used with Lana Turner, most of whose poses had been variations of those dreamed up for Harlow.' In an interview after he retired, Carpenter told Kobal, "The stars were about the only ones who appreciated what you were trying to do.  As far as the producers and executives were concerned, it was just publicity.  They couldn't have cared less."

He also worked as a uncredited still photographer on many great films including 'The Wizard of Oz' for which he did some wonderful Kodachrome stills, 'Singing in the Rain,' 'The Swan'--Grace Kelly's last film--'Gigi', 'Ben Hur,' and 'Please Don't Eat the Daisies' with Doris Day.

With his spirited and beautiful portraits, Carpenter quickly became the favorite photographer of the studio's rising young stars, like Ava Gardner and James Craig, among others.  His rapport with Lana Turner began when she signed with MGM and lasted up to her departure from the studio in the late fifties.  Carpenter was responsible for the most of her torrid, memorable gallery portrait sittings.  His photographs of her are lush and immediate in dazzling whites and sophisticated, plungingly deep backs.  More dynamic than almost any of the other glamour portraits of the era, their effect recalled the Harlow portraits and and anticipated the ones of Monroe at Fox in the early fifties--acres of white fur, opalescent skin, poses inviting by thier ease.

Carpenter once explained:

"The only secret of good work is to get the star to have confidence in you so that you can try to do something interesting.  Stars appreciated what you were trying to do.  The publicity department kept asking for glorified passport photos, which was what the newspapers could use.  It was a fight to get some shading into those pictures."

After the war Carpenter left the profession to join his brother in the shipyard business, but by 1950 he went back at MGM, this time as a production still photographer--a job he held until his retirement in the sixties--working on films like 'Quentin Durward' (1955), 'Beau Brummel (1954), and 'Mutiny on the Bounty' (1962).

He passed away on June 16, 1976 at the age of 66 in Hollywood, California.

Here are some examples of his work:

Clark Gable

Anna Neagle
 
Kathryn Grayson
 
Ann Southern



Ann Southern
 
Ava Gardner and Ava with her then husband, Mickey Rooney below:
 
 

Cyd Charisse

 
 
Elizabeth Taylor

Grace Kelly

Joan Crawford
 
Yvonne DeCarlo

Marilyn Monroe
 
Judy Garland



Lana Turner
 

 
Lucille Ball

 
James Steward

His Stamp
 
 
 

Another update this time on Virgil Apger

Donald Biddle Keyes

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Donald Biddle Keyes, a pioneer photographer and motion-picutre cameraman, started, out as a publicity phtotgrapher at the Ince Triagnle studis at Culver City (later MGM).  After World War I he moved to the Lasky studios, photographing such stars as Rudolph Valentino, Pola Negri, Gloria Swanson, and Wallace Reid, and taking stills on a number of their films.  He left the studio in 1922 and alternated between working as first cameraman and still photographer. 

The photographs he took of Ann Sheridan to promote 'Winter Carnival' (United Artists, 1932) appeared on the covers of seven national magazines, including Life, which also ran a story on Sheridan.

Paramount (then known as Famous Players-Lasky) was the first studio to set aside a permanent gallery for portrait photography.  Donald Biddle Keyes, who had been working as a stills photographer for the studio, suggested this consolidation to alleviate the increasing need of photographic services. By the mid-1920s, Paramount had a lively stills and portrait departement with dozens of employees.

MGM followed suit immediately after its creation in 1924.  At the end of the decade all major studios were handling stills and portraiture in-house.  The top portrait artists helped shaped his or her studio styles as much as any cinamatographer. 

The photography's gallery was used for advertising art--better known as poster art.  As soon as the players received their finished costumes, they were photographed against a plain or otherwise suitable background in scenes from the movie. The star gazing furtively over his or her shoulder on a large four-sheet Technicolor poster, fleeing from unseen enemies, probably struck this pose while sitting astride a beer barrel rigged up as some sort of animated rocking horese.  Stars oaccasionally had stand-ins to do their poster work, and their heads were superimposed later.  Posters for 'Wild Orchids' (MGM 1929) showing a bespangled Greta Garbo passionately entwined and a turbaned Nils Asther were actually made from photographs of Asther's stand-in holding Garbo's stand-in.  The impression of Garbo's face was taken with her from stills of a scene taken on the set or from a gallery session.

