Tuesday, May 11, 2010

RIP Frank Frazetta


The passing of Frank Frazetta reminded me of the first days of my movie marketing career.  I had no idea who he was, but I learned quickly.  He was an inspiration to artists of all stripes, including photographers and illustrators.  On many occasions I heard art directors use Frazetta's name as reference for what they wanted or hoped to see from an illustrator (not an easy assignment), and on one occasion I saw an art director use a number of Frazetta illustrations as examples of lighting for a special photos shoot (again, not an easy assignment).  Another great artist passes through.  We were privileged to stand witness.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

A Wonderful Life

One of the many things I love about Frank Capra’s “It’s A Wonderful Life” is the big “what if?” at the center of the story.  Imagine being able to see what life would have been like for your friends and family had you not been born into it.  Jimmy Stewart’s character George Bailey is given this opportunity when his guardian angel Clarence steps in to stop his suicide and ultimately helps him to understand his life’s true value.  I’ve often thought about this concept, and I found myself thinking about it again yesterday as I sat in the crowded Writer’s Guild Theatre and listened to famous actors, writers and friends sing the praises of Norman Corwin on the occasion of his 100th birthday. 

What would my life be like, I wondered, if I had never met Norman Corwin?

It got me to thinking about how our journey through time takes shape with the help of so much and so many. Parents, siblings, friends and strangers - teachers all - mix their spirit with ours in ways known and unknown.  From the moment we open our eyes and draw first breath, we become a player in an existential chain reaction, like a human recipe that calls for a blending of mind and soul, seasoned with a drizzle of chance and a pinch of choice.

When I met Norman Corwin in the spring of 1978 he was 68 years old and I was 22.  I was in the Telecommunications and Film school at San Diego State and Norman was there as a "distinguished visiting guest lecturer," as they called him.  Few if any of us students knew who he was or what he had accomplished in his life.  "He's a radio guy," someone told me when I inquired about him.  Not much to go on.  So, in those long ago pre-computer days before Google was a verb, I went to the campus library to look him up.   One person described him as “one of the greatest living writers in the English language,” another said that he was “America’s poet laureate of radio.”  I found a couple of books with collections of his radio plays.  The first one I read was “We Hold These Truths.”  The second one was “On a Note of Triumph,” considered by many to be his masterpiece.  Then I found a copy of his screenplay adaptation for “Lust For Life” about Vincent Van Gogh, in which Kirk Douglas played Van Gogh and Anthony Quinn played Paul Gauguin (and won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor).  The more I read, the more impressed I became.  It turned out that he wasn’t just “a radio guy” after all.   More like a renaissance man.

And so a couple of days later, filled with new information about this man in whose class I would study for a semester or more, I found myself in “The Creative Person in The Arts 596” and met Norman Corwin for the first time.

We spent so many memorable days together in that classroom, all of us eager kids listening to and learning from the old pro. He became my teacher and, ultimately, my friend.  He taught me how to write and how to see.  He taught me that creativity and compassion are inseparable, that thoughts, words and deeds are fluid, that every one of us has something valuable to contribute by virtue of the simple fact that we all share the same potential and the same destiny.

I remember going to his office on campus one day after a class.  I had no reason to go.  I just wanted to meet him in private and talk.  I really didn’t know how I would be received and I was painfully nervous.  Norman welcomed me in like an old friend would.  I know he sensed my nervousness, but he was kind and patient.  After about a half hour or so of talking about writing and writers and movies and such, Norman got up and went over to his typewriter.  He grabbed a piece of San Diego State stationery and twirled it around the roller.  He began to type something that I couldn’t see from where I was sitting.   When he finished, he pulled the paper out and handed it to me and said, “You remind me of this poem.”

From memory he had typed out William Henley’s “Invictus.”  I read it for the first time that day.  Since then I, too, have committed it to memory.  I realized that he could have told me the poem’s name and suggested that I find it and read it.  Or he could have recited it to me if he wanted to.  But he chose to take a moment to retrieve it from his brain and set it down on paper so that I could touch it, see it, and read it right then and there.  I thought that was a really fine thing for him to do. I still have that piece of SDSU stationery and the poem that Norman gave to me.  It has graced a dozen walls in four cities in three states, framed and hanging where I can always see it, usually in my office.

Of all the things I’ve learned along the way, this I know for certain: My life has been blessed because Norman Corwin is in it.  I can’t imagine it any other way.  Happy 100th Birthday, Norman.  A wonderful life, indeed.



"Invictus" by William Henley






A couple of photos I took of Norman in 1978:



Norman reading to us from his book, "Overkill and Megalove."



He loved to sit in the class, as a student, as one of us, and listen to our words, our work.  
You can see the joy in his expression.


Thursday, March 25, 2010

Never Fade Away

Jim Marshall passed away on Tuesday night in his sleep in a New York hotel.  He was THE rock and roll photographer, but don't take my word for it.  If you don't know his work, you have probably seen it anyway.  His images are legendary.  He was larger than life.  When I met him in 1997, it was a special time.  His images had already been a big part of my life as a photographer and a music fan.  But meeting him somehow fused it all together for me, gave me an insight into what it was like to be there to photograph Jimi Hendrix, Duane Allman, Mick Jagger, Miles Davis, Johnny Cash and so many others.  Jim was open and friendly and very generous with his time and his life stories.  He signed his first book, Not Fade Away, for me with these words, "To Tony Barbera, A New Friend."

