1 00:00:01,826 --> 00:00:04,409 (drum music) 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 4 00:00:27,664 --> 00:00:28,497 - [J F. Kennedy] We choose to go to the moon, 5 00:00:28,497 --> 00:00:31,680 and do the other things, 6 00:00:31,680 --> 00:00:33,743 Not because they're easy, 7 00:00:33,743 --> 00:00:35,970 but because they're hard. 8 00:00:35,970 --> 00:00:38,543 I am the greatest. 9 00:00:38,543 --> 00:00:40,960 - [Announcer] Waiting to see if Maris can hit number 61 10 00:00:42,277 --> 00:00:43,853 Here's the wind up. 11 00:00:44,986 --> 00:00:47,736 (crowd cheering) Fastball hit deep to left field, This is going to be it! way back there, HOLY COW 12 00:00:51,797 --> 00:00:54,002 Ladies and gentlemen, the Beatles. 13 00:00:54,002 --> 00:00:55,563 (crowd cheering) 14 00:00:55,563 --> 00:01:00,563 - I was hired as a photographer for LIFE magazine in 1959. 15 00:01:00,860 --> 00:01:05,033 It was the fulfillment of a dream I had since I was a kid. 16 00:01:06,010 --> 00:01:07,820 My first assignments, 17 00:01:07,820 --> 00:01:10,810 were Khrushchev football games, 18 00:01:10,810 --> 00:01:12,980 Lyndon Johnson, Adenauer, 19 00:01:12,980 --> 00:01:16,040 Ben-Gurion, Henry Cabot Lodge, 20 00:01:16,040 --> 00:01:18,390 Caroline Kennedy's birth, 21 00:01:18,390 --> 00:01:20,970 Marilyn Monroe, Jerry Lewis, 22 00:01:20,970 --> 00:01:24,160 Roger Maris, as he broke Babe Ruth's record, 23 00:01:24,160 --> 00:01:28,400 John F. Kennedy, Nehru, Adlai Stevenson, 24 00:01:28,400 --> 00:01:32,753 Dr. Benjamin Spock, the Cuban missile crisis, 25 00:01:34,100 --> 00:01:37,480 Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, 26 00:01:37,480 --> 00:01:39,253 and of course the JFK funeral. 27 00:01:40,863 --> 00:01:43,446 (upbeat music) 28 00:02:00,790 --> 00:02:03,710 I was already by the time LIFE 29 00:02:03,710 --> 00:02:08,420 ordered me to cover the Cassius fight, 30 00:02:08,420 --> 00:02:11,233 an experienced magazine photographer. 31 00:02:12,300 --> 00:02:16,210 I arrived at the famous 5th Street Gym in Miami 32 00:02:16,210 --> 00:02:18,143 several days before the fight. 33 00:02:19,520 --> 00:02:23,690 With a request from LIFE magazine to do a cover 34 00:02:23,690 --> 00:02:26,700 of Cassius as if he had beaten Liston, 35 00:02:26,700 --> 00:02:30,543 who was at that point a seven to one favorite. 36 00:02:32,240 --> 00:02:34,393 Life took no chances. 37 00:02:35,530 --> 00:02:38,250 They wanted a cover, plated and ready 38 00:02:38,250 --> 00:02:41,220 to print on Saturday night, 39 00:02:41,220 --> 00:02:43,240 to be distributed to newsstands 40 00:02:43,240 --> 00:02:45,803 by Monday in such an eventuality. 41 00:02:47,260 --> 00:02:49,280 So after one of his daily workouts, 42 00:02:49,280 --> 00:02:53,883 and when he was perspiring freely, 43 00:02:55,410 --> 00:02:57,840 I got him alone and asked him to show me 44 00:02:57,840 --> 00:03:02,840 various facial expressions as to how he might feel 45 00:03:03,030 --> 00:03:04,583 if an upset victory was his. 46 00:03:05,860 --> 00:03:08,580 The result was on the newsstands all over the world 47 00:03:08,580 --> 00:03:11,893 a little more than 24 hours after the fight. 48 00:03:14,720 --> 00:03:16,540 At the weigh in, 49 00:03:16,540 --> 00:03:21,540 Clay with so obstreperous that he was fined $2,500 50 00:03:22,850 --> 00:03:24,303 for taunting and bad contact. 51 00:03:25,960 --> 00:03:29,580 The camera I was using for the fight, was rather unique. 52 00:03:29,580 --> 00:03:31,790 It was called a Hulcher, 53 00:03:32,700 --> 00:03:36,490 and it was developed for the military air force 54 00:03:36,490 --> 00:03:38,263 during the war, 55 00:03:39,370 --> 00:03:42,110 so as to be able to make 56 00:03:42,110 --> 00:03:46,600 ground destruction pictures after a bombing. 57 00:03:46,600 --> 00:03:49,270 And it had the unique capacity 58 00:03:49,270 --> 00:03:54,270 of shooting at 50 frames per second, on 70 millimeter film, 59 00:03:55,350 --> 00:03:59,010 which was carried on hundred foot rolls. 60 00:03:59,010 --> 00:04:02,650 And at that point we did not have motorized cameras 61 00:04:02,650 --> 00:04:05,123 available to us in any other form. 62 00:04:06,430 --> 00:04:09,760 So, at the end of the sixth round, 63 00:04:09,760 --> 00:04:14,390 Liston had dislocated his shoulder, came out of the socket. 64 00:04:14,390 --> 00:04:19,150 The fight is over, absolute bedlam prevails. 65 00:04:19,150 --> 00:04:20,347 Clay is screaming, 66 00:04:20,347 --> 00:04:22,330 "I am the greatest, I am the greatest!" 67 00:04:22,330 --> 00:04:24,310 Over and over again. 68 00:04:24,310 --> 00:04:27,580 I climb up on the ring ropes and straddle myself 69 00:04:27,580 --> 00:04:31,153 to get a position of view point above them all. 70 00:04:32,270 --> 00:04:34,880 So, after the fight I went with Cassius and his group 71 00:04:34,880 --> 00:04:39,000 to the Hampton House Motel in Brownsville, 72 00:04:39,000 --> 00:04:41,180 since that was the only place he was... 73 00:04:41,180 --> 00:04:44,270 He was not allowed to spend the night in Miami 74 00:04:44,270 --> 00:04:47,980 due to the Jim Crow segregation laws. 75 00:04:47,980 --> 00:04:51,530 I was the only member of the press present, 76 00:04:51,530 --> 00:04:54,143 and certainly the only white man in the crowd. 77 00:04:55,030 --> 00:04:58,730 Cassius had donned a tuxedo, 78 00:04:58,730 --> 00:05:02,300 and Malcolm X, the Muslim leader, 79 00:05:02,300 --> 00:05:05,160 he was behind the counter with a camera 80 00:05:05,160 --> 00:05:07,463 to take Ali's picture. 81 00:05:10,310 --> 00:05:12,570 I climbed up on top of the counter 82 00:05:12,570 --> 00:05:15,083 to record this historic moment. 83 00:05:16,300 --> 00:05:19,440 Clay then proceeds to entertain the crowd 84 00:05:19,440 --> 00:05:23,860 with his keen sense of humor, 85 00:05:23,860 --> 00:05:26,893 and he's taken rhyming to a new level. 86 00:05:29,370 --> 00:05:32,360 Clay and Malcolm pose together. 87 00:05:32,360 --> 00:05:37,360 Clay later disavowed Malcolm, 88 00:05:39,630 --> 00:05:43,790 and in favor of his new religion 89 00:05:43,790 --> 00:05:46,740 and Malcolm was ostracized, 90 00:05:46,740 --> 00:05:48,150 and very shortly thereafter, 91 00:05:48,150 --> 00:05:50,963 assassinated by the Muslim leader. 92 00:05:51,820 --> 00:05:53,400 Later in his life, 93 00:05:53,400 --> 00:05:57,280 Ali regretted that decision 94 00:05:57,280 --> 00:06:00,113 to part friendship with Malcolm. 95 00:06:02,480 --> 00:06:06,260 And he asked me for a little wallet size print 96 00:06:06,260 --> 00:06:08,510 of that particular picture, 97 00:06:08,510 --> 00:06:12,113 which he carried with him for the rest of his life. 98 00:06:14,030 --> 00:06:16,980 So, they are going to fight again. 99 00:06:16,980 --> 00:06:21,320 I traveled to Sonny Liston's home in Philadelphia, 100 00:06:21,320 --> 00:06:24,900 and he comes down the stairs and I thought 101 00:06:24,900 --> 00:06:27,563 he was the scariest man in the world. 102 00:06:28,430 --> 00:06:32,380 But after we got to talking a bit, he warmed up. 103 00:06:32,380 --> 00:06:34,190 And by the time I took his portrait 104 00:06:35,900 --> 00:06:40,650 he looked much more friendly, I thought. 105 00:06:44,900 --> 00:06:48,773 The rematch is scheduled in Lewiston, Maine. 106 00:06:49,640 --> 00:06:52,750 I bring my family with two young sons aboard, 107 00:06:52,750 --> 00:06:56,223 and we're staying at Jack Parr's hotel. 108 00:06:57,170 --> 00:06:58,993 Ali's brother Ramon, 109 00:06:59,860 --> 00:07:04,860 offers to sterilize the baby milk bottles 110 00:07:05,150 --> 00:07:07,380 for our youngest son who was then 111 00:07:07,380 --> 00:07:10,053 no more than about six months old. 112 00:07:10,960 --> 00:07:13,190 Corey, not quite three 113 00:07:13,190 --> 00:07:17,600 climbs up on Ali's lap for a family portrait. 114 00:07:17,600 --> 00:07:19,870 - And Muhammad Ali has come to Houston, Texas 115 00:07:19,870 --> 00:07:21,650 to the George R. Brown convention center 116 00:07:21,650 --> 00:07:23,440 for an autograph show. 117 00:07:23,440 --> 00:07:28,440 So, we head backstage and I'm there with my daughter. 118 00:07:31,239 --> 00:07:32,560 And at this point in time in Ali's life, 119 00:07:32,560 --> 00:07:37,160 he's got Parkinson's, he's sitting alone in a chair. 120 00:07:37,160 --> 00:07:39,770 And when I come through the curtains 121 00:07:39,770 --> 00:07:42,630 with the photograph, he lightens up. 122 00:07:42,630 --> 00:07:45,160 He springs up from his chair, 123 00:07:45,160 --> 00:07:47,990 comes on over to me, takes a look at the photograph. 124 00:07:47,990 --> 00:07:50,520 We head back behind the curtains 125 00:07:50,520 --> 00:07:54,400 to the table where he's gonna sign that for me. 126 00:07:54,400 --> 00:07:55,560 And what happens is 127 00:07:55,560 --> 00:07:59,260 he puts the photograph down and he sits down opposite me, 128 00:07:59,260 --> 00:08:02,060 and looks at the photograph, looks at me, 129 00:08:02,060 --> 00:08:05,377 and points down and points at me and says, 130 00:08:05,377 --> 00:08:08,210 "You still ugly." 131 00:08:08,210 --> 00:08:09,043 And I said to him, 132 00:08:09,043 --> 00:08:10,270 Well, you know, that's gonna cost you now, 133 00:08:10,270 --> 00:08:12,470 and I'm gonna put my daughter on your lap 134 00:08:12,470 --> 00:08:14,890 and we're gonna try to recreate this photograph. 135 00:08:14,890 --> 00:08:19,360 It didn't come out so well, not like that other photograph. 136 00:08:19,360 --> 00:08:21,240 Here she looks a little bit like 137 00:08:21,240 --> 00:08:25,140 a scared little girl, on a big scary man's lap. 138 00:08:25,140 --> 00:08:27,510 - Ali invites me into his bedroom 139 00:08:27,510 --> 00:08:30,420 to demonstrate how he's preparing for this fight. 140 00:08:30,420 --> 00:08:34,600 Not just physically, but mentally as well. 141 00:08:34,600 --> 00:08:38,010 He stares at a blowup of Sonny Liston's picture, 142 00:08:38,010 --> 00:08:41,500 and jokes, "Man, you don't scare me at all." 143 00:08:44,970 --> 00:08:48,530 Sometime before the fight at a press conference 144 00:08:48,530 --> 00:08:50,823 I make this portrait of Ali. 145 00:08:51,660 --> 00:08:52,900 I've come to realize 146 00:08:52,900 --> 00:08:56,390 that all that braggadocio was just 147 00:08:56,390 --> 00:08:58,860 beating a drum for the box office. 