When space was allocated in a studio and the necessary lights and equipment were installed, the gallery was also used for portrait photography.  But this practice, begun around 1921 or 1922, did not become firmly established until 1925; and even by 1930 only Paramount, MGM, RKO, and a few other studios had allocated suitable spaces for galleries.  Most of the time, the photographer used standing stages or undisturbed corners of studio lots.  Shortly after Keyes set up his gallery at Famous Players-Lasky (Paramount now), Jack Freulich head still and portrait photographer for Universal, also got one going.

By the end of the decade of the 1920s, all major studios had their own galleries and to think, it had all started with a suggestion by Keyes.  One that would have a major impact on cinema for decades and more to come.

From 1945 until his retirement in 1954, Keyes was a contract photographer for Republic Pictures. 

Please be sure to read this online article as it has more detailed information on Keyes:

http://ladailymirror.com/2013/03/11/mary-mallory-hollywood-heights-donald-biddle-keyes-cameraman/

Here are some examples of his work:

Betty Bronson
 
Blanche Sweet 
 
 
 
Faith Bacon
 
Spectacle movie scene
 
Julia Faye
 
Jetta Goudal
 
Mary Miles Minter
 
Virginia Valli
 
Keyes most famous photo: Rudolph Valentino
 
Gloria Swanson 
 
 
 
Nita Naldi


 
The great William Powell



 
The back of one of his stills:
 
 

New Update on Eugene Robert Richee

Veronica "Rocky" Cooper: The Best Photographer of Husband Gary Cooper!

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Veronica Balfe was born May 23, 1913 in Brooklyn, New York. 

In 1933, Cooper met twenty year old Veronica Balfe, known as Rocky to her friends.  A New York debutant socialite (with Park Avenue and Southampton addresses), her father, Harry Balfe, Jr., was the son of a wealthy industrialist and financier and she was the neice of Cedric Gibbons, the well known Hollywood art director at MGM (as well as the designer of the Oscar, the Academy Awards Statue), whose wife was the actress Dolores Del Rio.  In 1930 Rocky moved to Los Angles (with a chaperone, since she was only seventeen and had just abandoned her finishing school) to flirt with a movie career under the name Sandra Shaw.  By her own admission she wasn't the world's greatest actor, but she had a beaufiul face and gorgeous figure--not particularly unusual in Hollywood.  What was disarmingly unusual was her poise and intelligence, well-bred, elegant style, and being ironically, something of a tomboy.  She was a national skeet-shooting champion and loved swimming, skiing, and riding.  Cooper was immediately smitten and soon he and Rocky became something of an item in Beverly Hills society.  The year she met Cooper she'd been in Hollywood three years and had made three films.

Just six months after they met, Cooper asked her to marry him, and the wedding took place in New York on December 15, 1933.  Rocky maintained her own identity even though her husband was a celebrated movie star, and Cooper surprised the gossip columnists by leaving behind his party-going bachelor days quite happily.  Their only daughter, Maria, was born four years later.  Marriage and fatherhood did nothing to damage his image as the most elegant man in the movies, driving around Hollywood in his chartreuse Duesenberg convertible, aptly named "The Yellow Peril" because of his fast driving habit.

His daughter, Maria Cooper Janis says:

With her camera, my mother, Veronica Cooper documented the life of our family in the group of personal photograghs I've selected for this book (Cary Cooper: Enduring Style).  "Rocky" was a great shot and she kept many meticulous red-leather bound albums.  The pages were filled with festive events, and intimate and private moments with my father.  But she also set about preserving more adventursome memories of their skiing forays in Sun Valley and Aspen, shooting, riding, and their many trips around the world.  There are pictures of poeple well known to the public as well as family friends, interspersed with shots of my father taken by some of the  premier photographers of the day, along with a few pictures he took himself.

She passed away in February 16, 2000 in New York, New York of natural causes.

