Douglas Kirkland recently passed away. His photographs are a celebration of beauty, and will live on. His death was widely noted, as he was a true legend of this industry. Below, a story in DP Review. The banner pic above was the group shot from the book, A Day in the Life of Hollywood, which of course was Douglas’ home turf. The formidable and friendly photographer Henry Groskinsky was given the daunting task of photographing 75 other photogs, all antique and impatient.
In the late seventies, I was a copy kid at the NY Daily News. Lots of rambunctious and unfounded hopes about becoming a “New Yawk photographer.”
Bob Clive was the art director at the News’ Sunday Magazine and saw a glimmer, somewhere, in the morass of my largely student portfolio, and gave me a couple of assignments, which eventually, over time, caused in my first-ever cover of a real magazine. The Daily News had over 50 regular staff photos, and the fact that a copy kid/apprentice knocked out a cover of the legendary Sunday News Magazine did not endear me to them. Except the confident ones, who congratulated me and told me to keep pushing. Those possessed of frail skills and a smallness of spirit looked at me sideways. A threat.
I took a vacation to the west coast. No money, cheap airfare, couch surfed while I was there. Clive gave me a few numbers to call to show my work around. One of them was Douglas Kirkland. I had studied his work in school. Summoned the guts and rang him up. My opening line was something along the lines of “Mr. Kirkland, my name is Joe McNally and I work at the New York Daily News. I’ve always admired your work and I’d like to come over and show you my portfolio.” (At this point, “stalking” had yet to enter the popular vernacular.)
He told me to come over.
He had a beautiful home in the Hollywood Hills, and his walls were adorned with dye transfer prints of some of the most legendary actresses in the movies. He sat with me, and, ever the gentleman, told me my stuff was fantastic. He was irrepressibly positive about my efforts, and described a bright future. I was related.
Later that same day, I had an appointment with Con Keyes, then the director of photography at the LA Times. He flat out told me I’d never make it.
I recall driving out on the Pacific Highway to a pullover and sitting on a rock staring at the ocean. I knew neither assessment was completely true, and the answer was somewhere in the middle. I also knew the devastating review I had received at the Times was really more about the egoistic power of the reviewer, and therefore not so much about me. Later in that trip, I drove north to San Francisco, and once again spooled up my stalking personality and called the legendary Magnum photog, Paul Fusco. He gave me a measured overview, critical where it was called for, but in the wasteland of my early work, he found sprouts of hope, and a smattering of promise. He told me to take those small positives and work on them.
But Douglas, at the height of his rightful acclaim, with huge magazines and movie companies beating down his door, took the time to see a nobody and encourage him. No pretense, no barriers, no waxing of ego. Just a “Come on over.” I remember walking on air out of his house. His review of my work really reflected an attitude he had about this whole endeavor.
“I have a genuine philosophy. I do not want to make negative pictures about people, and so I do everything I can to help make them feel comfortable in front of the camera. That is what is going to control your picture, because you are alone if your subject is not with you. And that’s the simple answer to getting a good picture,” says Kirkland when describing how he was able to get the personalities of his subjects to shine through.
The power of mentorship. The power of simply taking the time. The joy of looking at pictures. The soul healing effect of engaging with someone who had an open heart and an open mind, and lived joyously. And, fueling this, an unalloyed confidence in his own skills, confidence enough to pass it on, and encourage, not destroy from on high. He gave me a lifelong lesson that day. He will be missed. Certainly his eye, and his boundless enthusiasm for the next photo or the next assignment. But also, his gentlemanly ways. We will not see his like again.
More tk….