Stanley Tretick

Stanley Tretick

Stanley Tretick on left in Oval Office 1962
Born Aaron Stanley Tretick
July 21, 1921
Baltimore MD
Died July 23, 1999(1999-07-23) (aged 78)
Gaithersburg MD
Nationality United States
Known for Photojournalism

Aaron Stanley Tretick (July 21, 1921 – July 23, 1999) was an American photojournalist who worked for UPI, Look, and People magazines. He covered every president from Harry S. Truman through George H. W. Bush. Tretick also did stills for many films, including All the President's Men. He is best known today for the photographs he took of John F. Kennedy’s 1960 campaign and presidency. In the final issue of Look, in 1971, Tretick was called "President Kennedy's photographic Boswell."[1]

Early life

Tretick was born in Baltimore and raised in Washington, D.C., graduating from Central High School in 1940. Following a stint as a copy boy for The Washington Post, he joined the Marines in 1942.[2] Trained as a photographer, he served in the Pacific during World War II and then covered D.C. as a tough-talking news cameraman. Tretick joined Acme Newspictures and photographed combat during the Korean War.

In 1951, Tretick's were among the Korean War photos in the exhibit "Korea—The Impact of War" at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.[3] His photo of a soldier crumpled with despair and holding his muddy face in his hands was selected by Military Times as one of the one hundred most-enduring images captured in combat.[4]

UPI

Tretick moved to United Press, which acquired Acme in 1952.[5] He covered Capitol Hill, the White House and the presidential campaigns of the fifties. In 1952, the television audience saw the intrepid photographer punched by a delegate at the Republican National Convention.[6][7][8] A photo of Tretick in 1957 being hit by gangster Johnny Dio outside the Senate Caucus Room appeared around the country.[9][10] Tretick complained, "The worst part of being hit while on assignment is that some other photographer scoops you with a sensational shot of you getting belted."[8]

The agency, which became United Press International, assigned Tretick to travel with Senator John F. Kennedy in 1960. Tretick logged more miles with Kennedy during the presidential campaign than any other photographer.[11] The photographer and candidate became friends and Tretick took many important pictures during this time.

Look magazine

In 1961, when Kennedy took office, UPI refused to assign Tretick exclusively to the White House. Kennedy told Tretick to get a job with any publication that would, promising him extensive access. On this basis, Look hired Tretick.[12] Tretick is noted for the photographs he took of President Kennedy with his children.

Though his wife Jacqueline fought to shield young Caroline and John, Jr., Kennedy knew the public relations value of images that showed him with his young family. As Laura Bergquist of Look wrote about a battle over Tretick's photos of Caroline, Kennedy "was a reasonable man, open to persuasion, especially in matters of self-interest.".[13] According to Philip Brookman of the Corcoran Gallery of Art,

[Tretick's] photographs of [the Kennedys] published in Look from 1961 to 1964, helped define the American family of the early sixties and lent Kennedy an endearing credibility that greatly contributed to his popularity. A 1962 Look cover of Kennedy driving his nieces and nephews in a golf cart, taken at the family compound in Hyannis Port, is akin to the patriotic, illustrative paintings of Norman Rockwell that still graced the covers of the Saturday Evening Post. Tretick's uncanny understanding of the symbolic value of such imagery allowed him to focus on small humanistic moments within the power and politics of Washington.[14][15]
Famous Stanley Tretick photo of John F. Kennedy Jr. in desk

In October 1963, Tretick took his most famous photograph for an article about the President and his son. While Jacqueline Kennedy was out of the country, Tretick was allowed to join the father and son, walking the halls of the White House and playing together in the Oval Office. Tretick's photo of the moment John, Jr., popped out from under the President's desk, with Kennedy seated behind, encapsulates the myth of Camelot. When Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, these pictures were already on the newsstands and helped create lasting memories of John F. Kennedy the man.[16][17]

Tretick also covered Robert F. Kennedy's 1968 presidential campaign. His last picture of Bobby Kennedy was taken as Kennedy was going down to speak to his jubilant supporters after his victory in the California primary. Kennedy was assassinated after making that speech.[18] One of Tretick's photos of Robert F. Kennedy was used for a commemorative stamp released in 1979.[19]

People magazine

In later years, Tretick began to spend more time covering the movie industry. In addition to his news work, Tretick did special still photography for movies, becoming friends with Robert Redford, Warren Beatty, Dustin Hoffman and others. His first major Look cover for a movie was of the "dames" of Valley of the Dolls in 1967.[20][12] In 1996, Washingtonian magazine said that "his career has been a kind of metaphor for the Washington-Hollywood connection."[21]

When Look magazine folded in 1971, Tretick became a founding photographer of People magazine where he retired in 1995 as a contributing photographer. He covered major stories such as Watergate, Iran-Contra and the Clarence Thomas hearings.[22]

He turned down a chance to be President Jimmy Carter's personal photographer. "I didn't feel he wanted an intimate, personal photographer around him," Tretick said.[23]

Death

Tretick died in July 1999 at the age of 77, just days after John F. Kennedy, Jr.'s plane crashed off the coast of Martha's Vineyard.

