Weegee, the pseudonym of Arthur Fellig (June 12,
1899 – December 26, 1968), was a photographer and photojournalist,
known for his stark black and white street photography. Weegee
worked in Manhattan, New York City's Lower East
Side as a press photographer during the 1930s and '40s, and he
developed his signature style by following the city's emergency
services and documenting their activity. Much of his work
depicted unflinchingly realistic scenes of urban life, crime, injury
and death. Weegee published photographic books and also worked in
cinema, initially making his own short films and later collaborating
with film directors such as Jack Donohue and Stanley
Kubrick.
Weegee jumping for P. Halsman
Weegee
was born Ascher (Usher) Fellig in Złoczów
(now Zolochiv, Ukraine), near Lemberg, Austrian
Galicia. His name was changed to Arthur when he emigrated with his
family to live in New York in 1909. There he took numerous odd jobs,
including working as an itinerant photographer and as an assistant to
a commercial photographer. In 1924 he was hired as a dark-room
technician by Acme Newspictures (later United Press
International Photos). He left, however, in 1935 to become a
freelance photographer. Describing his beginnings, Weegee stated:
in my particular case I didn't wait 'til somebody gave me a job or something, I went and created a job for myself—freelance photographer. And what I did, anybody else can do. What I did simply was this: I went down to Manhattan Police Headquarters and for two years I worked without a police card or any kind of credentials. When a story came over a police teletype, I would go to it. The idea was I sold the pictures to the newspapers. And naturally, I picked a story that meant something.
He
worked at night and competed with the police to be first at the scene
of a crime, selling his photographs to tabloids and photographic
agencies. His photographs, centered around Manhattan police
headquarters, were soon published by the Herald
Tribune, World-Telegram, Daily News, New York
Post, New York Journal American, Sun, and others.
In
1957, after developing diabetes, he moved in with Wilma Wilcox,
a Quaker social worker whom he had known since the 1940s,
and who cared for him and then cared for his work. He traveled
extensively in Europe until 1968, working for the Daily
Mirror and on a variety of photography, film, lecture, and book
projects. In 1968, Weegee died in New York on December 26, at the age
of 69.
Name
Fellig
earned his nickname, a phonetic rendering of Ouija,
because of his frequent, seemingly prescient arrivals at
scenes only minutes after crimes, fires or other emergencies were
reported to authorities. He is variously said to have named himself
Weegee or to have been named by either the staff at Acme
Newspictures or by a police officer.
Another
version claims that the nickname originates from his work as a
darkroom assistant, also known as a "squeegee" boy.
Photographic technique
Some
photos, like the juxtaposition of society grandes dames in
ermines and tiaras and a glowering street woman at the Metropolitan
Opera (The Critic, 1943), turned out to have been staged.
Most
of his notable photographs were taken with very basic press
photographer equipment and methods of the era, a 4x5 Speed
Graphic camera preset at f/16 at 1/200 of a second,
with flashbulbs and a set focus distance of ten feet. He was a
self-taught photographer with no formal photographic training. Weegee
developed his photographs in a homemade darkroom in the rear of his
car. This provided an instantaneous result to his work that
emphasized the nature of the tabloid industry and gave the images a
"hot off the press" feeling. While Fellig would shoot a
variety of subjects and individuals, he also had a sense of what sold
best:
names make news. There's a fight between a drunken couple on Third Avenue or Ninth Avenue in Hell's Kitchen, nobody cares. It's just a barroom brawl. But if society has a fight in a Cadillac on Park Avenue and their names are in the Social Register, this makes news and the papers are interested in that.
Late 1930s to mid-1940s
In
1938, Fellig was the only New York newspaper reporter with a permit
to have a portable police-band shortwave radio. He maintained a
complete darkroom in the trunk of his car, to expedite getting his
free-lance product to the newspapers. Weegee worked mostly at
nightclubs; he listened closely to broadcasts and often beat
authorities to the scene.
In
1943 five of his photographs were acquired by the Museum of
Modern Art. These works were included in their exhibition
entitled, Action Photography.[ He was later included in "50
Photographs by 50 Photographers", another MoMA show organized by
photographer Edward Steichen,[and he lectured at the New
School for Social Research. Advertising and editorial assignments for
magazines followed, including Life and beginning in
1945, Vogue.
Naked
City (1945) was his first book of photographs. Film producer
Mark Hellinger bought the rights to the title from Weegee. In 1948,
Weegee's aesthetic formed the foundation for Hellinger's film The
Naked City. It was based on a gritty 1948 story written by Malvin
Wald about the investigation into a model's murder in New York.
Wald was nominated for an Academy Award for his screenplay,
co-written with McCarthy-era blacklistedscreenwriter, Albert Maltz.
Later the title was used again for a naturalistic television
police drama series, and in the 1980s, it was adopted by a band,Naked
City, led by the New York experimental musician John Zorn.
1950s and 1960s
Weegee
experimented with 16mm filmmaking himself beginning in 1941
and worked in the Hollywood industry from 1946 to the early
1960s, as an actor and a consultant. He was an uncredited special
effects consultant and credited still photographer for Stanley
Kubrick's 1964 film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop
Worrying and Love the Bomb. His accent was one of the influences for
the accent of the title character in the film, played by Peter
Sellers.
In
the 1950s and 1960s, Weegee experimented with panoramic photographs,
photo distortions and photography through prisms. Using a plastic
lens, he made a famous photograph of Marilyn Monroe in
which her face is grotesquely distorted yet still recognizable. For
the 1950 movie The Yellow Cab Man, Weegee contributed a sequence
in which automobile traffic is wildly distorted. He is credited for
this as "Luigi" in the film's opening credits. He also
traveled widely in Europe in the 1960s, where he photographed nude
subjects. In London he befriended pornographer Harrison
Marks and the model Pamela Green whom he photographed.
In
1966, two years before his death, Weegee starred as himself in a
'Nudie Cutie' Exploitation film, intended to be
a pseudo-documentary of his life. Called The
'Imp'probable Mr. Wee Gee, it saw Fellig apparently falling in love
with a shop window dummy, which he then traces to London, before
finally ending up in Paris, all the while pursuing or photographing
various women.
Legacy
Weegee
can be seen as the American counterpart to Brassaï, who
photographed Paris street scenes at night. Weegee's themes of
nudists, circus performers, freaks and street people were later taken
up and developed by Diane Arbus in the early 1960s.
In
1980 Weegee's widow, Wilma Wilcox, Sidney Kaplan, Aaron
Rose and Larry Silver formed The Weegee Portfolio
Incorporated to create an exclusive collection of photographic prints
made from Weegee’s original negatives.As a bequest, Wilma Wilcox
donated the entire Weegee archive - 16,000 photographs and 7,000
negatives to the International Center of Photography in
New York. This 1993 gift became the source for several exhibitions
and books include "Weegee's World" edited Miles Barth
(1997) and "Unknown Weegee" edited by Cynthia Young (2006).
The first and largest exhibition was the 329-image "Weegee's
World: Life, Death and the Human Drama," brought forth in 1997.
It was followed in 2002 by "Weegee's Trick Photography," a
show of distorted or otherwise caricatured images, and four years
later by "Unknown Weegee," a survey that emphasized his
more benign, post-tabloid photographs.[4] In 2012 ICP opened
another Weegee exhibition titled, "Murder is my Business".
Also in 2012, exhibition called "Weegee: The Naked City", opened
at Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow.
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