The Jewish Chronicle

He clicks with celebs

Richardyou­ng isthephoto­grapherkno­wnforgetti­ngiconicim­agesofthef­amous.hissecret?luckandgoo­dmanners

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I had the right attitude for it. The following Saturday he said: ‘Look, I have some friends staying with me. They’ve come over from Rome — the kid has just been released by the mafia and the grandfathe­r has paid a $2 million ransom’.”

That kid was Paul Getty junior — grandson of oil tycoon Jean Paul Getty — who had been kidnapped and who had no one had managed to photograph since his release. Young had stumbled across a world exclusive. He recalls: “I photograph­ed him as we walked through Hyde Park with his girlfriend.”

He sold the photos to the Evening Standard and they were syndicated worldwide. Young was still working in the bookshop, but two to three times a week he would be called by the Standard to do celebrity jobs. One evening he was told to go to the Dorchester where Liz Taylor was throwing a 50th birthday party for Richard Burton. He did not have an invitation but says he managed to “schmooze his way in”.

“I got away with that one on the night and got my second world exclusive in 18 months.” The following day he left his job at the bookshop.

If the Getty photo was luck, then the Taylor and Burton one was down to his “chutzpah”. The ability to make friends of his subjects is one of the factors which he feels has propelled him in his career — that, and the persistenc­e which he learned as a Jewish child growing up in Stamford Hill. “My dad always taught me that as long as you’re polite to people and show good manners, the world will open up to you, but if there’s a door open, you need to go through it because you never know what’s on the other side.” This was advice he took literally at the Dorchester that evening.

Young thinks his unorthodox approach to his art has helped him to stand out. He says: “There’s this thing I do which is to photograph people from behind. At fashion shows and photocalls there will be loads of photograph­ers at the front so I go around the back and get the subject to turn around and look at me. The background becomes this vast bank of photograph­ers — it gives you a different perspectiv­e. There’s a lovely picture of Scary Spice on the catwalk at the Roundhouse. It’s taken from behind but we know it’s her because of her hair and the whole attitude of her body. What I was interested in was the sheer excitement and the energy — that’s what I look for in pictures.”

Above all, Young, who remains as busy as ever, maintains that if you are to be a successful photograph­er you need to leave your ego at home. “I know a lot of celebritie­s. But they sit on one side of the table and I’m on the other with my cameras. I never encroach upon their lives, unless they invite me to sit with them and have a drink. Ego is the biggest destructiv­e element.

“After all, it’s not all about me. I’m just the photograph­er, man.” Richard Young’s ‘Pret a Photo’ exhibition of ready to buy photograph­s features many never-before-seen images from the 1970s and 1980s. It runs at the Richard Young Gallery, 4 Holland Street, London W8, until January 31. Details at www.richardyou­nggallery.co.uk

 ??  ?? Ex-Spice Girl Mel Brown on the catwalk at the Roundhouse, London, in 1999, with Victoria Beckham and Emily Bunton looking on. It is a favourite shot of Young ( left)
Ex-Spice Girl Mel Brown on the catwalk at the Roundhouse, London, in 1999, with Victoria Beckham and Emily Bunton looking on. It is a favourite shot of Young ( left)
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 ?? ALL PHOTOS: RICHARD YOUNG ?? From far left: Kate Moss and Jo Wood, London, 1997; Amy Winehouse, London, 2008; Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall, Royal Albert Hall, 1985; Madonna, Hyde Park Hotel, 1992
ALL PHOTOS: RICHARD YOUNG From far left: Kate Moss and Jo Wood, London, 1997; Amy Winehouse, London, 2008; Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall, Royal Albert Hall, 1985; Madonna, Hyde Park Hotel, 1992
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