148 00:08:58,860 --> 00:09:02,303 Incidentally, Ali told me his inspiration. 149 00:09:03,210 --> 00:09:05,910 It was none other than gorgeous George 150 00:09:05,910 --> 00:09:08,020 with his wavy blonde hair 151 00:09:08,020 --> 00:09:11,830 and his ostentatious manner in the ring. 152 00:09:11,830 --> 00:09:16,760 So, here we are into the fight itself 153 00:09:16,760 --> 00:09:21,760 and Liston falls down before the first round is over, 154 00:09:22,070 --> 00:09:26,563 and everybody screams fraud. 155 00:09:28,810 --> 00:09:30,410 He took a dive, 156 00:09:30,410 --> 00:09:31,713 he threw the fight. 157 00:09:33,640 --> 00:09:37,580 Nobody saw the punch, I captured it on film. 158 00:09:37,580 --> 00:09:39,260 You can clearly see my picture, 159 00:09:39,260 --> 00:09:43,020 which was published in Sports Illustrated of Ali 160 00:09:43,020 --> 00:09:46,453 connecting with a hard right to Liston's head. 161 00:09:48,420 --> 00:09:51,580 Shooting ahead to 1969, 162 00:09:51,580 --> 00:09:56,580 LIFE magazine asks him to cover the Broadway show, 163 00:09:56,967 --> 00:09:59,460 "The Great White Hope" which is about 164 00:10:00,700 --> 00:10:05,700 a black heavyweight champion in 1901 called Jack Johnson. 165 00:10:07,110 --> 00:10:10,410 And Ali was very interested in this show 166 00:10:10,410 --> 00:10:13,327 at the conclusion of which he says to me, 167 00:10:13,327 --> 00:10:15,440 "You know, except for the sex part, 168 00:10:15,440 --> 00:10:17,520 that could very well be me." 169 00:10:17,520 --> 00:10:22,280 So, we are walking back to the hotel on 42nd Street 170 00:10:22,280 --> 00:10:24,650 and Ali had an affinity for magic. 171 00:10:24,650 --> 00:10:29,350 We walk into a magic store and remember, this is 1969. 172 00:10:29,350 --> 00:10:31,920 There's no such thing as cell phones. 173 00:10:31,920 --> 00:10:35,090 So he buys a phone with a coil cord, 174 00:10:35,090 --> 00:10:37,270 and a receiver, and a bell, 175 00:10:37,270 --> 00:10:38,650 and puts it on his person. 176 00:10:38,650 --> 00:10:41,090 And we go back to the Taft Hotel where he was staying, 177 00:10:41,090 --> 00:10:45,070 and we get in the elevator with about 15 other people. 178 00:10:45,070 --> 00:10:49,520 Elevator operator closing gate and Ali, 179 00:10:52,200 --> 00:10:57,200 the elevator starts up and Ali rings the phone 180 00:10:57,310 --> 00:11:00,060 and pulls the receiver out of his pocket, 181 00:11:00,060 --> 00:11:03,863 and pretends to have a quick, brief animated conversation. 182 00:11:04,970 --> 00:11:07,420 When we get off at the first express store, 183 00:11:07,420 --> 00:11:09,640 the gate closes, the elevator goes up farther. 184 00:11:09,640 --> 00:11:11,240 We fell on the floor laughing, 185 00:11:11,240 --> 00:11:14,400 'cause we both knew exactly what those people 186 00:11:14,400 --> 00:11:18,470 in the elevator who of course recognized him were thinking. 187 00:11:18,470 --> 00:11:21,230 So I took him over to the LIFE studio 188 00:11:21,230 --> 00:11:22,680 which was a few blocks away, 189 00:11:22,680 --> 00:11:27,680 and projected some pictures of the show 190 00:11:28,200 --> 00:11:31,580 onto the screen and photographed Ali 191 00:11:31,580 --> 00:11:35,850 in front of these things so I can flush out the story. 192 00:11:35,850 --> 00:11:37,893 At the conclusion of our shoot, 193 00:11:38,920 --> 00:11:42,420 the assistant took a picture of Ali and I 194 00:11:42,420 --> 00:11:44,243 facing off against each other. 195 00:11:45,170 --> 00:11:49,160 In 1960, Cassius Clay came to Miami 196 00:11:49,160 --> 00:11:52,840 determined to be the heavyweight champion in the world. 197 00:11:52,840 --> 00:11:57,840 In end, he became something even more, a legend! 198 00:11:59,047 --> 00:12:01,630 (drum music) 199 00:12:16,850 --> 00:12:19,480 Everybody remembers who was alive 200 00:12:19,480 --> 00:12:21,500 at the time back in the fifties, 201 00:12:21,500 --> 00:12:24,850 when Eisenhower picked Nixon to be 202 00:12:24,850 --> 00:12:27,260 his candidate for Vice President. 203 00:12:27,260 --> 00:12:30,670 And then there were some expose' in the press 204 00:12:30,670 --> 00:12:35,670 about Nixon's financial doings. 205 00:12:37,040 --> 00:12:40,350 And so he was under pressure, 206 00:12:40,350 --> 00:12:43,220 and Nixon decided to take to television 207 00:12:43,220 --> 00:12:46,390 which was a relatively new medium. 208 00:12:46,390 --> 00:12:51,070 And he gave a speech to the American public. 209 00:12:51,070 --> 00:12:55,907 And he said, basically one of the lines was 210 00:12:55,907 --> 00:13:00,260 "My wife, Pat has a plain cloth coat." 211 00:13:00,260 --> 00:13:04,223 Indicating they didn't have any money coming to them. 212 00:13:06,050 --> 00:13:07,090 But he said, 213 00:13:07,090 --> 00:13:11,930 a gentleman from Texas sent them a Cocker spaniel 214 00:13:11,930 --> 00:13:13,920 and my daughter fell in love with it, 215 00:13:13,920 --> 00:13:18,480 and she named it Checkers and we're not giving him back. 216 00:13:18,480 --> 00:13:20,010 Well, the public was impressed. 217 00:13:20,010 --> 00:13:23,377 Eisenhower applauded the speech and said, 218 00:13:23,377 --> 00:13:25,240 "You're gonna stay on the ticket." 219 00:13:25,240 --> 00:13:30,240 And that's how Checkers became the name of that speech. 220 00:13:31,310 --> 00:13:34,023 It's now called the Checkers Speech. 221 00:13:34,890 --> 00:13:38,100 And now I wanna jump ahead to a relationship that 222 00:13:38,100 --> 00:13:41,110 Richard Nixon had with Hedda Hopper. 223 00:13:41,110 --> 00:13:42,530 Who was Hedda Hopper? 224 00:13:42,530 --> 00:13:44,560 Well, at one point 225 00:13:44,560 --> 00:13:48,550 she was the most famous columnist in the country. 226 00:13:48,550 --> 00:13:52,150 She was basically somebody who knew and dealt 227 00:13:52,150 --> 00:13:55,190 with all the movie stars and celebrities, 228 00:13:55,190 --> 00:13:59,180 and her newspaper column was nationally syndicated. 229 00:13:59,180 --> 00:14:00,110 She was also 230 00:14:02,950 --> 00:14:07,950 known for her very funny, crazy hats that she wore. 231 00:14:08,020 --> 00:14:09,760 She was quite a celebrity in her own day. 232 00:14:09,760 --> 00:14:10,810 And then Nixon, 233 00:14:10,810 --> 00:14:15,690 who was part of that Hollywood crowd knew Hedda 234 00:14:15,690 --> 00:14:18,333 and went ahead and published a book. 235 00:14:20,644 --> 00:14:24,050 I was there doing a story on Hedda Hopper 236 00:14:24,050 --> 00:14:28,690 and Nixon came in and posed with Hedda for the picture. 237 00:14:28,690 --> 00:14:32,730 Getting assigned to do a cover for LIFE magazine 238 00:14:32,730 --> 00:14:37,730 for any photographer, especially myself was a big deal. 239 00:14:38,900 --> 00:14:42,740 When my boss, Roy Rowan came to me and said, 240 00:14:42,740 --> 00:14:45,800 Bob, you're gonna get a crack at a cover. 241 00:14:45,800 --> 00:14:48,790 We want you to shoot a picture of Richard Nixon, 242 00:14:48,790 --> 00:14:52,610 because he's gonna be running president. 243 00:14:52,610 --> 00:14:54,303 And I got so excited. 244 00:14:55,275 --> 00:14:57,170 And a couple of days later, 245 00:14:57,170 --> 00:14:59,167 Roy called me into his office and said, 246 00:14:59,167 --> 00:15:01,400 "Bob, we're having a little problem. 247 00:15:01,400 --> 00:15:04,240 Nixon does not wanna pose now. 248 00:15:04,240 --> 00:15:06,390 He feels it wouldn't be propitious 249 00:15:07,360 --> 00:15:10,550 throwing his hat in the ring this early." 250 00:15:10,550 --> 00:15:11,760 So Roy Rowan said, 251 00:15:11,760 --> 00:15:14,430 well, we're not gonna take no for an answer. 252 00:15:14,430 --> 00:15:18,500 We're going to ask our boss, Henry Luce, 253 00:15:18,500 --> 00:15:23,450 who was a big Republican donor to intercede in our behalf. 254 00:15:23,450 --> 00:15:24,963 We want Nixon on the cover. 255 00:15:26,160 --> 00:15:29,070 And I felt pretty good about that. 256 00:15:29,070 --> 00:15:32,960 But then days later I found out that Nixon was adamant. 257 00:15:32,960 --> 00:15:35,363 He was not going to do this. 258 00:15:37,090 --> 00:15:41,677 So I said to Roy Rowan, my boss, I said, 259 00:15:41,677 --> 00:15:44,270 "Roy do you mind if I try on my own?" 260 00:15:44,270 --> 00:15:47,330 And he laughed at me after what had happened, 261 00:15:47,330 --> 00:15:49,050 but I had an ace up my sleeve. 262 00:15:49,050 --> 00:15:54,050 I was with Hedda Hopper months ago doing a story on her, 263 00:15:54,490 --> 00:15:59,490 and she told me about her relationship with Dick Nixon. 264 00:15:59,760 --> 00:16:01,410 And it was as follows. 265 00:16:01,410 --> 00:16:06,410 When Eisenhower and Nixon in 52 and in 1956 266 00:16:06,540 --> 00:16:11,330 were touring the Midwest by train is how they used to do it. 267 00:16:11,330 --> 00:16:13,090 They were not drawing the crowds. 268 00:16:13,090 --> 00:16:15,780 The farmers were not that interested, 269 00:16:15,780 --> 00:16:18,860 and they were worried stiff. 270 00:16:18,860 --> 00:16:22,780 So, Nixon who knew Hedda Hopper called her 271 00:16:22,780 --> 00:16:25,950 and said, "Hedda you got to come out and help us." 272 00:16:25,950 --> 00:16:30,950 And she flew out and the farmer's wives heard she was coming 273 00:16:31,720 --> 00:16:36,670 and she got on the train and the crowds came to see 274 00:16:36,670 --> 00:16:41,670 Eisenhower and Nixon and Hedda Hopper with her kookie hats, 275 00:16:42,120 --> 00:16:44,603 and truth be told, 276 00:16:46,500 --> 00:16:49,890 Hedda Hopper was responsible for not only 277 00:16:49,890 --> 00:16:53,930 winning the Midwest for Eisenhower, but the presidency. 278 00:16:53,930 --> 00:16:55,453 So I knew that story. 279 00:16:56,390 --> 00:16:59,113 And I decided to call Hedda Hopper. 