Here are some examples of her work:



 
With Grace Kelly

Elizabeth Taylor and Tony Curtis
 

Below are a few of Cooper with "Rocky":

 


 
With his family including Maria:
 
 
And the other part of his 'family', love of animals:
 
 
Here is Maria's celebratory book of her father:
 
I highly recommend it!  Thanks for shaing the memories, Maria!

John Engstead: A Total Professional with Celebrities and More

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John Engstead was born on September 22, 1909 (some say 1912) in Los Angeles, California.  Engstead began his career in 1926, when he was hired as an office boy by Paramount Pictures' head of studio publicity, Harold Harley.

In 1927, Engstead pleased his boss by arranging a photo session for actress Clara Bow with photographer Otto Dyer using an outdoor garden setting which was unusual at that time. The resulting photographs hailed Harley as "Clara Bow's best sitting."

In 1928, in response to fan magazine requests, Engstead appointed Paramount magazine contact that he wear a suit and tie every day.

Engstead's creative direction of photographs of actress Louise Brooks led to a promotion to art supervisor, where he oversaw the production of Paramount's publicity stills.

In 1932, due to a strike by photographers, Engstead assumed the position of studio portrait photographer, despite having never previously photographed anyone. Actor Cary Grant posed for his practice shots. He returned to his job as art supervisor after the strike was resolved.

In 1941, Paramount Pictures fired Engstead, and Harper's Bazaar hired him for freelance advertising and portrait photography assignments. From 1941 to 1949, he took fashion photography assignments from numerous other magazines, including Collier's, Esquire, House Beautiful, Ladies Home Journal, Life, Look, Mademoiselle, McCall's, Vogue, and Women's Home Companion.

In the 1940s, Engstead photographed many celebrities, including Joan Crawford, Bette Davis, Maureen O'Hara and Shirley Temple. Unlike other photographers, he often shot his subjects at home or outdoors, and his portraits of a young Judy Garland in Carmel, California were particularly successful. During this decade, he built a studio in Los Angeles that became a gathering place for celebrities.

He remembered the stars well.  Marlene Dietrich, to whom he later became her official photographer for her celebrated one-woman show, recalled that for her last film with von Sternberg, Paramount's "The Devil is a Woman" (1935), the designer Travis Baton and Dietrich produced an enormous Spanish comb which supported a large mantilla.  The comb was anchored to Dietrich's head with wire cutters, and "Marlen fell forward, arms and head resting on her dressing table, exhausted from pain.  When she came up, tears were running down her face."

Another was Gary Cooper.  Engstead supervised Cooper's sessions when they were both at Paramount and he photographed him a great deal in later years, he had this revealing insight on Cooper:  "Cooper knew more about how to be photographed than any other man I know.  The way he handled his face and his six-toot-three-inch frame led me to surmise that he must have done considerable homework.... He moved with the grace of a panther.  I don't think he either liked or disliked photographic sessions, but he endured them because he realized that they were part of his business... One thing that made it easy for Cooper to make stills was his appreciation that cameras photograph the mind.... Cooper carried this professionalism to the care of his body, which he kept in top physical condition until his last illness."

Carole Lombard, who bought most of her clothes with the still camera in mind, was a photographer's delight.  She approached each sitting with almost as much care as a screen role. She would meet with the photographer perhaps a week before each session to discuss the type of photographs that would be taken, te backgrounds, the wardrobe she should get for it.  In her eight years at Paramount the studio released more than seventeen hundred portraits of her--and this does not include all the other types of stills and portraits taken when she was on loan-out to other studios.   Engstead, who adored Lombard and loved working with her, praised her contribution to the success of her portraits:  "Carole always gave her complete cooperation.  she loved good photographs--knew about lighting and how to pose--and had no inhibitions about being photographed, so it was possible to shoot her any way you wanted and she gave all the time it needed."

He also photographed an up and coming star named Sharon Tate.  His photographs of her are timeless and he says: "She was a sweet girl.  I hated how she died."

From 1942 to 1954, he photographed celebrity clients outdoors and at home, an innovation in fashion photography.  Then he  photographed the annual spring and fall collections for Adrian.

From 1959 to 1970, he continued commercial work and society portraiture. 