In the years after our first meeting, I saw Jim a number of times.  We had dinner, hung out at an auction of rock and roll photos (many of them his), chatted at gallery openings, and shared a scotch or two in the middle of the California desert.  At one point, finally ready to invest in a couple of his images, I called him in San Francisco to tell him.  I said, "Jim, I think I'm finally ready to buy a couple of your photos."  Without missing a beat, he said, "Well, then fucking buy 'em then."  A pause, and then great laughter.  I won't soon forget that conversation.  I told him I wanted the shot of a smiling Bob Dylan at a press conference, and the shot of a pensive John Lennon backstage before the Candlestick Park concert, the last live concert the Beatles ever played.  Jim told me the stories behind those two photos and his memories of taking the pictures, and before the conversation was done he told me a few more stories.  And Jim had so many stories to tell.  Though he is now silent, his images carry on his legacy, tell his stories, and rightly so.

As he said in the foreword to his book, Not Fade Away:
"Let the music move you, whether to a frenzy or a peaceful place.  Let it be what you want to hear - not what others say is popular.  Let the photograph be one you remember - not for its technique but for its soul.  Let it become a part of your life - a part of your past to help shape your future.  But most of all, let the music and the photograph be something you love and will always enjoy."

So many people knew him as I did, and many of them much more intimately than I did.  But the time I spent with Jim will always hold a place dear in my heart.  He was a fine man, honest and direct (what some may call gruff or disagreeable), a great artist, and a good friend who always greeted me with a hug and a kind word, whether I saw him only once a year or once every other.

The photograph attached here I took in Amboy in '02.  It is how I will remember him, Leica in hand, doing what he did best.  Rest in Peace, Jim.


Thursday, October 15, 2009

Wasn't She Just a Baby?


My niece, Marietta, was married this past Sunday, the 11th.

I travelled to Maryland for the occasion.  My intention was to take some photos, but not to overdo it this time.  I wanted to enjoy the festivities.  Of course, once I got there, I realized as I knew I would that I can never truly enjoy anything as long as there are photos to be taken, especially at a family wedding.  So I did what I always do.

Marietta and Casey were married in an old Franciscan Chapel in rural Ellicott City.  I went up into the empty organ loft to get this shot of my brother Joe walking his daughter down the aisle.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Patti Smith at the Santa Monica Pier

Patti Smith and her band closed out the Santa Monica Pier music season with a terrific show last night.  The sound was incredible and the moon was full. I was standing dead center, right in front of the sound board guys, so that probably had something to do with the sonic quality.  I don't think I would have cared either way.  Just seeing her perform for the first time ever was a joy for me.  She's a bright light, a force of nature, and her voice was vibrant and crisp.

As I stood there listening, I remembered all of the times I could have seen her when I lived in New York in the 80's but didn't, for whatever reason.  Better late than never.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Happy Birthday, Aida!






I celebrate you, Mom. When I think of you, I think of the boundless love you have always shown for your family, the limitless kindness you extend to anyone within reach, and the sterling example of dignity and faith that you have displayed throughout your life. And since I was the one always running around the house with the camera, you'd think I might have captured some of that along the way. Well, maybe a bit of it...


Love you, Mom! Happy Birthday. See you soon!!

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Jazz Drummers








The tribute to Miles davis and Gil Evans at the Hollywood Bowl a few weeks ago got me to thinking about some of the great drummers I've had the privilege to meet and photograph. Thanks to my client, DW Drums, I've been given some wonderful and rare opportunities to meet these exceptional artists and watch them, HEAR them play. The music, the experience, in a word, sublime.

One of the artists featured here, Peter Erskine, played at the Bowl Tribute.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Too Close to the Flame


Not much to say about this one. I think the poor guy was just trying to get warm.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Jazz at the Bowl






A wonderful tribute last night to jazz greats Miles Davis and Gil Evans at the Hollywood Bowl. Some exceptional talents played tribute to the music of these two legendary artists. On hand on trumpet were: Terence Blanchard, Nicholas Payton, and Gil Evan's son, Miles Evans (Wonder who he was named after?). On base: Christian McBride, on drums: Peter Erskine and Jimmy Cobb, on tuba: Howard Johnson, as well as an orchestra, and all of this under the direction of conductor Vince Mendoza.

I had nice seats in Promenade 1, courtesy of Peter Erskine, whom I've photographed on several occasions. I had my G10 with me, but it was too dark and I was too far away to get anything really clean. So, I cropped and photoshopped.

Incredible music! Thank you, Peter.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Zac Sunderland Returns






Imagine sailing 40,000 miles of open ocean...alone. Even the most seasoned sailor might think twice before embarking on an adventure like this. So many dangers lurk: high winds, treacherous seas, pirates. It's certainly not something, say, the average 16 year old would ever consider. Well, apparently, Zac Sunderland is not your average 16 year old. And by the way, he encountered all of the above, including pirates off the Somali coast.


On July 15th, after 13 months at sea, Zac Sunderland (now 17) returned to Marina del Rey aboard his 36' sailboat, Intrepid, as the youngest sailor to circumnavigate the globe solo. An amazing accomplishment for this daring young man, and one that deserved a bit of celebration.

So, along with my friend Stephen, his wife, Kelly, and my camera, we motored out from the marina on their sailboat at just past 10am to be a part of Zac's welcome home committee. We were not alone. We joined a large flotilla about a mile off the breakwater and escorted him back into the marina. Dozens of other crafts of varying sizes, including a couple of water-canon-equipped Sheriff's Dept. vessels whose job it was to keep most of us at a safe distance, a Coast Guard boat or two, buzzing media helicopters from CNN, ABC and many others, all joined the party. It was an interesting day, and a safe and happy ending to a long journey.

Welcome home Zac!

Here's a link to Zac's blog if you're interested in more information: http://www.zacsunderland.com/blog/