280 00:17:00,120 --> 00:17:01,660 She used to call me, "Dear boy." 281 00:17:01,660 --> 00:17:06,030 Cause she was about 30 years older than I was. 282 00:17:06,030 --> 00:17:09,167 And she understood what I needed and she said, 283 00:17:09,167 --> 00:17:13,080 "Dear boy, what's your phone number?" 284 00:17:13,080 --> 00:17:14,280 And I gave her the phone number. 285 00:17:14,280 --> 00:17:17,600 She said, "Stay by your phone a few minutes." 286 00:17:17,600 --> 00:17:20,570 In few minutes the phone rings, 287 00:17:20,570 --> 00:17:22,083 and the lady says to me, 288 00:17:23,617 --> 00:17:28,140 "My name is Rosemary Woods. 289 00:17:28,140 --> 00:17:30,070 I don't know who you are, 290 00:17:30,070 --> 00:17:32,960 but where do you want him, and when?" 291 00:17:32,960 --> 00:17:35,870 Well, okay, who is Rosemary Woods? 292 00:17:35,870 --> 00:17:38,630 She was Nixon's personal secretary. 293 00:17:38,630 --> 00:17:41,690 So at any rate, 294 00:17:41,690 --> 00:17:46,160 now I have Nixon over at the LIFE studio 295 00:17:46,160 --> 00:17:51,077 with a camera that was a four by five Gowlandflex 296 00:17:53,320 --> 00:17:55,670 like a giant twin lens reflex. 297 00:17:55,670 --> 00:18:00,670 And we do some testing and you see a picture behind me 298 00:18:02,940 --> 00:18:06,520 when I stood in for Nixon to see that the lights were right 299 00:18:07,610 --> 00:18:10,460 and everything looked good and Nixon comes along, 300 00:18:10,460 --> 00:18:13,453 and we made one more test and it looked good. 301 00:18:14,640 --> 00:18:18,830 So we proceeded to photograph him in that fashion. 302 00:18:18,830 --> 00:18:23,670 At the conclusion of which he wasn't in a hurry to run out. 303 00:18:23,670 --> 00:18:28,060 And the assistant took a picture of myself 304 00:18:28,060 --> 00:18:33,060 with Nixon at the studio and he leaves 305 00:18:33,540 --> 00:18:35,137 and I've run over to the LIFE lab, 306 00:18:35,137 --> 00:18:38,090 and it took about three hours to process the film. 307 00:18:38,090 --> 00:18:42,730 And when it comes out of the tank, it's a disaster. 308 00:18:42,730 --> 00:18:45,643 About five of the six lights that we had, 309 00:18:46,765 --> 00:18:48,580 didn't go off. 310 00:18:48,580 --> 00:18:49,620 And of course, 311 00:18:49,620 --> 00:18:52,780 well I was shooting I couldn't know that 312 00:18:52,780 --> 00:18:55,203 because it was just a blinding flash of light, 313 00:18:56,420 --> 00:18:58,970 but I had no cover. 314 00:18:58,970 --> 00:19:02,150 After all the trouble I went through, I had no cover. 315 00:19:02,150 --> 00:19:06,090 So I took the train home and I told my wife, 316 00:19:06,090 --> 00:19:07,870 you know, I think my career is over. 317 00:19:07,870 --> 00:19:09,960 I really blew a big one. 318 00:19:09,960 --> 00:19:11,710 And she said, well, I don't understand. 319 00:19:11,710 --> 00:19:13,660 Why don't you just call up and get him back? 320 00:19:13,660 --> 00:19:16,210 I said, you don't understand. It doesn't go that way. 321 00:19:16,210 --> 00:19:18,300 I had my chance, I blew it. 322 00:19:18,300 --> 00:19:22,560 Well, she was after me throughout the rest of the night. 323 00:19:22,560 --> 00:19:25,740 So by the time the next morning came along, 324 00:19:25,740 --> 00:19:28,590 I decided I'd make the phone call and see what happens. 325 00:19:28,590 --> 00:19:32,617 So I called this Rosemary Woods again and she says, 326 00:19:32,617 --> 00:19:34,040 "Oh, I was just gonna call you." 327 00:19:34,040 --> 00:19:36,670 I said really, what for? 328 00:19:36,670 --> 00:19:37,503 She said well, 329 00:19:37,503 --> 00:19:39,650 I wonder if we could get some prints of what you did. 330 00:19:39,650 --> 00:19:42,110 I said, Oh yeah, I'll be happy to do that. 331 00:19:42,110 --> 00:19:44,380 But quite frankly, Rosemary, 332 00:19:44,380 --> 00:19:46,030 there was a problem with the picture. 333 00:19:46,030 --> 00:19:47,730 She said, "What problem?" 334 00:19:47,730 --> 00:19:50,900 I said, well your boss showed up in a black suit 335 00:19:50,900 --> 00:19:53,160 and a solid black tie, 336 00:19:53,160 --> 00:19:55,240 and it looked very funereal. 337 00:19:55,240 --> 00:19:58,500 And she says, "Oh my God, what can we do?" 338 00:19:58,500 --> 00:20:01,630 I said, I'll go buy some ties to freshen up the picture 339 00:20:01,630 --> 00:20:02,870 If you get him back. 340 00:20:02,870 --> 00:20:05,580 She said, "I'd be happy to do that. 341 00:20:05,580 --> 00:20:06,800 Let's do it." 342 00:20:06,800 --> 00:20:11,280 So what you see on the screen now 343 00:20:11,280 --> 00:20:14,450 is the final picture, corrected picture 344 00:20:14,450 --> 00:20:17,451 of Nixon with all lights working. 345 00:20:17,451 --> 00:20:19,868 (calm music) 346 00:20:33,060 --> 00:20:38,060 Airplane controllers were unhappy with the amount of pay 347 00:20:38,990 --> 00:20:41,100 they received for the hard work they were doing, 348 00:20:41,100 --> 00:20:44,840 but they were prohibited by law from striking. 349 00:20:44,840 --> 00:20:46,590 So, they did the next best thing. 350 00:20:46,590 --> 00:20:49,580 They decided really enforce the laws 351 00:20:49,580 --> 00:20:54,580 and airports all over the country were causing huge delays, 352 00:20:56,890 --> 00:20:59,960 as these controllers were exercising 353 00:20:59,960 --> 00:21:03,080 their prerogatives under the law. 354 00:21:03,080 --> 00:21:06,660 And that created pileups of airplanes 355 00:21:06,660 --> 00:21:10,727 waiting on the tarmac 20, 30 minutes at a time. 356 00:21:10,727 --> 00:21:14,620 And the public was very well aware of the condition 357 00:21:14,620 --> 00:21:16,300 and it put pressure on the government 358 00:21:16,300 --> 00:21:17,490 to do something about it. 359 00:21:17,490 --> 00:21:18,883 But in the meantime, 360 00:21:20,140 --> 00:21:25,140 LIFE asked me to do some kind of coverage of this situation, 361 00:21:26,820 --> 00:21:29,440 and I went out there and I watched it. 362 00:21:29,440 --> 00:21:33,760 Now, even though the pilots were 363 00:21:33,760 --> 00:21:37,200 caused to wait 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 364 00:21:37,200 --> 00:21:39,050 they were still spread apart 365 00:21:39,050 --> 00:21:42,720 on this giant situation on the runways, 366 00:21:42,720 --> 00:21:44,803 and it didn't make a very good picture. 367 00:21:45,790 --> 00:21:48,290 So that first evening, 368 00:21:48,290 --> 00:21:53,150 I asked the chief of the controller, 369 00:21:53,150 --> 00:21:55,070 if he would come to dinner with me. 370 00:21:55,070 --> 00:22:00,070 And we dined and I explained what I needed for a picture, 371 00:22:00,600 --> 00:22:05,600 which was 20 or 30 planes in a row like soldiers. 372 00:22:07,290 --> 00:22:11,530 And I guess after a few beers, he thought, 373 00:22:11,530 --> 00:22:12,933 why not, he'll do it. 374 00:22:13,780 --> 00:22:18,780 And so the next day I was in a helicopter 375 00:22:19,770 --> 00:22:24,770 and my new friend arranged that the planes be lined up 376 00:22:25,580 --> 00:22:29,360 like soldiers on one runway. 377 00:22:29,360 --> 00:22:32,620 And I made the picture that became the LIFE cover. 378 00:22:32,620 --> 00:22:34,690 So, it wasn't a falsehood 379 00:22:36,190 --> 00:22:39,190 because that was a real situation, 380 00:22:39,190 --> 00:22:42,710 but I had to make it visual and vertical 381 00:22:42,710 --> 00:22:44,223 so that we could use it. 382 00:22:46,770 --> 00:22:49,470 For the Winter Olympics of that year, 383 00:22:49,470 --> 00:22:53,880 I was assigned to do the U.S. Bobsled team 384 00:22:53,880 --> 00:22:58,640 up at Lake Placid, New York, Mt. Van Hoevenberg, 385 00:22:58,640 --> 00:23:01,270 where they had a bobsled track 386 00:23:01,270 --> 00:23:03,380 going down the side of the mountain. 387 00:23:03,380 --> 00:23:06,300 But I knew I wanted something different. 388 00:23:06,300 --> 00:23:11,240 And so we got a bobsled over to a garage shop 389 00:23:11,240 --> 00:23:15,070 and we welded a mount for a camera 390 00:23:15,070 --> 00:23:19,070 on the front cowl of the bobsled, 391 00:23:19,070 --> 00:23:20,950 and ran a wire. 392 00:23:20,950 --> 00:23:24,390 Bobsled was a four seater 393 00:23:24,390 --> 00:23:29,160 and ran a wire in the bobsled to see position three, 394 00:23:29,160 --> 00:23:33,060 where I was going to be firing the camera 395 00:23:33,060 --> 00:23:37,453 as we rode down at approximately 103 miles an hour. 396 00:23:38,410 --> 00:23:40,490 What I did not know, 397 00:23:40,490 --> 00:23:43,050 was what shutter speed to select. 398 00:23:43,050 --> 00:23:45,520 I didn't wanna freeze the action completely. 399 00:23:45,520 --> 00:23:48,290 It'd make it look still and frozen. 400 00:23:48,290 --> 00:23:51,490 I wanted enough sense of motion 401 00:23:51,490 --> 00:23:55,120 to appreciate 103 miles an hour, 402 00:23:55,120 --> 00:23:58,560 but I also wanted detail in Bob Said, 403 00:23:58,560 --> 00:24:02,780 who was the captain of the U.S. team 404 00:24:02,780 --> 00:24:06,320 and in the steering position to be recognizable. 405 00:24:06,320 --> 00:24:08,810 So, it required three separate runs 406 00:24:08,810 --> 00:24:11,570 at three different shutter speeds. 407 00:24:11,570 --> 00:24:14,180 And I had the film processed 408 00:24:14,180 --> 00:24:18,500 and one of the runs was just perfect. 409 00:24:18,500 --> 00:24:23,500 And that's how I got that cover of the U.S. Bobsled team. 410 00:24:24,620 --> 00:24:25,453 But I'll tell you, 411 00:24:25,453 --> 00:24:29,280 it was the scariest thing I think I have ever done 412 00:24:29,280 --> 00:24:31,800 in terms of riding that bobsled 413 00:24:32,890 --> 00:24:36,960 bouncing all over the ice at that great speed. 414 00:24:36,960 --> 00:24:40,143 It was quite an experience I'll never forget. 415 00:24:42,470 --> 00:24:44,620 Next I wanna talk about this picture 416 00:24:44,620 --> 00:24:49,360 in black and white of Little League hockey. 417 00:24:49,360 --> 00:24:54,080 When it first started, I was asked to do a story on it. 418 00:24:54,080 --> 00:24:56,120 And I went out to New Jersey somewhere, 419 00:24:56,120 --> 00:24:59,560 and I stayed with the hockey league there 420 00:24:59,560 --> 00:25:02,040 and photograph kids playing hockey. 