The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

AP’s legendary ‘Napalm Girl’ photograph­er Nick Ut to retire

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LOSANGELES » 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 black-and-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 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 champagne 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.

“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.

 ??  ?? Associated Press staff photograph­er Nick Ut, left, meets Phan Thi Kim Phuc during a presentati­on at the Liberty Baptist Church in Newport Beach “That picture changed my life. It changed Kim’s life,” he says of the pair’s chance meeting in a dusty...
Associated Press staff photograph­er Nick Ut, left, meets Phan Thi Kim Phuc during a presentati­on at the Liberty Baptist Church in Newport Beach “That picture changed my life. It changed Kim’s life,” he says of the pair’s chance meeting in a dusty...

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