Arab Times

‘Napalm Girl’ photograph­er to retire

Nick Ut took photos from ‘hell to H’wood’

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LOS ANGELES, March 13, (AP): It would seem all but impossible to sum up one of the most distinguis­hed careers in photojourn­alism in only four words, but that’s just what Nick Ut does when he says, “From hell to Hollywood.”

And the Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph­er, who is retiring this month after 51 years with The Associated Press, has the pictures to prove it, the most famous being a stunning blackand-white image from the Vietnam War that’s come to be known simply as “Napalm Girl.”

It’s the photo of a terrified child running naked down a country road, her body literally burning from the napalm bombs dropped on her village just moments before Ut captured the iconic image.

“That photograph illustrate­d dramatical­ly what had become a regular occurrence in Vietnam over the years — napalm on distant villages, civilians killed and scared by the war, pictures we’d rarely had in the past,” said Peter Arnett, a distinguis­hed network news war correspond­ent and Pulitzer Prize winner himself. “This picture revealed the kind of details that were an integral part of what the war had been about, which made it so significan­t and important to be published.”

Ut was only 21 when he took that photo on June 8, 1972, then set his camera aside to rush 9-year-old Kim Phuc to a hospital, where doctors saved her life. He would go on to take literally tens of thousands more over the next 44 years, including images of practicall­y every A-list celebrity who walked a Hollywood red carpet or entered a courtroom on the wrong side of the law.

“Every star who has trouble, they will see me,” jokes the friendly 65-year-old photograph­er who, although

and came out stronger. Twin bombings near the marathon’s finish line killed three people and injured more than 260. (AP) his thick, dark hair has grayed over the years, retains both a boyish charm and irrepressi­ble enthusiasm for his work.

On a recent morning in a conference room of the AP’s Los Angeles bureau, Ut clicks through a portfolio showing a few of his most famous images.

There’s one of a sobbing Robert Blake, the actor’s head on a courtroom table moments after he was acquitted of killing his wife. In another, Michael Jackson is dancing on an SUV outside a courtroom where he would be acquitted of child molestatio­n. Perhaps the most ironic of all, of a tearful Paris Hilton headed to jail for driving violations, was taken on June 8, 2007, the 35th anniversar­y of the day he took the “Napalm Girl” picture.

Warren Beatty once called Ut aside at a Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony to spend 30 minutes talking about the “Napalm Girl” photo. After learning he was the one who took it, actress Joan Collins opened a bottle of beverage for Ut during a shoot at her home. It was a much friendlier reaction, he says, than the one he got when he previously photograph­ed her heading into a courtroom to settle an acrimoniou­s divorce.

Changed

“That picture changed my life. It changed Kim’s life,” he says of the pair’s chance meeting in a dusty Vietnamese village called Trang Bang. He’d just finished photograph­ing four planes flying low to drop the napalm that would set Phuc’s village ablaze when he saw a terrified group of men, women and children running for their lives from a pagoda.

After getting that perfectly framed photo, he set aside his camera, gave the badly burned girl water, poured

LOS ANGELES:

“T2 Trainspott­ing” is headed to SXSW. The TriStar Pictures release, starring Ewan McGregor, is the Sunday night secret screening at the annual more on her wounds, then loaded her and others into his AP van to take them to a hospital. When doctors refused to admit her, saying she was too badly burned to be saved, he angrily flashed his press pass. The next day, he told them, pictures of her would be displayed all over the world, along with an explanatio­n of how the hospital refused to help.

“I cried when I saw her running,” Ut once told an AP reporter. “If I don’t help her — if something happened and she died — I think I’d kill myself after that.”

Now a 53-year-old wife and mother of two who lives in Canada, Kim Phuc remains Ut’s close friend.

But her photo, dramatic as it was, represente­d only a small slice of the horror Ut saw during those war years.

As he flips through photos of villages destroyed, dead bodies piled everywhere and parents grieving over dead children, Ut tells how he came to be a combat photograph­er.

The 11th of 12 children, he grew up idolizing one of his older brothers, Huynh Thanh My, an actor whose good looks seemed to have him destined for movie stardom until the Vietnam War got in the way. Huynh was hired by the AP and was on assignment in 1965 when he and a group of soldiers he was with were overrun by Viet Cong rebels who killed everyone.

At his brother’s funeral, Ut approached the late Horst Faas, photo editor for AP’s Saigon bureau, to ask for a job. But Faas, a two-time Pulitzer winner, turned him down cold. He didn’t want the Huynh family losing another son.

After weeks of Ut’s pestering, Faas finally relented, hiring him on Jan. 1, 1966, but giving the 15-year-old strict orders: Under no circumstan­ces was he to carry his camera into a war zone.

celebratio­n of indie movies in Austin.

In recent years, the tradition of the secret screening has become a fun parlor game at film festivals, as attendees try to guess which title will play at a theater near them. Sometimes the news gets out early, but in other cases the crowd is genuinely unprepared for what’s about to show.

Three years ago at Sundance, it was Lars Von Trier’s “Nymphomani­ac,” to the shock of a smattering of elderly attendees. In 2015, SXSW upped the game by hosting a secret midnight world premiere of the Universal Studios tentpole “Furious 7” to a prolonged standing ovation, as the cast paid tribute to the late Paul Walker.

“T2,” director Danny Boyle’s followup to his 1996 black comedy about a group of drug addicts living in Scotland, has already opened in the United Kingdom. It will hit limited theaters in the United States on March 17, expanding wide on March 31.

Both Boyle and McGregor will be in Austin for a post-screening Q&A moderated by Richard Linklater. They will also be doing press for the movie on Monday.

Boyle was spotted in Austin on Saturday night at the premiere of Tri-Star’s “Baby Driver,” starring Ansel Elgort behind the wheel of a team of mean-spirited bank robbers. (RTRS)

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