421 00:25:02,040 --> 00:25:03,990 And it was just great, 422 00:25:03,990 --> 00:25:07,945 except that none of my pictures, action pictures 423 00:25:07,945 --> 00:25:12,320 of the actual competition really said 424 00:25:12,320 --> 00:25:14,980 what I knew was happening, 425 00:25:14,980 --> 00:25:19,270 and that was they're enjoying the heck out of hockey. 426 00:25:19,270 --> 00:25:22,910 So I had an idea how to make this work in a photograph. 427 00:25:22,910 --> 00:25:27,910 I lined up two teams on the opposite end of the arena. 428 00:25:29,170 --> 00:25:34,170 And I took a $5 bill and I put a puck over it, 429 00:25:34,290 --> 00:25:37,780 and I got up on a little three foot ladder 430 00:25:37,780 --> 00:25:40,730 and I blew a whistle and they came charging 431 00:25:40,730 --> 00:25:43,810 to see who could get that $5 bill. 432 00:25:43,810 --> 00:25:44,950 And what resulted 433 00:25:44,950 --> 00:25:49,000 was a pile up of kids laughing and having a ball. 434 00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:52,620 And that was the opening double page spread 435 00:25:52,620 --> 00:25:53,790 in LIFE magazine. 436 00:25:53,790 --> 00:25:57,370 It said, "Kids are having a great time 437 00:25:57,370 --> 00:25:59,317 at ice hockey Little League." 438 00:26:01,410 --> 00:26:03,800 In 1965, 439 00:26:03,800 --> 00:26:07,910 there was a blackout of the entire Eastern seaboard 440 00:26:07,910 --> 00:26:10,570 from Ottawa to Florida. 441 00:26:10,570 --> 00:26:13,200 And it went on for many, many hours. 442 00:26:13,200 --> 00:26:16,970 And I didn't have an assignment from anybody 443 00:26:16,970 --> 00:26:19,010 'cause phones were out, 444 00:26:19,010 --> 00:26:21,710 but I decided it seemed significant enough 445 00:26:21,710 --> 00:26:24,370 after several hours that I better get somewhere 446 00:26:24,370 --> 00:26:27,290 and record this as best I could. 447 00:26:27,290 --> 00:26:30,530 So I drove into New York, 448 00:26:30,530 --> 00:26:32,840 ended up somewhere in the Brooklyn Navy yard, 449 00:26:32,840 --> 00:26:35,280 looking at lower Manhattan 450 00:26:35,280 --> 00:26:38,693 as nobody had ever seen it before. 451 00:26:39,830 --> 00:26:44,150 It was totally dark except by the light of a full moon, 452 00:26:44,150 --> 00:26:45,380 which was over my shoulder. 453 00:26:45,380 --> 00:26:48,240 So I set my camera up on a tripod 454 00:26:48,240 --> 00:26:50,950 and I made some time exposures 455 00:26:50,950 --> 00:26:55,223 of lower Manhattan in that moonlight. 456 00:26:56,110 --> 00:26:58,240 And then I got an idea. 457 00:26:58,240 --> 00:27:02,440 It seemed to me that we were all existing basically 458 00:27:02,440 --> 00:27:04,610 by the light of a full moon that night. 459 00:27:04,610 --> 00:27:09,250 And that, that should be part of my picture and story. 460 00:27:09,250 --> 00:27:13,880 So taking a clue from a great colleague of mine, 461 00:27:13,880 --> 00:27:17,470 the famous black photographer, Gordon Parks, 462 00:27:17,470 --> 00:27:20,470 who had done multiple exposures 463 00:27:20,470 --> 00:27:23,923 of which I thought were very significant. 464 00:27:24,870 --> 00:27:29,870 So, what I did was rewound my film, I exposed film, 465 00:27:30,820 --> 00:27:35,820 turned the camera 180 degrees, put on a telephoto lens, 466 00:27:36,140 --> 00:27:40,170 and exposed pictures of the full moon 467 00:27:40,170 --> 00:27:42,740 in the upper right hand quadrant 468 00:27:42,740 --> 00:27:47,563 where I knew the skyline had nothing else exposed. 469 00:27:48,520 --> 00:27:52,590 And shot another whole roll doing that. 470 00:27:52,590 --> 00:27:57,590 And then the big question at LIFE the next day 471 00:27:58,880 --> 00:27:59,713 was well, 472 00:27:59,713 --> 00:28:02,460 I told them, I explained exactly how that picture was made. 473 00:28:02,460 --> 00:28:04,800 And my justification for doing that 474 00:28:05,670 --> 00:28:07,920 in that fashion was that, 475 00:28:07,920 --> 00:28:12,040 in fact it was not so bad 476 00:28:12,040 --> 00:28:14,410 because had I been on the New Jersey side 477 00:28:14,410 --> 00:28:15,940 looking at the lower Manhattan, 478 00:28:15,940 --> 00:28:17,480 I would have seen that moon. 479 00:28:17,480 --> 00:28:21,030 So I justified what I did on that basis. 480 00:28:21,030 --> 00:28:22,410 There was a huge argument, 481 00:28:22,410 --> 00:28:27,410 went on for hours about in the context of a news picture, 482 00:28:28,110 --> 00:28:29,960 knowing what I had done 483 00:28:29,960 --> 00:28:32,130 they could go with that in good conscience. 484 00:28:32,130 --> 00:28:35,087 And they decided to do exactly that. 485 00:28:35,087 --> 00:28:40,087 And it ran as a big double page opening spread 486 00:28:40,410 --> 00:28:42,830 for the story of that great blackout. 487 00:28:42,830 --> 00:28:44,960 And what was interesting to me 488 00:28:44,960 --> 00:28:48,320 considering the ethics involved 489 00:28:48,320 --> 00:28:50,350 was that all the major magazines 490 00:28:50,350 --> 00:28:52,140 in the world picked up on it. 491 00:28:52,140 --> 00:28:54,750 There was Der Stern, there were Paris Match. 492 00:28:54,750 --> 00:28:56,990 They all grabbed it and ran with it, 493 00:28:56,990 --> 00:28:58,380 and felt it was okay, 494 00:28:58,380 --> 00:29:03,333 even in terms of how I had made it. 495 00:29:05,100 --> 00:29:07,517 (calm music) 496 00:29:11,020 --> 00:29:14,090 What you're looking at on the screen 497 00:29:14,090 --> 00:29:18,510 is a picture of myself with Nikon's first 498 00:29:18,510 --> 00:29:23,510 and only underwater or waterproof camera called a Nikonos. 499 00:29:25,690 --> 00:29:27,300 And on top of my head, 500 00:29:27,300 --> 00:29:31,420 you just see a giant studio strobe attached to a pipe 501 00:29:31,420 --> 00:29:36,420 with some electric cords going to the surface of the pool. 502 00:29:39,540 --> 00:29:43,210 I am doing a story on the 1964, 503 00:29:43,210 --> 00:29:47,570 U.S. Women's Olympic Swim Team. 504 00:29:47,570 --> 00:29:50,750 And we're in California during practice, 505 00:29:50,750 --> 00:29:55,750 and I decided that the best way to see these ladies 506 00:29:56,360 --> 00:30:00,733 and their perfection is to look at it underwater. 507 00:30:01,580 --> 00:30:06,330 And what is now coming on the screen 508 00:30:06,330 --> 00:30:10,680 is a picture of a 16 year old Kathy Ellis, 509 00:30:10,680 --> 00:30:15,680 who is swimming the butterfly as observed by me 510 00:30:16,350 --> 00:30:18,210 from under the water. 511 00:30:18,210 --> 00:30:20,820 She went on to win three gold medals, 512 00:30:20,820 --> 00:30:23,790 I believe and a few others. 513 00:30:23,790 --> 00:30:24,710 Quite a superstar! 514 00:30:24,710 --> 00:30:26,650 That particular picture was 515 00:30:26,650 --> 00:30:28,913 one of the best I have ever made. 516 00:30:30,930 --> 00:30:34,610 And I continued, did a big picture story 517 00:30:34,610 --> 00:30:36,370 on the Women's Olympic team. 518 00:30:36,370 --> 00:30:39,370 It ran for eight or 10 pages in LIFE, 519 00:30:39,370 --> 00:30:44,040 and on the cover it featured another 520 00:30:44,040 --> 00:30:48,093 Olympic swimming champion named Donna de Varona. 521 00:30:49,530 --> 00:30:51,890 And I thought to myself, 522 00:30:51,890 --> 00:30:53,750 how can I flush out this story 523 00:30:53,750 --> 00:30:56,780 apart from all the practices going on? 524 00:30:56,780 --> 00:30:58,010 And I asked Donna, 525 00:30:58,010 --> 00:31:00,770 what else she does that might be of some interest? 526 00:31:00,770 --> 00:31:03,330 And she said, well, she's a pretty good surfer. 527 00:31:03,330 --> 00:31:05,200 I said, no kidding. 528 00:31:05,200 --> 00:31:08,370 Let's go to the beach and catch you doing some surfing. 529 00:31:08,370 --> 00:31:13,370 It'll be a great contrast to all this practice in the pool. 530 00:31:13,370 --> 00:31:14,920 So she was very accommodating. 531 00:31:14,920 --> 00:31:19,920 She gets out there in the surf and after a ride or two, 532 00:31:20,110 --> 00:31:22,010 she has a terrible accident. 533 00:31:22,010 --> 00:31:25,040 She flies off the surfboard and injures herself. 534 00:31:25,040 --> 00:31:30,000 She comes crawling out of the ocean and I'm thinking, 535 00:31:30,000 --> 00:31:31,720 Oh my gosh, 536 00:31:31,720 --> 00:31:33,880 I've wrecked her career right before 537 00:31:33,880 --> 00:31:37,150 the summer Olympics in Tokyo. 538 00:31:37,150 --> 00:31:39,170 Well, I was very nervous about that, 539 00:31:39,170 --> 00:31:42,660 but fortunately Donna de Varona 540 00:31:43,550 --> 00:31:46,280 recovered sufficiently to make the team. 541 00:31:46,280 --> 00:31:48,010 And then by the time they got to Tokyo, 542 00:31:48,010 --> 00:31:50,683 she was in top form and did very well. 543 00:31:52,058 --> 00:31:54,641 (upbeat music) 544 00:32:04,400 --> 00:32:06,250 - [Announcer] Ladies and gentlemen, 545 00:32:06,250 --> 00:32:07,208 the Beatles. 546 00:32:07,208 --> 00:32:08,239 Bring them on now. 547 00:32:08,239 --> 00:32:09,846 (crowd cheering) 548 00:32:09,846 --> 00:32:12,596 (Beatle's music) 549 00:32:19,200 --> 00:32:22,850 - By the time the Beatles first arrived in America, 550 00:32:22,850 --> 00:32:25,230 they were already well known. 551 00:32:25,230 --> 00:32:27,070 Their song, "She Loves You", 552 00:32:27,070 --> 00:32:30,033 was a big hit among teenagers. 553 00:32:31,100 --> 00:32:33,360 They appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, 554 00:32:33,360 --> 00:32:37,410 in February of 1964. 555 00:32:37,410 --> 00:32:38,290 The second night of 556 00:32:38,290 --> 00:32:41,010 the democratic presidential debate 557 00:32:41,010 --> 00:32:44,930 in Miami this past June 2019, 558 00:32:44,930 --> 00:32:48,150 drew 18 million viewers, 559 00:32:48,150 --> 00:32:50,820 but 73 million people were watching 560 00:32:50,820 --> 00:32:53,263 the Beatles back in 1964. 561 00:32:56,010 --> 00:32:57,380 On February 13th, 562 00:32:57,380 --> 00:33:00,250 they flew down to Miami for another appearance 563 00:33:00,250 --> 00:33:03,403 on Sullivan at the Deauville hotel. 