Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

LA Times photograph­er who took iconic shot of dying RFK

- By Doug Smith

LOS ANGELES — As Robert F. Kennedy was leaving the Ambassador Hotel on June 5, 1968, following his victory in that year’s California Democratic presidenti­al primary, a part-time Los Angeles Times photograph­er, working on his own time in hopes of catching a shot for his wall, followed.

“The idea went further than I had expected,” Boris Yaro would write more than 40 years later in a reminiscen­ce of the night he became one of the world’s celebrated photograph­ers.

In the pandemoniu­m of the hotel’s pantry following Kennedy’s shooting by Sirhan B. Sirhan, as the crowd parted from the fallen candidate, Mr. Yaro snapped the enduring black-andwhite image of a distraught busboy trying to console a mortally wounded hero.

Mr. Yaro, who shot news photos for the Times for more than 40 years and along the way tutored the actor who played the news photograph­er on the TV series “Lou Grant,” died Wednesday at his home in Northridge, Calif., of natural causes. He was 81.

Although Mr. Yaro’s career became defined by the Kennedy photo, he was known to colleagues as a hard-driving but dapper news hound.

Always going to work in a blazer and tie, Mr. Yaro presented an amusing contrast to the slovenly, rumpled photograph­er known as Animal on “Lou Grant.” In preparing for that role, actor Daryl Anderson tutored under Mr. Yaro, learning how to use a camera and going on assignment­s to absorb the daily rhythm of the photojourn­alist.

“It struck me as comical that here was this character he got hanging around with

Boris,” Times photograph­er Al Seib said.

In a 1996 book on the making of “Lou Grant,” author Douglass K. Daniel quoted Mr. Yaro as saying, “You can’t walk into a newsroom dressed as a damn bum.”

Beneath Mr. Yaro’s sharp appearance was an intense commitment to his craft.

“It was like meeting a rock star,” said Rick Meyer, another longtime Times photograph­er, of his first meeting with Mr. Yaro in 1973, when Mr. Meyer was fresh out of journalism school. “His company car sprouted numerous antennas for police radios. Boris would respond to news stories all hours of the day and night.”

“He knew everybody: every fireman, every policeman,” said colleague Joel Lugavere. “They all knew him on a first-name basis.”

Mr. Yaro’s children, Michael Yaro and Nicole Good, said that dedication was part of their lives too.

“We all lived with that,” Ms. Good said. “He had scanners on his nightstand.

He never left home without some form of connected communicat­ion. He always had one, maybe two, maybe three cameras with him, film in every single pocket.”

According to his children, Mr. Yaro joined the Times in the mid-1960s as a part-time photograph­er in the paper’s San Gabriel Valley office.

In his 2010 recollecti­on of the night of the Kennedy assassinat­ion, Mr. Yaro said he did not take photos during the shooting.

“It was dark, and I think I was afraid,” he wrote.

When he saw Kennedy sinking to the floor, he realized, “I had better make pictures.”

Then a woman grabbed his sleeve and pleaded with him to stop.

“My response was, ‘Dammit, lady, this is history,’” Mr. Yaro wrote. “I pulled my coat sleeve loose from her grasp but lost some visual space because people began crowding around the fallen Kennedy.”

The photo, which is part of the permanent collection­s of the Getty Museum in Los Angeles and Museum of Modern Art in New York, did not win the Pulitzer Prize, which went that year to an equally enduring shot of the execution of a Viet Cong prisoner in Saigon.

Pulitzer Prize-winning former Times photograph­er Don Bartletti said he thought two Pulitzers should have been given that year.

“When you look at Boris’ picture of Kennedy from head to foot, with the kitchen worker leaning over him, that is a completely perfect compositio­n with all the necessary elements,” Mr. Bartletti said. “His picture is and will remain fantastic.”

Besides his two children, Mr. Yaro is survived by his wife, Jill, and a brother.

 ?? Boris Yaro/Los Angeles Times ?? A busboy crouches over U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy as he lies mortally wounded on the floor of a pantry at the Ambassador Hotel a minute after being shot by Sirhan B. Sirhan on June 5, 1968, in Los Angeles.
Boris Yaro/Los Angeles Times A busboy crouches over U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy as he lies mortally wounded on the floor of a pantry at the Ambassador Hotel a minute after being shot by Sirhan B. Sirhan on June 5, 1968, in Los Angeles.

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