|
Leo Fuchs is a Hollywood veteran who spent 20 years
(1944 -1965) shooting some of the most moving and memorable images
of ‘50s and ‘60s film icons. He had a major retrospective
at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (the Oscar academy)
in Los Angeles in 2001. "Shooting Stars: Photographs by Leo
Fuchs," included photographs taken on and off the sets of such
legendary films as “Exodus," "To Kill a Mockingbird,"
“The Nun's Story,” “Cape Fear,” and “Lover
Come Back.”
Although Fuchs spent over twenty years as a motion
picture producer, beginning with “Gambit’
in 1966, his introduction to movie making came during the previous
decades as one of the world's leading "special photographers"
on movie sets in Europe and North America. As a magazine photographer,
he was one of the rare “outsiders” invited onto movie
sets and left to his own devises to befriend movie stars and get
candid shots both during shooting, and after hours while socializing
with the stars. The resulting photographs, both intimate and immediate
in their appeal, were then syndicated to magazines the world over.
His sensitive and dramatic photographic essays of filmmaking appeared
in such venerable publications as Life, Look, Paris Match, Bunte.
Film icons Audrey Hepburn, Paul Newman, Gregory Peck,
Sean Connery, Shirley MacLaine, Frank Sinatra, Marlon Brando and
Cary Grant, as well as such legendary directors as Billy Wilder,
Otto Preminger and Fred Zinnemann were all captured by Fuchs’
camera.
Rock Hudson was actually responsible for Fuchs’
coming to Hollywood to work directly for the studios. While working
in Rome with Hudson on “Come September,” Fuchs received
a telegram from the head of publicity at Universal inviting him
to California to work on 'Lover Come Back,” Hudson and Doris
Day’s sequel to “Pillow Talk.”
Fuchs moved to Hollywood in 1961, where he photographed
most Universal films made between 1961 and 1965, including “To
Kill a Mockingbird,” “Cape Fear,” “40 Pounds
of Trouble,” “Strange Bedfellows” and “Bedtime
Story.” He also covered all of the Rock Hudson/Doris Day films
for Universal, and directed and shot special advertising art as
well.
As matter of courtesy, Fuchs would always show the
actors his photographs before he sent them to his agent, resulting
in an enormous amount of respect being built up between the photographer
and his star subjects. Quite simply, the actors trusted him. The
excellent working relationship Fuchs created can be seen clearly
in the intimacy of his photographs.
In l964, Universal Studios president Edward Muhl persuaded
the affable and cultured Fuchs to become a film producer. His first
venture in his new role was producing “Gambit” starring
Shirley MacLaine and hot British import Michael Caine. He went on
to produce a total of 14 films in Hollywood and Europe, including
“The Secret War of Harry Frigg” starring Paul Newman,
“Le Mouton Enrage” (“Love at the Top”) featuring
Romy Schneider and Jane Birkin, and “A Fine Pair” with
Rock Hudson and Claudia Cardinale.
Born in Vienna to a family of pastry chefs in 1929,
Fuchs emigrated to New York with his family in 1939. He sold his
first picture (of Eleanor Roosevelt) for $5 when he was barely a
teenager, then quit school at 14 to apprentice at Globe Photos in
New York. He struck out on his own two years later, working in Broadway
nightclubs and as a glamour photographer for newspapers and magazines.
After serving as a Signal Corps cameraman in Germany in the early
'50s, Fuchs stayed in Europe and was hired as a still photographer
on his first film, “Magic Fire,” directed by William
Dieterle.
As every picture tells a story, a book of the master
photographer’s work is due out in 2004. And as Fuchs has a
story for every one of his pictures, it promises to be a very close
look indeed at an exceptional time in Hollywood history.
His son, Alexandre
Fuchs, is also a photographer and lives in New York.
Exhibits
"Special Photographer"; 80 Images from the 1950s and
1960s
"Special Photographer"
Travelling Exhibit
Bibliography
| 60 Year of Globe
PhotOS
Inside Hollywood |
Koenemann
Publishers
|
|