Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

After 80 years, still smiling on the job

- ALIX STRAUSS

NEW YORK — Fred Marcus, who was a longtime wedding photograph­er in New York, often said: “When the wedding is over, the photograph­s will last forever. So will the relationsh­ips we made at that event.”

Decades later, both statements still ring true.

In January, the Fred Marcus Studio celebrated 80 years in business. The studio, which has always specialize­d in weddings, is one of the few multigener­ational photograph­y businesses still thriving in New York.

After more than seven decades on West 72nd Street, the company moved to its current 58th Street location in Columbus Circle in 2019. In doing so, they packed up thousands of photograph­s and volumes of digital archives and memories created over the years.

They went from a 4,000-square-foot space operating on three floors to 2,500 square feet, all on one level, making it more cohesive for everyone to work. For over a month, they packed 300-plus boxes, which contained 30 years’ worth of negatives and digital material, most of which was put in a storage unit. They moved to the new space with more than a dozen cameras, lighting equipment, a large printer, photo background­s, and 50-plus albums filled with archival photos. The rent at their previous location was exorbitant, they said, and they needed a less expensive location.

HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR

According to family lore, in 1939, Fred Marcus was a 29-year-old escaped Holocaust survivor living in Cuba. He made money taking pictures of families on the beach.

“All he knew was how to take photograph­s and connect with people,” said his son, Andy Marcus, 71, whose wife, Judi Marcus, manages the studio. “When I was little I asked him why he did weddings. He took out the Yellow Pages and flipped to commercial fashion photograph­ers. There were pages of them. Then he went to wedding photograph­ers.

Only three or four were listed. He wanted to excel at something others didn’t.”

Fred Marcus was 31 in 1941 when he opened his studio on the basement floor of a building on West 72nd Street. At the time his son was 1. Twelve years later, in an effort to keep Andy out of trouble, he made him a lighting assistant at the weddings he was shooting.

“Afterward we’d swap out the used film for new film at 2 a.m. in the closet. We put a towel on the floor to block the light from entering,” Andy Marcus said. “We’d talk about the wedding. It was a wonderful way to get to know him.”

NEVER LEFT THE BUSINESS

Andy Marcus never left the business. After graduating from college he started working at the studio full time. When his father was injured in a car wreck in 1975, Andy Marcus stepped up.

“I was left on my own to run the business,” he said. “I didn’t have a clue how to do that. I just knew I had to make it work. I wanted him to be proud of me.”

While Fred Marcus spent seven months in the hospital, Andy Marcus was thriving.

The first torch was passed.

“When I started, each photo required one flashbulb. Then you had to change the film,” he said. “The most photos you took at a wedding were 80 to 100. When digital came in the early 2000s, it changed everything. Now you can take 100 photos of the bride’s shoes.”

What has not changed are the client’s desires regarding what to capture.

“We’re known for expressive, well-lit family portraits. It keeps our legacy going,” Andy Marcus said.

OVER-THE-TOP EVENTS

In 2001, Fred Marcus, then 91, died. Over the years Andy Marcus expanded the business, brought new energy and fresh ideas, raised prices and increased clientele. The ’80s and early ’90s brought opulence and over-the-top events.

“The weddings were larger; there were more flowers, bigger bands. Everything was on steroids,” Marcus said.

The wedding industry grew. Celebritie­s became clients. Today, average packages start around $9,000 to $20,000, though some clients have spent more than $150,000.

Then, Andy’s son, Brian Marcus, who learned the business the same way his father did, joined the business in 2003, returning to the East Coast after college and a brief job as a production assistant at a film company in Los Angeles.

“This is a job my family has been passionate­ly ingrained in forever,” said Brian Marcus, 42, who lives in Tenafly, N.J. Marcus, who is now the company president, took over the business when his father started to slow down. His father still shoots weddings, meets with clients, and helps with photo selection and album design.

‘BORN INTO THIS’

“Being born into this, I already had a leg up because clients trusted me,” Marcus said. “They knew I had the knowledge and ability. Then I had to keep their trust and prove myself. Every day I work to earn the respect my father and grandfathe­r built.”

Today, not including Andy or Brian, they have six full-time employees. That includes two photograph­ers who work in the studio, cover weddings and handle production. Fifteen part-time employees help with photograph­y, video and lighting.

They have photograph­ed more than 30,000 weddings, traveling around the world to capture couples on film and video. Among the celebritie­s they have witnessed saying ‘I do’ are Mary Tyler Moore and Dr. Robert Levine, Billy Baldwin and Chynna Phillips, Eddie Murphy and Nicole Mitchell, Gov. Mario and Matilda Cuomo’s daughter and granddaugh­ter, and the daughter of Sen. Chuck Schumer and Iris Weinshall. They also photograph­ed the weddings of Donald Trump and Marla Maples, and Ivanka and Jared Kushner.

“My father knew how to take a photograph. Back then you couldn’t look at what you got to see if you captured the couple or the cake or people dancing. You had to trust you got the shot,” said Andy Marcus, who added that the wedding and event business could be an all-consuming, sevenday-a-week job. “It’s hard on your personal life. You can miss a lot of weekends and holidays with your family because you’re documentin­g other people celebratin­g them.”

GENERATION­AL FOOTPRINT

But it is in these celebratio­ns that the Marcus family has spent a lifetime capturing and creating a generation­al footprint.

“Seventy years ago, Fred Marcus shot my parent’s wedding, and 46 years ago shot mine,” said Judy Kaufthal, 67, of the Bronx. “This was a long-term relationsh­ip. I’ve known all of them. They did my three sons’ weddings. Fred, who wasn’t working anymore, came to my oldest son’s wedding just to give him a hug. That’s a special thing.”

In the wedding industry, nostalgia is everything.

“My father had a wonderful way with people. He told me to never say ‘smile’ to someone. Talk to them instead,” Andy Marcus said. “He built relationsh­ips. Then he kept them. I did, too. So does Brian. That’s how we keep this going. That’s why we’re still here.”

 ?? (The New York Times/Trevor Wisecup) ?? Brian Marcus (left) and his father, Andy Marcus, of the multigener­ational Fred Marcus Studio, walk in Manhattan earlier this year. The studio, which has always specialize­d in weddings, celebrated its 80th birthday in January and is one of the few multigener­ational photograph­y businesses still thriving in New York.
(The New York Times/Trevor Wisecup) Brian Marcus (left) and his father, Andy Marcus, of the multigener­ational Fred Marcus Studio, walk in Manhattan earlier this year. The studio, which has always specialize­d in weddings, celebrated its 80th birthday in January and is one of the few multigener­ational photograph­y businesses still thriving in New York.

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