Tretick had said of his picture of John F. Kennedy Jr. in his father's desk, "When I shove off I'll probably be remembered for the snap of John-John."[24] His obituaries bore this out, invariably mentioning the photo; some newspapers printed it.[25][26][27][28][29][30] But Dick Stolley of Time, who had known Tretick at Look and at People, recognized the breadth of Tretick's work: "He was that most unusual of photographers, a man who could do anything—soft subjects like the Kennedy children and very tough things, too."[31]

Awards

Books

Exhibitions

Collections

Tretick's work is held in the following public collections:

Movie and theatrical still photography

References

  1. Nick Ravo, "Stanley Tretick, 77, Photographer Of Kennedys at the White House," New York Times, 7/20/1999
  2. "Stanley Tretick Leaves to Train with U.S. Marines," Washington Post, 9/31/1942
  3. "Pictures from Korea," New York Times, 2/18/1951
  4. Merry C. "100 Greatest Military Photographs". slideshare.net.
  5. Marie Fulton, "Picture This!" The Digital Journalist, Nov. 2006
  6. "Anyway, It Was an Exciting Convention," Washington Post, 7/12/1952
  7. "Photographer Sues GOP for Chicago Clash," Washington Post, 8/23/1952
  8. 1 2 Stanley Tretick as told to Douglas Larsen, "I Shoot the Bigshots," Saturday Evening Post, 3/15/1958
  9. Bernard D. Nossiter, "Dio Slugs Cameraman, Repeatedly Pleads the Fifth," Washington Post, Times Herald, 8/9/1957.
  10. "Strong Arm Dio Doing What Comes Naturally," Life, 8/19/1957
  11. Laura Bergquist, A Very Special President (McGraw-Hill, 1965), Foreword
  12. 1 2 Dirck Halstead, "A Tribute to Stanley Tretick," The Digital Journalist, no date (1999)
  13. Laura Bergquist, A Very Special President (McGraw-Hill, 1965), p. 84
  14. Look, January 2, 1962
  15. Philip Brookman, pamphlet for "Stanley Tretick: The Kennedy Years" exhibit, Corcoran Gallery of Art, July 1- October 7, 2002
  16. Laura Bergquist, A Very Special President (McGraw-Hill, 1965), pp. 121, 124, 125-126
  17. "The President and His Son," Look, Dec. 3, 1963
  18. Kitty Kelley, Capturing Camelot: Stanley Tretick's Iconic Images of The Kennedys (Thomas Dunne, 2012), pp. 214-215
  19. F. R. Bruns, Jr., "Stamps and Coins," Washington Post and Times Herald, 12/10/1978
  20. Look, Sept. 5, 1967
  21. "All That Glitters: Stanley Tretick Captured the Faces That Haunt and Sweeten the City's Memories," Washingtonian, March 1996
  22. "www.stanleytretick.com". stanleytretick.com.
  23. A. O. Sulzberger, Jr., "Portrait of Personal Photographers to the President," New York Times, 4/18/1981
  24. Kitty Kelley, "Jackie Said 'No,'" Washingtonian, November 2000
  25. Claudia Levy, "Photographer A. Stanley Tretick, 77, Dies," Washington Post,7/20/1999
  26. Nick Ravo, "Stanley Tretick, 77, Photographer Of Kennedys at the White House," New York Times 7/20/1999
  27. Sue Woodman, "Obituaries: Stanley Tretick," Guardian, 7/28/1999
  28. "A. Stanley Tretick," The Times (London), 7/21/1999
  29. Rita Delfiner, "Fotog Famed for JFK Pix Dies at 77," New York Post, 7/21/1999
  30. "Milestones," Time, 8/2/1999
  31. Sue Woodman, "Obituaries: Stanley Tretick," Guardian, 7/28/1999
  32. "Post Cameraman Captures 4 Prizes in White House Photo Contest," Washington Post, 2/26/1950
  33. 1 2 3 Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2006. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale, 2006.
  34. "White House Photographers' Show Opened at Congressional Library," Washington Post, 2/25/1951
  35. "Post Sweeps 3 Top Places in Sports Picture Awards," Washington Post, 3/22/1953
  36. "Vandenburg Picture Wins Photo Award," Washington Post, 3/14/1954
  37. "Winners in Photo Contest," Washington Post, Times Herald, 4/25/1956