564 00:33:04,250 --> 00:33:07,660 A radio show host announced in advance 565 00:33:07,660 --> 00:33:11,030 their arrival time at the airport. 566 00:33:11,030 --> 00:33:14,612 7,000 screaming fans were there to greet them. 567 00:33:14,612 --> 00:33:17,445 (crowd screaming) 568 00:33:26,290 --> 00:33:30,773 They broke 23 windows and a plate glass door. 569 00:33:31,696 --> 00:33:34,529 (crowd screaming) 570 00:33:39,090 --> 00:33:42,490 Reporter, Gail Cameron and I covering for LIFE 571 00:33:42,490 --> 00:33:45,870 got driven in limos to the hotel, 572 00:33:45,870 --> 00:33:48,963 adoring crowds waving as we passed. 573 00:33:49,920 --> 00:33:51,710 Arriving at the hotel, 574 00:33:51,710 --> 00:33:56,060 we're invaded by a mob of teenagers. 575 00:33:56,060 --> 00:33:59,063 At least one girl passes out. 576 00:34:00,550 --> 00:34:02,300 LIFE's original idea, 577 00:34:02,300 --> 00:34:03,920 was to get the Beatles together 578 00:34:03,920 --> 00:34:06,870 for a photo session in a pool. 579 00:34:06,870 --> 00:34:10,060 It was obviously impossible to do this 580 00:34:10,060 --> 00:34:12,283 at the Deauville facility. 581 00:34:13,240 --> 00:34:18,140 Gail, arranges access at a private residence on Miami beach, 582 00:34:18,140 --> 00:34:21,993 but the Beatles say no, claiming they're tired. 583 00:34:22,890 --> 00:34:27,083 Paul McCartney finally agrees to the LIFE request. 584 00:34:28,330 --> 00:34:30,860 Now getting the Beatles out of the hotel 585 00:34:30,860 --> 00:34:33,730 with thousands of screaming fans 586 00:34:33,730 --> 00:34:35,740 required strategic planning 587 00:34:35,740 --> 00:34:39,630 usually reserved for military landings. 588 00:34:39,630 --> 00:34:42,890 With five cops to protect the four Beatles, 589 00:34:42,890 --> 00:34:46,053 we finally snuck them out a back way. 590 00:34:47,630 --> 00:34:50,560 After changing into bathing suits, 591 00:34:50,560 --> 00:34:55,560 four pale skinny guys entered the pool. 592 00:34:55,730 --> 00:34:58,680 They seemed uncertain how to react. 593 00:34:58,680 --> 00:35:02,090 They wanted to be told what to do. 594 00:35:02,090 --> 00:35:04,700 I told them just to have fun. 595 00:35:04,700 --> 00:35:07,470 Ringo started a splash fight. 596 00:35:07,470 --> 00:35:11,250 John did a few cannonballs off the diving board. 597 00:35:11,250 --> 00:35:13,570 McCartney takes a plunge underwater, 598 00:35:13,570 --> 00:35:16,740 he comes up screaming, "It's cold!" 599 00:35:16,740 --> 00:35:18,333 Lenin tries it too. 600 00:35:19,590 --> 00:35:20,820 Finally exhausted, 601 00:35:20,820 --> 00:35:24,750 they exit the pool and wrap themselves in towels. 602 00:35:24,750 --> 00:35:26,723 It's time for a nap and some rest. 603 00:35:27,900 --> 00:35:29,940 My best known photograph 604 00:35:29,940 --> 00:35:33,083 is of the four lads in lounge chairs. 605 00:35:34,220 --> 00:35:38,270 The Beatles told me they had never been anywhere 606 00:35:38,270 --> 00:35:40,530 where there were palm trees. 607 00:35:40,530 --> 00:35:44,950 They were so accustomed to the miserable British winters. 608 00:35:44,950 --> 00:35:47,443 Florida was a paradise. 609 00:35:48,410 --> 00:35:50,890 McCartney falls asleep. 610 00:35:50,890 --> 00:35:53,680 Harrison grabs a French fry. 611 00:35:53,680 --> 00:35:56,060 Lennon grabs the smoke. 612 00:35:56,060 --> 00:36:00,050 McCartney wakes and takes some pictures with his Pentax. 613 00:36:00,050 --> 00:36:02,483 Harrison grabs another snack. 614 00:36:03,560 --> 00:36:07,960 The next day, we whisked them away to North Miami beach, 615 00:36:07,960 --> 00:36:10,893 where we hoped they wouldn't be recognized. 616 00:36:11,780 --> 00:36:12,623 Wrong. 617 00:36:13,540 --> 00:36:15,110 After a brief run, 618 00:36:15,110 --> 00:36:18,730 the lads jumped into the ocean and splashed away. 619 00:36:18,730 --> 00:36:21,973 A few girls spotted them and joined them in the water. 620 00:36:22,840 --> 00:36:25,780 One of them, a girl named Ruth Blythe 621 00:36:25,780 --> 00:36:29,120 impulsively gave McCartney a kiss. 622 00:36:29,120 --> 00:36:32,460 Ringo and the others were also hugged and kissed 623 00:36:32,460 --> 00:36:36,223 until police got them safely away to our vehicles. 624 00:36:37,330 --> 00:36:39,960 The next day was the rehearsal, 625 00:36:39,960 --> 00:36:43,643 and the lads renewed their acquaintance with Ed Sullivan. 626 00:36:44,900 --> 00:36:47,020 For the actual performance, 627 00:36:47,020 --> 00:36:52,020 CBS, gave out 3,500 tickets for the 600 available seats, 628 00:36:54,790 --> 00:36:58,570 and there was a near riot as a result. 629 00:36:58,570 --> 00:37:01,233 The fans were delirious with excitement. 630 00:37:02,140 --> 00:37:07,140 Surprisingly enough, LIFE never ran the story. 631 00:37:10,800 --> 00:37:15,410 In 2005 Yoko Ono, widow of John Lennon 632 00:37:15,410 --> 00:37:18,850 invited me to contribute a chapter of my memories 633 00:37:18,850 --> 00:37:23,850 along with Joan Baez, Bono Ray Charles, Mick Jagger, 634 00:37:24,530 --> 00:37:29,530 Elton John, Norman Mailer, Carlos Santana and Carly Simon. 635 00:37:30,010 --> 00:37:33,773 I was very honored to be included with such august company. 636 00:37:35,100 --> 00:37:39,590 The first time some of my Beatle photographs were published 637 00:37:39,590 --> 00:37:44,590 was in August of 2015 in Closer Magazine, 51 years later. 638 00:37:47,880 --> 00:37:51,593 CBS saw it and came over for an interview. 639 00:37:53,010 --> 00:37:55,650 I showed them a picture of McCartney and Ruth Blythe 640 00:37:55,650 --> 00:37:58,230 kissing on Miami beach. 641 00:37:58,230 --> 00:38:01,640 The show appeared nationally and the Blythe's family 642 00:38:01,640 --> 00:38:06,320 now living on the West coast, watched it on their TV. 643 00:38:06,320 --> 00:38:07,530 They were astonished, 644 00:38:07,530 --> 00:38:12,530 because when their daughter Ruth came home that day in 1964 645 00:38:12,610 --> 00:38:15,710 claiming she had met and kissed a Beatle, 646 00:38:15,710 --> 00:38:17,013 they didn't believe her. 647 00:38:18,010 --> 00:38:21,610 Now, more than 50 years had passed, 648 00:38:21,610 --> 00:38:24,933 and they realized she was telling the truth. 649 00:38:26,380 --> 00:38:31,380 Sadly, Ruth Blythe had passed away some years before 650 00:38:31,630 --> 00:38:35,203 and never got the vindication she deserved. 651 00:38:36,530 --> 00:38:37,940 My prints of that occasion 652 00:38:37,940 --> 00:38:40,260 now hang proudly in their home. 653 00:38:40,260 --> 00:38:42,500 And more recently also in the rooms 654 00:38:42,500 --> 00:38:47,010 of the elegant five-star Post Oak Hotel in Houston, 655 00:38:47,010 --> 00:38:49,003 courtesy of Tilman Fertitta. 656 00:38:51,111 --> 00:38:53,528 (calm music) 657 00:38:55,160 --> 00:38:59,437 The title of the NBC show in 1961 was 658 00:38:59,437 --> 00:39:02,520 "Car 54, Where are you?" 659 00:39:02,520 --> 00:39:04,870 It was story about two policemen 660 00:39:04,870 --> 00:39:07,050 out of a fictitious precinct 661 00:39:07,050 --> 00:39:09,550 in the Bronx, the 53rd precinct, 662 00:39:09,550 --> 00:39:14,550 and their misadventures on various assignments. 663 00:39:14,680 --> 00:39:17,660 Well, it was popular show. 664 00:39:17,660 --> 00:39:21,950 They did about 60, 30 shows per year. 665 00:39:21,950 --> 00:39:25,830 They did a total of 60 shows and it was very well received. 666 00:39:25,830 --> 00:39:30,470 And LIFE asked me to cover the shooting 667 00:39:33,057 --> 00:39:35,990 of the program, and I did. 668 00:39:35,990 --> 00:39:39,380 And on a particular day I was out there, 669 00:39:39,380 --> 00:39:42,460 we were in the Bronx and I don't remember 670 00:39:42,460 --> 00:39:44,380 what the script was calling for, 671 00:39:44,380 --> 00:39:49,380 but we were suddenly faced with a rainstorm, 672 00:39:50,550 --> 00:39:52,130 a deluge of water, 673 00:39:52,130 --> 00:39:55,210 and everybody broke and ran from the street 674 00:39:55,210 --> 00:39:56,973 where they were doing pictures. 675 00:39:58,110 --> 00:40:01,080 And I ended up in a candy store 676 00:40:01,080 --> 00:40:04,163 with the two principal cops just by accident. 677 00:40:05,150 --> 00:40:08,180 Where I was hoping for a break in the weather 678 00:40:08,180 --> 00:40:12,510 and it wasn't coming and we're there 20, 30 minutes. 679 00:40:12,510 --> 00:40:16,050 And I noticed outside the candy store 680 00:40:16,050 --> 00:40:19,853 was a garbage can with a broken umbrella in it. 681 00:40:20,930 --> 00:40:22,800 So I got the idea and I asked 682 00:40:22,800 --> 00:40:26,460 the two principal actors in their uniforms, 683 00:40:26,460 --> 00:40:29,840 if they would please honor me and go out 684 00:40:29,840 --> 00:40:33,170 in the middle of the intersection heavy traffic 685 00:40:33,170 --> 00:40:37,230 with this broken umbrella and huddle underneath it. 686 00:40:37,230 --> 00:40:39,753 And they were happy to do that. 687 00:40:39,753 --> 00:40:44,753 And indeed, that was the picture that opened the story 688 00:40:44,870 --> 00:40:47,671 even though it had nothing to do with any other episode. 689 00:40:47,671 --> 00:40:51,000 It was very funny to see these two guys 690 00:40:51,000 --> 00:40:52,703 huddle out there in traffic. 691 00:40:53,900 --> 00:40:56,317 (calm music) 692 00:41:02,428 --> 00:41:05,095 (camera clicks) 693 00:41:14,040 --> 00:41:16,000 - And so my fellow Americans 694 00:41:17,010 --> 00:41:21,920 ask not what your country can do for you, 695 00:41:21,920 --> 00:41:24,579 ask what you can do for your country. 696 00:41:24,579 --> 00:41:28,120 (crowd cheering) 697 00:41:28,120 --> 00:41:30,350 - LIFE first assigned me to cover 698 00:41:30,350 --> 00:41:34,763 a presidential campaign of John Kennedy in 1960. 