Engstead continued to photograph movie stars and other celebrities through the 1950s (Marilyn Monroe) and 1960s. He produced promotional material for many television personalities, including Pat Boone, Carmel Quinn, Donna Reed, Ozzie and Harriet, Eve Arden, and Lucille Ball. He also shot cover photos for albums recorded by singers such as Peggy Lee and Connie Francis.. His work extended into governmental figures in the 1950s, including then-Second Lady Pat Nixon. Engstead closed his studio in 1970 but continued to accept special portrait and television assignments until his death on April 15, 1984 at age 72 in West Hollywood, California.

Engstead's images are represented by the Motion Picture and Television Photo Archive and can be viewed by the public at MPTV.net.  Also, he is listed in books such as Star Shots, Masters of Starlight and The Art of the Great Hollywood Portrait Photograghers by Kobal.

Ingrid Bergman

Natalie Wood

Marilyn Monroe

Carole Lombard

Audrey Hepburn

Cary Grant

Hedy Lamarr

 Gary Cooper
 
 
Marlene Dietrich

Sharon Tate

Elizabeth Taylor

Images of Celebrites Now On Sale

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I have a friend who is offering some movie star photos.  She has a sister who has many medical problems and medical bills.  That is why I am trying to help her out.  Otherwise, I usually don't sell on this site.

Many are actresses but if you are looking for a certain star, she will look for you. 

Her description is this: 

The photos are not cheap inkjet (computer printouts) or laser copies. These are guaranted gallery archival quality photographs printed from the original negatives and transparencies. From these negatives we clean up any damage or flaws and make the finest quality prints available. The photos are detailed and crystalline. Anyone would be more than proud to matte and frame these for your home. These will be struck recently and so they are reprints and not the vintage originals. But still, they are printed on the best stock paper such as pearl finish, gloss and even metallic. The metallic gives it a rich quality that adds that special something extra. Even so, all prints are in excellent condition. Please be sure to inquire if you need further information.

We are proud to present some very rare stars as well. Some not even found on Ebay or elsewhere. However, we do not own the rights so this is from one collector to another.

You will not find any better prints than the ones we offer here.

All photos will be shipped in the finest quality packaging available. So you will get your photos without damage.

Since these are printed and fixed of flaws it may take some time to get them to you but rest assured we will get them to you as soon as possible.

Current stars include for the A's: 

Abigail Adams
Anna Maria Alberbergetti
Adrienne Ames
Alyce and Rhae Andrece
Adelle August
Ann Blyth
Anita Colby
Arlene Dahl
Audrey Dalton
Alicia Darr
Angie Dickinson
Anita Ekberg

Here are some of the images:


 
 

PS: We have many other photos of the stars listed here.  Feel free to ask to see more.  Thanks for your time and consideration.

I will put on more A's and B's on next post but please feel free to ask about any star you are interested in.

More Photos on Sale

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Here are some more stars that we are selling photos of:

Anna Mae Wong
Alice White
Ann Sheridan
Ava Gardner
Audrey Hepburn
Alice Faye
 Anne Francis
 Angela Greene
 Aliza Gur
 Anne Gwynne
 Allison Hayes
 Anne Helm
 Anne Heywood
 Arlene Hunter

Here is an example of one of them:

 
 
 
In addition, she has decided to part with some of her real vintage press photos, so again please ask for any star you are interested in. 
 
My best to our fans.

More Images Available for Sale

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Here are more A's:
Alicia Ibanez
 Adele Jergens
 Alice Kelley
 Abbe Lane
 A'leshia Lee
 Adele Mara
 Andra Martin
 Asa Maynor
 Andree Melley
 Ann Michelle
 Anne Neyland
 Ava Norring
 April Olrich


Next Set of Photos for Sale

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Here are some more photographs being sold.  Please let me know if you have any questions or information or feedback.

Last of the A's

Alix Talton

Arleen Whelan

Anne Heywood

Arlene Hunter

Ann Robinson

Ann Smyrner

Angela Stevens

Asta Nielsen

Alla Nazimova

Ann Miller

Anna Sten

Anne Baxter

Example:

 
Again, let me know if there are any star photos you are looking for and I am more than happy to assist.
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