Las Vegas Review-Journal

Longtime AP photograph­er Mclendon dies in Las Vegas

- The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Lennox “Red” Mclendon, a globe-trotting photograph­er who chronicled everything from the Vietnam War to the Academy Awards during a long career with the U.S. Navy and The Associated Press, has died at age 74.

Mclendon died Oct. 24 in Las Vegas, according to his family. No cause of death was given, but he had suffered in recent years from Parkinson’s disease and other ailments.

He began his long career as a photojourn­alist upon enlisting with the U.S. Navy in 1962. After teaching photograph­y for a time, he was dispatched to southeast Asia to cover the Vietnam War as a military combat photograph­er.

That assignment earned him the Navy Achievemen­t Medal With Combat V for what the military described as “profession­alism and devotion to duty under arduous living and working conditions and frequent enemy rocket and mortar attacks.”

After leaving the Navy in 1970, Mclendon went on to earn bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Syracuse University before joining Georgia’s Marietta Daily Journal newspaper in 1974 as its chief photograph­er.

During his time in Georgia he also began freelancin­g for The Associated Press. When the AP’S Atlanta photo editor, Spencer Jones, moved to a similar position in Los Angeles, he brought Mclendon with him as a staff photograph­er.

“He was outstandin­g in every assignment, from sports to politics to space shuttle landings at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave Desert,” Jones said Monday. “Red was instrument­al in coverage of all the awards shows, music, television and Academy Awards.”

He also covered natural disasters, including earthquake­s and wildfires, the Olympics and other major sports events. He photograph­ed presidents and popes.

A large, flamboyant personalit­y with flaming red hair, Mclendon himself stood out at most events he covered.

“One of the things I fondly remember is what others jokingly said about him — he had the sharpest elbows in the industry,” recalled former AP photograph­er Doug Pizac. “During crowded photo shoots, few dared to stand next to him and try to get in front for fear of getting a jab in the rib cage. He protected his space for the best shot to put on the wire.”

He is survived by his wife of 49 years, Dianne Mclendon.

A funeral service is scheduled for noon Thursday at the Southern Nevada Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Boulder City.

 ??  ?? Lennox “Red” Mclendon
Lennox “Red” Mclendon

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