699 00:41:35,650 --> 00:41:39,090 My first assignment was covering his mother, Rose Kennedy, 700 00:41:39,090 --> 00:41:42,030 who was doing campaigning for him. 701 00:41:42,030 --> 00:41:47,030 She had told me that Jack was one of nine children she had. 702 00:41:48,840 --> 00:41:51,300 At three years old she related, 703 00:41:51,300 --> 00:41:54,770 Jack was very sick, whooping cough, measles, 704 00:41:54,770 --> 00:41:57,940 chicken pox, Scarlet fever, 705 00:41:57,940 --> 00:42:01,730 and a family joke about great risk. 706 00:42:01,730 --> 00:42:03,940 A mosquito took in biting him 707 00:42:03,940 --> 00:42:06,210 who with some of his blood the mosquito, 708 00:42:06,210 --> 00:42:08,113 was almost sure to die. 709 00:42:09,990 --> 00:42:13,690 Jack was a student at a boys school in Connecticut 710 00:42:13,690 --> 00:42:16,610 and had a daily subscription to the New York Times 711 00:42:16,610 --> 00:42:18,993 like I do to this very day. 712 00:42:20,380 --> 00:42:22,690 When he won the election, 713 00:42:22,690 --> 00:42:27,150 I was assigned to cover him at his home in Georgetown. 714 00:42:27,150 --> 00:42:30,100 The press were camped out in front ... 715 00:42:30,100 --> 00:42:34,870 as potential cabinet appointees pulled up in limousines, 716 00:42:34,870 --> 00:42:38,080 and walk the three steps to the door. 717 00:42:38,080 --> 00:42:39,480 His daughter, Caroline, 718 00:42:39,480 --> 00:42:43,043 occasionally peered out the window to watch us. 719 00:42:46,570 --> 00:42:48,960 The president elect would take her 720 00:42:48,960 --> 00:42:51,940 for brief walks down the street. 721 00:42:51,940 --> 00:42:54,110 On a Saturday morning, Pierre Salinger, 722 00:42:54,110 --> 00:42:59,000 the president's press secretary told we assembled press 723 00:42:59,000 --> 00:43:01,130 that there were no appointments that day, 724 00:43:01,130 --> 00:43:02,793 and we could go home. 725 00:43:03,950 --> 00:43:06,680 All the world's news organization got permission 726 00:43:06,680 --> 00:43:09,460 from their offices to do just that, 727 00:43:09,460 --> 00:43:14,460 except Jim Atherton, an AP photographer and myself. 728 00:43:15,000 --> 00:43:17,440 LIFE magazine went to press Saturday night 729 00:43:17,440 --> 00:43:19,180 and they wouldn't take any chances 730 00:43:19,180 --> 00:43:21,703 that something newsworthy might happen. 731 00:43:22,840 --> 00:43:26,700 So Jim and I stood outside on that cold November afternoon 732 00:43:26,700 --> 00:43:29,300 until the president opened his windows, 733 00:43:29,300 --> 00:43:31,140 and invited us in to watch 734 00:43:31,140 --> 00:43:33,333 the Army Navy football game with him. 735 00:43:34,730 --> 00:43:37,190 We were ushered into the den 736 00:43:37,190 --> 00:43:40,150 where three TV trays were set up, 737 00:43:40,150 --> 00:43:42,993 and we were served steak and baked potato. 738 00:43:44,090 --> 00:43:49,000 After days outside in the freezing Washington November, 739 00:43:49,000 --> 00:43:52,180 the warm house environment got the better of me 740 00:43:52,180 --> 00:43:53,383 and I fell asleep. 741 00:43:55,090 --> 00:43:57,860 Atherton finally shook be awake. 742 00:43:57,860 --> 00:43:59,610 He said the game was over 743 00:43:59,610 --> 00:44:02,840 and that the president had left the room. 744 00:44:02,840 --> 00:44:05,233 We returned to our position in the street. 745 00:44:06,680 --> 00:44:07,513 After that, 746 00:44:07,513 --> 00:44:09,250 whenever the president would see me 747 00:44:09,250 --> 00:44:11,570 covering one of his events, 748 00:44:11,570 --> 00:44:14,710 he would point at me with a big knowing smile 749 00:44:14,710 --> 00:44:17,860 and I would turn beet red in embarrassment 750 00:44:20,370 --> 00:44:23,010 In preparation for his presidency, 751 00:44:23,010 --> 00:44:28,010 John Kennedy had a personal tailor custom make his clothes. 752 00:44:28,270 --> 00:44:29,820 His name was Sam Harris, 753 00:44:29,820 --> 00:44:31,660 and the procedure intrigued enough 754 00:44:31,660 --> 00:44:35,710 to seek out a custom tailor for myself, named Morty Sills, 755 00:44:35,710 --> 00:44:39,560 who was well known among celebrity circles. 756 00:44:39,560 --> 00:44:42,590 Now, more than 57 years later, 757 00:44:42,590 --> 00:44:45,500 I'm still wearing the clothes Morty made for me 758 00:44:45,500 --> 00:44:48,023 in the sixties and seventies. 759 00:44:49,350 --> 00:44:52,410 I did not cover the inauguration ceremony, 760 00:44:52,410 --> 00:44:56,667 but will always remember Kennedy's immortal challenge. 761 00:44:56,667 --> 00:45:00,100 "Ask not what your country can do for you, 762 00:45:00,100 --> 00:45:02,947 ask what you can do for your country." 763 00:45:04,830 --> 00:45:07,950 My first assignments covering now, president Kennedy 764 00:45:07,950 --> 00:45:11,960 began when he addressed the United Nations general assembly 765 00:45:11,960 --> 00:45:15,330 in September of 1961. 766 00:45:15,330 --> 00:45:18,180 He began by paying homage to the recent death 767 00:45:18,180 --> 00:45:22,610 of UN secretary general, Dag Hammarskjold, 56, 768 00:45:22,610 --> 00:45:25,890 who died under somewhat mysterious circumstances 769 00:45:25,890 --> 00:45:28,110 when his plane crashed while on route 770 00:45:28,110 --> 00:45:32,123 to ceasefire negotiations during the Congo crisis. 771 00:45:33,800 --> 00:45:37,660 Next came prime minister of India, Nehru, 772 00:45:37,660 --> 00:45:41,280 with his wife to visit in November for three days 773 00:45:41,280 --> 00:45:43,850 of talks, walks, parties. 774 00:45:43,850 --> 00:45:47,780 It was an occasion for me to also attend a reception 775 00:45:47,780 --> 00:45:50,780 for Nehru at the Indian embassy that 776 00:45:50,780 --> 00:45:54,510 I was sufficiently attracted to the families I met 777 00:45:54,510 --> 00:45:57,980 to create a desire to one day visit their country, 778 00:45:57,980 --> 00:46:02,693 which I have in recent years done three times now. 779 00:46:04,340 --> 00:46:06,770 In May, 1962, 780 00:46:06,770 --> 00:46:09,860 JFK spoke to the United auto workers 781 00:46:09,860 --> 00:46:11,853 in Atlantic city, New Jersey. 782 00:46:14,950 --> 00:46:17,153 JFK, and the press Corps, 783 00:46:18,840 --> 00:46:22,690 charisma, what better way to describe it. 784 00:46:22,690 --> 00:46:27,690 Charm, aura, personality, magnetism, drawing power, 785 00:46:29,350 --> 00:46:33,470 attractiveness, appeal, mystique, glamor, 786 00:46:33,470 --> 00:46:36,903 a type of leadership seen as extraordinary. 787 00:46:39,150 --> 00:46:41,130 Kennedy visits Independent Hall 788 00:46:41,130 --> 00:46:45,020 in Philadelphia on July 4th, 1962. 789 00:46:45,020 --> 00:46:48,130 He talks about the Declaration of Independence 790 00:46:48,130 --> 00:46:50,833 as being a revolutionary document. 791 00:46:52,800 --> 00:46:57,800 The short life of Patrick Kennedy born 20 years to the day 792 00:46:58,010 --> 00:47:02,313 JFK was rescued from an island in the Pacific. 793 00:47:03,630 --> 00:47:08,630 We flew on air force one to Otis Airbase, Massachusetts. 794 00:47:09,330 --> 00:47:11,350 Five and a half weeks, 795 00:47:11,350 --> 00:47:15,003 that is to say Patrick was five and a half weeks premature. 796 00:47:15,950 --> 00:47:19,343 The baby had breathing difficulties within minutes. 797 00:47:20,200 --> 00:47:24,960 JFK saw his son in distress, called for a chaplain, 798 00:47:24,960 --> 00:47:27,140 and had him baptized. 799 00:47:27,140 --> 00:47:30,623 Patrick lived for only 39 hours. 800 00:47:31,700 --> 00:47:35,350 My photo of Kennedy in the elevator of the hospital 801 00:47:35,350 --> 00:47:38,083 looks grave and appearing tired. 802 00:47:39,750 --> 00:47:42,370 Next time I was assigned to cover the president 803 00:47:42,370 --> 00:47:45,610 it was because of the Cuban missile crisis, 804 00:47:45,610 --> 00:47:48,393 in October of 1962. 805 00:47:49,340 --> 00:47:52,050 Our U2 spy plane discovers 806 00:47:52,050 --> 00:47:55,500 Soviet ballistic missiles in Cuba. 807 00:47:55,500 --> 00:47:58,220 We traveled to Fort Stewart, Georgia 808 00:47:58,220 --> 00:48:01,453 to inspect our readiness to go to war. 809 00:48:02,960 --> 00:48:07,620 Then on to the Naval Air Station in Key West 810 00:48:07,620 --> 00:48:10,103 preparing fighter planes and bombers. 811 00:48:11,130 --> 00:48:15,020 Fortunately, Khrushchev backs off. 812 00:48:15,020 --> 00:48:20,020 In 2017, Caroline Kennedy invites me to a celebration 813 00:48:20,120 --> 00:48:23,030 at the Smithsonian in Washington to commemorate 814 00:48:23,030 --> 00:48:26,120 the hundredth anniversary of her dad's birth 815 00:48:26,120 --> 00:48:29,243 with rare photos of the sixties, including mine. 816 00:48:30,260 --> 00:48:33,410 Among the speakers, Senator John McCain 817 00:48:33,410 --> 00:48:35,870 tells of being on an aircraft carrier 818 00:48:35,870 --> 00:48:39,060 as a Navy fighter pilot on his way to Cuba 819 00:48:39,060 --> 00:48:43,780 when Kennedy called off the attack and how grateful he was. 820 00:48:43,780 --> 00:48:45,280 I shared with him that memory 821 00:48:45,280 --> 00:48:48,053 as I was also assigned to that carrier. 822 00:48:48,930 --> 00:48:53,620 Russia is making big strides in space exploration 823 00:48:53,620 --> 00:48:58,120 and John Kennedy commits to win the race. 824 00:48:58,120 --> 00:48:59,640 I accompany him on a tour 825 00:48:59,640 --> 00:49:04,080 of the U.S. facilities from Florida to Texas. 826 00:49:04,080 --> 00:49:07,810 Along with Vice President Johnson and several astronauts, 827 00:49:07,810 --> 00:49:12,050 we tour Huntsville, Alabama, Cape Canaveral, Florida, 828 00:49:12,050 --> 00:49:15,440 Houston, Texas, and the main space center 829 00:49:15,440 --> 00:49:18,050 at the McDonald plant in st. Louis to see 830 00:49:18,050 --> 00:49:20,813 the Mercury and Gemini space capsules. 831 00:49:23,010 --> 00:49:28,010 He meets with Wernher Von Braun, Schirra, Wally Schirra, 832 00:49:28,500 --> 00:49:31,230 John Glenn among others. 833 00:49:31,230 --> 00:49:34,020 We also visit the army missile command research 834 00:49:34,020 --> 00:49:35,363 and development center. 835 00:49:37,430 --> 00:49:40,810 Then we motorcade through downtown Houston, 836 00:49:40,810 --> 00:49:43,833 Foley's department store with flags around the right. 837 00:49:45,510 --> 00:49:48,980 We arrive at the Rice University Stadium. 838 00:49:48,980 --> 00:49:53,200 I am behind him to the right, camera's at the ready. 