  38. "Tames Gets Top Prize for Photo of Kennedy," Washington Post, Times Herald, 4/22/1962
  39. "Photo Prize Winners Meet With President," Washington Post, Times Herald, 3/1/1964; "Lincoln-Like Kennedy Photo Named Top White House Picture," Washington Post, Times Herald, 3/39/1964
  40. Frank van Riper, "Stan Tretick and the Obligations of Access," WashingtonPost.com, 2002
  41. "The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 106, July 2002 - April, 2003". The Portal to Texas History.
  42. "Martin Luther King III Among Special Guests to Lecture on New Exhibit in Lake Charles," US Federal News Service, 1/12/2006
  43. "UTPA hosts "Surrendering the White House: Documenting Watergate" exhibit Feb. 2-April 28". utpa.edu.
  44. Martha Ross, "Camelot Comes to Walnut Creek," Diablo Magazine, February 2006
  45. http://www.dusablemuseum.org/exhibits/details/and-freedom-for-all-martin-luther-king-the-civilrights-Movement (Accessed 10/22/2012)
  46. "Frazier Museum Exhibit Recalls Courage and Struggles of Kennedy Family, Martin Luther King, Jr.," artdaily.org, no date (2008)(Accessed 10/22/2012)
  47. http://www.nps.gov/malu/parknews/upload/BMJ_Press_Release.pdf
  48. "Holiday: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day Events". Creative Loafing Tampa.
  49. http://www.coventrycathedral.org.uk/downloads/publications/220.pdf Accessed 10/22/2012)
  50. "Richard F. Brush Art Gallery:St. Lawrence University:Sister Corita: The Joyous Revolutionary". stlawu.edu.
  51. Laura Corona, "Tretick Photos Capture 1960s Politics," Berkshire's Week, August 12, 2010
  52. http://www.centregallery.usf.edu/index.php/upcoming-and-freedom-for-all-the-march-on-washington-for-jobs-and-freedom-office-of-multicultural-affairs-january-18-january-28-2010/
  53. NSU. "View Historic Civil Rights Photos of "March on Washington" at NSU's 2011 African Presence Art Exhibition - NSU News Room". nova.edu.
  54. "Martin Luther King Exhibit Featured 48 Photos of March on Washington," Milwaukee Courier, 2/25/2012
  55. http://www.zvents.com/st_louis_mo/events/show/237219465-and-freedom-for-all-the-march-on-washington-for-jobs-and-freedom (Accessed 3/6/2015)
  56. http://www.levisjcc.org/events/2012/11/12/arts-and-learning/nathan-d.-rosen-gallery-from-camelot-to-hollywood-iconic-america.-a-photographic-exhibition-of-stanley-tretick-s-images-of-the-kennedys./ (Accessed 10/19/2012)
  57. 1 2 http://www.artvisionexhibitions.com/MartinLutherKingExhibit.html (Accessed 12/22/2014)
  58. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/17/nyregion/events-on-long-island.html?_r=0
  59. https://www.clintonlibrary.gov/museum/temporary-exhibits/freedomforall/
  60. "Recapturing Kennedy". Eagle-Tribune.
  61. "Temecula: Exhibit Highlights 50th Anniversary March on Washington,” The Press-Enterprise,8/14/13
  62. "Pro[Claiming] Freedom Events - Diversity & Inclusion - The George Washington University". gwu.edu.
  63. victoria rehberg. "Event : reception -- New Gallery Opening - National Exhibitions and Archives". poststar.com.
  64. http://www.nola.com/living/baton-rouge/index.ssf/2013/09/iconic_images_of_the_kennedys.html/
  65. http://www.bigdealtn.com/articles/?id=2426 (Accessed 12/11/2014)
  66. http://www.vacnwf.org/UpcomingExhibitsDetail.aspx?nNum=64 (Accessed 12/22/2014)
  67. http://www.mcpls.org/content/let-freedom-ring-exhibit-1 (Accessed 1/15/2015)
  68. http://www.capital.edu/schumacher (Accessed 1/15/2015)
  69. http://www.alperjcc.org/artsculture/art-gallery/ (Accessed 1/15/2015)
  70. The Broadway League. "Mister Lincoln - IBDB: The official source for Broadway Information IBDB: The official source for Broadway Information". ibdb.com.
  71. sol (11 January 1987). "Mercy or Murder? (TV Movie 1987)". IMDb.
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