839 00:49:53,200 --> 00:49:58,140 University officials escort the president to the podium. 840 00:49:58,140 --> 00:49:59,750 He begins what turns out to be 841 00:49:59,750 --> 00:50:03,530 one of the most historic speeches of all times. 842 00:50:03,530 --> 00:50:06,537 A pledge to go to the moon quote, 843 00:50:06,537 --> 00:50:10,307 "Not because they're easy, but because they're hard." 844 00:50:11,810 --> 00:50:15,210 My best picture of this trip was never published. 845 00:50:15,210 --> 00:50:17,640 It was overlooked in the exigencies 846 00:50:17,640 --> 00:50:19,340 of the weekly magazine business, 847 00:50:19,340 --> 00:50:23,470 and I recently discovered it a few years ago of Kennedy 848 00:50:23,470 --> 00:50:28,470 coming out of a mockup prototype of a Saturn five rocket 849 00:50:29,210 --> 00:50:33,623 that would one day launch Apollo eight around the moon. 850 00:50:35,260 --> 00:50:37,680 Another day that will live infamy 851 00:50:38,700 --> 00:50:43,160 November 22nd, 1963, 852 00:50:43,160 --> 00:50:46,183 the assassination of John F. Kennedy. 853 00:50:48,060 --> 00:50:51,550 I go to Washington and went immediately to the White House, 854 00:50:51,550 --> 00:50:56,090 about 4:30 AM, Saturday, November 23rd. 855 00:50:56,090 --> 00:51:00,150 The bronze casket used to transport the body from Dallas 856 00:51:00,150 --> 00:51:04,333 was damaged and a new mahogany casket replaced it. 857 00:51:05,170 --> 00:51:07,670 It was kept closed because Jackie felt 858 00:51:07,670 --> 00:51:10,843 the gaping head wound was unbearable to view. 859 00:51:12,550 --> 00:51:17,550 The next day, Kennedy is brought to the Capitol rotunda. 860 00:51:17,900 --> 00:51:21,363 Jackie asked the honor guard to face inward. 861 00:51:23,850 --> 00:51:26,093 There's the playing of the Navy Hymn. 862 00:51:27,750 --> 00:51:32,293 I take a back stairway and walk upstairs to a high balcony. 863 00:51:35,020 --> 00:51:39,170 Jackie and Caroline kneel in prayer. 864 00:51:39,170 --> 00:51:43,020 Then a most remarkable thing happens. 865 00:51:43,020 --> 00:51:46,770 I later name it, divine intervention. 866 00:51:46,770 --> 00:51:51,140 The sun bursts through upper skylight windows, 867 00:51:51,140 --> 00:51:54,363 and sends a few beams of light onto the coffin. 868 00:51:55,430 --> 00:51:57,400 I make the picture. 869 00:51:57,400 --> 00:52:01,903 The beams disappear, divine intervention. 870 00:52:03,950 --> 00:52:07,330 After 18 hours of public viewing, 871 00:52:07,330 --> 00:52:12,210 250,000 people waiting in freezing temperatures 872 00:52:12,210 --> 00:52:15,690 the casket is loaded onto the caisson. 873 00:52:15,690 --> 00:52:17,930 The riderless horse, named Black Jack 874 00:52:17,930 --> 00:52:21,120 escorts the body back to the White House. 875 00:52:21,120 --> 00:52:24,973 I get this shot from the outside balcony of the Capitol. 876 00:52:25,830 --> 00:52:29,460 Next, I rushed to the Mayflower Hotel 877 00:52:29,460 --> 00:52:32,090 where I'm able to view the procession, 878 00:52:32,090 --> 00:52:36,870 leaving the white house on foot to St. Matthew's church. 879 00:52:36,870 --> 00:52:39,830 Then quickly to a vantage point at the church 880 00:52:39,830 --> 00:52:43,230 where Cardinal Cushing kisses the casket. 881 00:52:43,230 --> 00:52:48,230 Jackie with children arrive as do Bobby Kennedy, Teddy, 882 00:52:48,240 --> 00:52:49,763 and the rest of the family. 883 00:52:51,510 --> 00:52:54,560 We were not credentialed for the Arlington burial, 884 00:52:54,560 --> 00:52:57,360 so the reporter and I take a chance 885 00:52:57,360 --> 00:53:02,070 and hire a black limousine like the dignitaries are using, 886 00:53:02,070 --> 00:53:04,153 and fall into line behind them. 887 00:53:05,470 --> 00:53:08,810 Fortunately, when we arrive at the checkpoint 888 00:53:08,810 --> 00:53:11,260 it's the reporters old college professor, 889 00:53:11,260 --> 00:53:14,990 now a secret service officer who recognizes her 890 00:53:14,990 --> 00:53:16,503 and waves us through. 891 00:53:17,720 --> 00:53:19,980 I am able to capture the military marching 892 00:53:19,980 --> 00:53:22,460 across the bridge, the honor guard, 893 00:53:22,460 --> 00:53:24,963 and the family's arrival at graveside. 894 00:53:26,640 --> 00:53:30,580 Another bit of perspicacity shrewdness on my part, 895 00:53:30,580 --> 00:53:34,000 I secure a vantage point among the VIP's 896 00:53:34,000 --> 00:53:38,560 where no press is allowed to make this historic photograph 897 00:53:38,560 --> 00:53:43,240 of Charles de Gaulle and Haile Selassie saluting 898 00:53:43,240 --> 00:53:48,240 while 220 foreign dignitaries, 19 heads of state, 899 00:53:49,140 --> 00:53:51,290 and members of royal families 900 00:53:51,290 --> 00:53:54,543 from 92 countries stand witness. 901 00:53:55,870 --> 00:53:57,740 Kennedy was buried at Arlington 902 00:53:57,740 --> 00:54:02,140 exactly two weeks to the day he last visited there 903 00:54:02,140 --> 00:54:04,703 for Veteran's Day observations. 904 00:54:05,730 --> 00:54:09,350 I'm often asked about my ability to divorce myself 905 00:54:09,350 --> 00:54:11,890 from any emotional reaction to the events 906 00:54:11,890 --> 00:54:16,053 that were happening to a president who knew me by name. 907 00:54:17,580 --> 00:54:21,180 The overriding consideration during those days 908 00:54:21,180 --> 00:54:24,890 was to make photographs that will forever explain 909 00:54:24,890 --> 00:54:28,240 the momentousness of the occasion, 910 00:54:28,240 --> 00:54:31,183 and the viewers like you will never forget. 911 00:54:32,970 --> 00:54:34,740 50 years later, 912 00:54:34,740 --> 00:54:36,187 when LIFE published the book, 913 00:54:36,187 --> 00:54:38,480 "The Day Kennedy Died" 914 00:54:38,480 --> 00:54:41,210 I had my emotional reaction. 915 00:54:41,210 --> 00:54:43,001 Tears came to my eyes. 916 00:54:43,001 --> 00:54:45,584 (somber music) 917 00:54:52,740 --> 00:54:55,010 You remember I talked about, 918 00:54:55,010 --> 00:55:00,010 how I felt the lighting at the John Kennedy funeral 919 00:55:01,020 --> 00:55:03,190 was divine intervention. 920 00:55:03,190 --> 00:55:07,840 There was something else that happened that day, in 1963. 921 00:55:07,840 --> 00:55:09,930 I looked up to the ceiling, 922 00:55:09,930 --> 00:55:13,500 some 200 feet above me and thought 923 00:55:13,500 --> 00:55:18,500 if I ever get another opportunity to shoot in this hall, 924 00:55:19,980 --> 00:55:22,690 I'm gonna figure out how to get a camera 925 00:55:22,690 --> 00:55:23,993 up there in the ceiling. 926 00:55:24,890 --> 00:55:27,513 Well, in 1969, 927 00:55:29,520 --> 00:55:33,040 General Eisenhower dies and he is going 928 00:55:33,040 --> 00:55:36,820 to have a ceremony in the Capitol rotunda. 929 00:55:36,820 --> 00:55:38,363 And I knew what I had to do. 930 00:55:39,250 --> 00:55:44,250 I picked up the phone and called a secret service agent that 931 00:55:44,430 --> 00:55:48,370 I knew from the Kennedy administration who was a friend, 932 00:55:48,370 --> 00:55:49,990 and told him what I had in mind. 933 00:55:49,990 --> 00:55:53,260 He said, "Don't tell anybody, 934 00:55:53,260 --> 00:55:56,340 but get down here with your help right away, 935 00:55:56,340 --> 00:55:57,450 and I'll work with you." 936 00:55:57,450 --> 00:55:59,650 The reason for the secrecy was, 937 00:55:59,650 --> 00:56:03,850 because there were three jurisdictions that had control 938 00:56:03,850 --> 00:56:07,810 over what happens for the Eisenhower funerals. 939 00:56:07,810 --> 00:56:11,390 One was, of course the Congress, it was their house. 940 00:56:11,390 --> 00:56:13,670 And the second was the Department of the Army, 941 00:56:13,670 --> 00:56:16,310 and the third of course was the secret service. 942 00:56:16,310 --> 00:56:18,710 Had the other two jurisdictions 943 00:56:20,060 --> 00:56:21,330 heard about my plan, 944 00:56:21,330 --> 00:56:22,700 they never would have allowed it 945 00:56:22,700 --> 00:56:27,390 because was a fear that my camera might fall from above 946 00:56:27,390 --> 00:56:32,390 and injure some of the many dignitaries who were below. 947 00:56:33,340 --> 00:56:37,170 So we worked in the wee hours of the morning 948 00:56:38,200 --> 00:56:42,930 around a huge balcony at the very top, 949 00:56:42,930 --> 00:56:47,930 and we ran steel cables all the way around 950 00:56:48,110 --> 00:56:52,640 to the opposite side and then pulled the cables 951 00:56:52,640 --> 00:56:57,030 over the top and had them tied very tauntly, 952 00:56:57,030 --> 00:57:01,200 so that there were two lines going across 953 00:57:01,200 --> 00:57:05,830 the center of the rotunda ceiling. 954 00:57:07,060 --> 00:57:12,060 And I put a plexiglass sheet attached 955 00:57:14,010 --> 00:57:18,320 to those two lines with a hole in the middle, 956 00:57:18,320 --> 00:57:23,320 and attached to camera facing down on that sheet. 957 00:57:23,660 --> 00:57:28,640 And then a wire back to fire that camera. 958 00:57:28,640 --> 00:57:32,950 And we pullied the camera out over the center, 959 00:57:32,950 --> 00:57:35,200 and I had to run some tests, 960 00:57:35,200 --> 00:57:39,770 because I could not know what the camera was seeing 961 00:57:39,770 --> 00:57:42,450 that far away from where I was on the balcony. 962 00:57:42,450 --> 00:57:46,590 And I was not sure of what focal length lens, 963 00:57:46,590 --> 00:57:50,310 how wide a lens I could use there, 964 00:57:50,310 --> 00:57:53,860 which kept emphasis on the American flag 965 00:57:53,860 --> 00:57:56,223 covering Eisenhower's casket, 966 00:57:57,437 --> 00:58:02,233 at the same time wanting to see the walls of the rotunda. 967 00:58:04,230 --> 00:58:08,070 So I tried back and forth with three different lenses 968 00:58:08,070 --> 00:58:10,610 and we ran strobe lights, 969 00:58:10,610 --> 00:58:13,060 big powerful studio strobe lights 970 00:58:13,060 --> 00:58:17,150 around the entire arena and synced that with the camera, 971 00:58:17,150 --> 00:58:21,870 because 200 feet of walls were not lit. 972 00:58:21,870 --> 00:58:25,780 The press and television was lighting down below 973 00:58:25,780 --> 00:58:29,070 where the ceremonies were taking place, 974 00:58:29,070 --> 00:58:32,123 but I needed to light the entire wall area. 975 00:58:33,050 --> 00:58:35,480 Okay, so we found a lab. 976 00:58:35,480 --> 00:58:37,520 We opened the lab in the middle of the night 977 00:58:37,520 --> 00:58:40,740 and it took three hours to process color film, 978 00:58:40,740 --> 00:58:43,320 but I got it back about 5:00 AM 979 00:58:43,320 --> 00:58:47,790 and was able to pick the lens that worked the best. 980 00:58:47,790 --> 00:58:51,240 And now, the only task left 981 00:58:51,240 --> 00:58:56,240 was to string a zip cord wire down 500 feet of stairwell 982 00:59:01,760 --> 00:59:05,730 to a foot switch where I was gonna be assigned 983 00:59:05,730 --> 00:59:08,950 with the rest of the press down on the floor 984 00:59:08,950 --> 00:59:10,433 to cover the goings on. 985 00:59:11,380 --> 00:59:13,480 Well, the big fear I had 986 00:59:13,480 --> 00:59:16,600 those Ascor strobe units at the time 987 00:59:16,600 --> 00:59:19,380 when notorious for going off by themselves. 988 00:59:19,380 --> 00:59:22,300 And had they done that on this occasion, 989 00:59:22,300 --> 00:59:27,300 I'm afraid that they would have been called off 990 00:59:27,700 --> 00:59:30,180 and I would not have been able to complete this picture, 991 00:59:30,180 --> 00:59:33,670 but fortunately the Ascor lights 992 00:59:33,670 --> 00:59:37,450 did not fire off by themselves. 993 00:59:37,450 --> 00:59:40,080 And during the ceremony, 994 00:59:40,080 --> 00:59:45,080 I took two or three frames with my foot and nobody noticed. 995 00:59:48,470 --> 00:59:52,060 And so, that's how that cover was made. 996 00:59:52,060 --> 00:59:53,160 By the way, 997 00:59:53,160 --> 00:59:57,860 after it came out the rest of the world claimed 998 00:59:57,860 --> 01:00:01,630 that it should be a pool photograph. 999 01:00:01,630 --> 01:00:04,073 And LIFE told them, "No way". 1000 01:00:05,370 --> 01:00:07,610 But interesting enough, 1001 01:00:07,610 --> 01:00:10,790 years later National Geographic 1002 01:00:10,790 --> 01:00:14,630 was doing a story on the Capitol, 1003 01:00:14,630 --> 01:00:16,940 and they wanted to do something similar 1004 01:00:16,940 --> 01:00:18,390 from the dome of the rotunda. 1005 01:00:19,402 --> 01:00:21,580 And they went before the Congress 1006 01:00:21,580 --> 01:00:26,230 and they showed him my cover of LIFE as precedent, 1007 01:00:26,230 --> 01:00:27,923 and they got permission to do it. 1008 01:00:30,560 --> 01:00:33,873 When General Douglas MacArthur passed, 1009 01:00:35,830 --> 01:00:37,830 the procession he was held 1010 01:00:37,830 --> 01:00:42,830 at the 51st Street Armory on Park Avenue, 1011 01:00:44,260 --> 01:00:48,040 and there was a procession of visitors 1012 01:00:48,040 --> 01:00:50,460 who passed by the casket. 1013 01:00:50,460 --> 01:00:54,690 And I was curious about what level 1014 01:00:54,690 --> 01:00:56,960 since the casket was open, 1015 01:00:56,960 --> 01:00:59,970 I could photograph this scene 1016 01:00:59,970 --> 01:01:02,760 where it would still not be offensive 1017 01:01:02,760 --> 01:01:05,620 to some people in the general circulation. 1018 01:01:05,620 --> 01:01:08,520 I didn't want it to be ghoulish in other words. 1019 01:01:08,520 --> 01:01:12,670 But he did have a famous Patrician nose. 1020 01:01:12,670 --> 01:01:15,670 And I thought from the side, 1021 01:01:15,670 --> 01:01:20,430 I could show that and that might be acceptable. 1022 01:01:20,430 --> 01:01:23,480 So I waited until about 2:00 AM in the morning 1023 01:01:23,480 --> 01:01:25,820 when the crowds had dissipated, 1024 01:01:25,820 --> 01:01:30,820 and there were just two honor guard soldiers and myself. 1025 01:01:31,720 --> 01:01:33,830 And without asking, 1026 01:01:33,830 --> 01:01:37,920 I picked up one of the American flags 1027 01:01:37,920 --> 01:01:41,610 and I moved it to a position that would be 1028 01:01:41,610 --> 01:01:44,770 directly behind the General's profile, 1029 01:01:44,770 --> 01:01:48,740 and to give it some other meaning 1030 01:01:48,740 --> 01:01:52,113 besides just his contenance. 1031 01:01:53,540 --> 01:01:58,540 And so I went home and got back very early the next morning, 1032 01:02:00,500 --> 01:02:05,120 because the procession was to leave the armory, 1033 01:02:05,120 --> 01:02:08,570 go to Grand Central Station, and then onto Washington. 1034 01:02:08,570 --> 01:02:13,120 And I was driving a 1960 Corvair at the time. 1035 01:02:13,120 --> 01:02:15,510 And it had a unique trunk situation, 1036 01:02:15,510 --> 01:02:18,233 which was in the front where engines normally go. 1037 01:02:19,090 --> 01:02:21,240 And I had my cameras in there, 1038 01:02:21,240 --> 01:02:23,820 but I couldn't open the lock that morning. 1039 01:02:23,820 --> 01:02:26,320 And it was pouring down rain, 1040 01:02:26,320 --> 01:02:31,320 and there were some policemen and they tried to help me. 1041 01:02:31,930 --> 01:02:35,610 We took a crowbar and tried to pry open the damn thing. 1042 01:02:35,610 --> 01:02:36,893 And that didn't work. 1043 01:02:37,870 --> 01:02:39,610 Some garbage men came by. 1044 01:02:39,610 --> 01:02:42,090 Now, it's eight o'clock sharp. 1045 01:02:42,090 --> 01:02:45,460 And I'm standing on the steps of the armory 1046 01:02:45,460 --> 01:02:49,100 and here comes General MacArthur. 1047 01:02:49,100 --> 01:02:50,950 And all I could do, 1048 01:02:50,950 --> 01:02:54,870 I thought I'll salute at least in respect. 1049 01:02:54,870 --> 01:02:57,520 But it was now after eight o'clock, 1050 01:02:57,520 --> 01:03:01,200 and I could reach a locksmith. 1051 01:03:01,200 --> 01:03:03,390 So, I called a locksmith. 1052 01:03:03,390 --> 01:03:04,530 They came over and they were able 1053 01:03:04,530 --> 01:03:07,130 to open it one, two, three, and I thought to myself, 1054 01:03:08,890 --> 01:03:11,030 what can I do at this point? 1055 01:03:11,030 --> 01:03:15,750 And it occurred to me to drive to LaGuardia airport 1056 01:03:15,750 --> 01:03:17,850 and take a plane to Washington, 1057 01:03:17,850 --> 01:03:22,760 and I could catch up with the entourage. 1058 01:03:22,760 --> 01:03:24,080 And that's exactly what I did. 1059 01:03:24,080 --> 01:03:26,540 But at this point, 1060 01:03:26,540 --> 01:03:29,803 from the episode with the car and the pouring rain, 1061 01:03:30,730 --> 01:03:32,940 I was drenched. 1062 01:03:32,940 --> 01:03:34,780 And when I got to Washington, 1063 01:03:34,780 --> 01:03:37,300 it was raining down there heavily. 1064 01:03:37,300 --> 01:03:40,880 And the other LIFE photographers who were assigned 1065 01:03:40,880 --> 01:03:45,410 were working with reporters at certain fixed positions, 1066 01:03:45,410 --> 01:03:48,420 under umbrellas they were standing there. 1067 01:03:48,420 --> 01:03:51,530 But I was so wet at that point, 1068 01:03:51,530 --> 01:03:53,320 and I thought the only thing I can do 1069 01:03:53,320 --> 01:03:58,320 is follow along side the procession. 1070 01:03:58,550 --> 01:03:59,840 And I did, 1071 01:03:59,840 --> 01:04:04,840 and I made a wonderful picture of the procession 1072 01:04:05,260 --> 01:04:10,260 reflected doubly in the wet pavement below it, 1073 01:04:10,900 --> 01:04:13,570 and that ran as a big double page picture. 1074 01:04:13,570 --> 01:04:16,620 And then I had a picture of the General's wife 1075 01:04:16,620 --> 01:04:17,900 coming into the funeral. 1076 01:04:17,900 --> 01:04:19,420 All of which was possible, 1077 01:04:19,420 --> 01:04:23,810 because I was no longer trying to hide from getting wet. 1078 01:04:23,810 --> 01:04:27,288 I was wet enough already. 1079 01:04:27,288 --> 01:04:30,288 (melancholic music) 1080 01:04:32,630 --> 01:04:35,780 This picture of this little girl 1081 01:04:35,780 --> 01:04:39,520 with tears in her eyes behind this rope line, 1082 01:04:39,520 --> 01:04:42,830 is my favorite picture of all time. 1083 01:04:42,830 --> 01:04:47,830 It was shot early in my career, somewhere early 1960s. 1084 01:04:48,400 --> 01:04:51,587 And I've shot thousands of images since, 1085 01:04:51,587 --> 01:04:54,230 but this remains my favorite. 1086 01:04:54,230 --> 01:04:59,230 It was a situation where a United States submarine, 1087 01:04:59,410 --> 01:05:01,780 the first atomic powered submarine, 1088 01:05:01,780 --> 01:05:05,180 in fact called the USS Triton 1089 01:05:06,090 --> 01:05:09,463 circumnavigated the globe underwater. 1090 01:05:10,630 --> 01:05:13,873 And they we're coming home to New London, 1091 01:05:14,960 --> 01:05:18,750 and this little girl's father was one of the sailors. 1092 01:05:18,750 --> 01:05:21,393 And when I saw her, 1093 01:05:25,080 --> 01:05:30,070 tears were coming down her face from both eyes 1094 01:05:30,070 --> 01:05:32,203 just a single tear. 1095 01:05:33,210 --> 01:05:36,040 And I thought, Oh my gosh! 1096 01:05:36,040 --> 01:05:38,200 And I captured that, 1097 01:05:38,200 --> 01:05:43,200 and it forever remains my best emotional picture. 1098 01:05:46,810 --> 01:05:49,970 You could feel what she was thinking 1099 01:05:49,970 --> 01:05:54,090 the excitement to see her father again and whatnot. 1100 01:05:54,090 --> 01:05:55,940 But I have to tell you a funny story. 1101 01:05:57,040 --> 01:05:59,920 When the picture ran as a full page in the LIFE, 1102 01:05:59,920 --> 01:06:02,730 one of my associates, Stan Wayman, 1103 01:06:02,730 --> 01:06:04,420 another very fine photographer 1104 01:06:06,580 --> 01:06:09,550 was kidding me one day and he said, 1105 01:06:09,550 --> 01:06:12,570 Bob, what kind of eyedropper do you use 1106 01:06:12,570 --> 01:06:15,853 for those liquid tears in that picture? 1107 01:06:16,870 --> 01:06:21,760 And I haven't forgotten his remark, his joking remark. 1108 01:06:21,760 --> 01:06:23,280 But to this day, 1109 01:06:23,280 --> 01:06:26,300 if I had to put up one picture that represents 1110 01:06:26,300 --> 01:06:29,600 the best I ever did, the Triton homecoming, 1111 01:06:29,600 --> 01:06:31,600 the little girl with tears, would be it. 1112 01:06:34,585 --> 01:06:37,002 (calm music)