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story=A new feature film documentary about legendary NYTimes photographer Bill Cunningham

74 minutes

Bill Cunningham

tomatometers=7 / 10

Documentary

USA

 

 

Anyone know the name of the last song. Honeys best friend is A JOKE. Credit. The Bill Cunningham Foundation LLC Here comes a big new picture book, organized by decade and with more than 700 photographs. Row royalty: Left to right, Carlyne Cerf de Dudzeele, Anna Wintour and Suzy Menkes. The Bill Cunningham Foundation LLC Published Sept. 1, 2019 Updated Sept. 26, 2019 The reason Bill Cunninghams photographs for The New York Times quickly morphed from occasional small street fashion or society-affair feature into an enormously popular weekly visual column called On the Street was simple. H e had an unerring eye for catching every fashion wave well before anyone else, and doing so not just on runways (though he loved designer fashion shows) but out there on the pavement of good old gritty Gotham. Say what you will about this unfair city, the parade here never stops, and no one understood that better than a Bostonian named William J. Cunningham. Starting in the 1970s for The Times, he created a singular image of himself by visually chronicling what people (overwhelmingly New Yorkers, but also Parisians) were wearing as they went about their business. Which was often trying to get Bill to photograph them. Image Credit. Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times As Bills features began to appear more regularly, each would showcase a fashion theme, and it was eventually decided that rather than just captions beneath the pictures, a short essay tying everything together was a better idea. At first the essays were supplied by Bill, who would sit next to Alex Palmer, the Style departments editorial assistant and a woman of boundless charm and good humor who was a better speller and typist than he was, and dictate. The result was 50 or so words that usually, as they say, needed a little work. Often, I was the copy editor chosen to perform the procedure. Certainly I was no fashion authority, and whatever else I spun these miniature stories into, it was not to be mistaken for gold. But apparently it was printable and I genuinely enjoyed the connection with Bill, whose enthusiasm for what he was doing was irresistible, whether one cared about fashion or not. He would come rushing into the office with photographs, recently developed at his local pharmacy, as if they were the Rosetta stone, assuring all of us, whom he referred to as “kids” or “child, ” that this was the next big thing. Which inevitably it turned out to be. Then came the essential part of the process: choosing the pictures for the layout. Bill and Nancy Newhouse, then the Style editor, would do this together. Ms. Newhouse recalled that Bill inevitably had double or triple the number that could fit in the allotted space, and passionately argued to cram in as many as possible. “I loved going through those pictures with Bill, and always felt bad having to insist on fewer rather than more, ” she said recently, “but he was always a good sport. ” He never gave up trying, however. After the copy was edited and the photos carefully winnowed, Bill was free to run back outside, hop on his bicycle and pedal up to Midtown to see what else he could find. This habit did not please everyone in our department. In that Paleolithic era, designing pages was a cumbersome process, and substituting different photos as deadlines loomed (and the Style pages were among those that had to close early) could create instant migraines for our editors and art director. A particular sufferer was Morton D. Stone. Over the years, Bill worked with a number of talented photo editors. Tiina Loite, who edited “Bill Cunningham: On the Street, ” the new book from Clarkson Potter from which these images were chosen, was the Style photo editor in the 1990s and 2000s, which could be described as his breakout period. Ms. Loite reflects on the process of choosing images for the book. But during my stint in that department the photo editor was Mort Stone. Mort possessed both skill and taste. He was also unflappable, as long as you drop the first syllable off that word. At the sight of Bill returning to the newsroom and the clock ticking, the color would drain from Morts face. “Oh my God, ” hed moan. “Hes back! ” Those days inevitably ended at the upstairs bar at Sardis, the famed theater district restaurant where Mort sought solace. Loathing the thought of a man drinking alone, I usually felt the least I could do was join him. By the second Scotch, Mort would volunteer that while Bills late additions may have created some peptic havoc, they made the feature better. Mort was a pro, and like all of us, a genuine admirer of Bills work. It was simply impossible not to be. If Vincent Sardi had known that Bill was responsible for some of his best customers, he would have been an admirer, too. Thinking back on those days, it is difficult to imagine two more different personalities than Bill and Mort. Its also difficult to think of two other Timespeople for whom I felt more utter devotion, and I was not alone there. The difference was that Mort became an open, personal friend to a number of us, while Bill had a genius for elusiveness. Much has been made of his dedication to his work and his spartan life style. At the same time he seemed endlessly upbeat and brimming with enthusiasm. “Hey there, Alex, young fella, ” he would greet the not-so-young me in the Times cafeteria years after we had stopped working together. After a few quick pleasantries, he was suddenly off. “Gotta get snappin and crackin, ” hed say, “lots going on out there and I dont want to miss it. ” Not many of us really knew a lot about Bill until the documentary “ Bill Cunningham New York ” was released in 2010. It showed the snappin and crackin on the street, all right, but also his monastic digs in Carnegie Hall, where he slept on a pallet balanced on two of an almost uncountable number of file cabinets that held his lifes considerable work, and used what seemed to be a public bathroom down the hall. The film delved into his childhood and time in the Army and offered up an excruciating moment when the subject of his sexuality left him totally frozen. All those cabinets came back into focus a year and a half ago when serious research began on the book that goes on sale this week. If there is a key to who Bill was, it is crammed into the folders that are crammed into them. And what an amazing treasure they hold. Hundreds of thousands of contact sheets and prints, many of which have detailed notes and drawings from couture shows in Paris and New York appended to them. There are scores of magazines, notebooks, invitations, thank-you notes, programs from shows. Your first question is, did he ever sleep? The answer, apparently, is not much, if at all. Enid Nemy, a longtime Style reporter who frequently worked with Bill, confirmed what became his stripped-down lifestyle. “He didnt care about food or drink — believe me, I went to his apartment on several occasions and Ill tell you, the only thing in his refrigerator was film, ” she said. Nemy also recalled Bills strong reluctance to ever accept favors, large or small, which Anna Wintour confirms in a warm essay in the new book, recalling numerous offers of a ride, which he accepted only once, when he could not budge his bicycle in a snowstorm. When she dropped him off at the Times building, she writes, he jumped out of the car so quickly that she hardly had time to say goodbye. A man who prized his independence, Bill for years insisted on working as a freelancer for The Times. He relented in the early 1980s, when one day, Nancy Newhouse recalled, he shyly indicated that he would like to go on staff, the advantages and security of benefits having become clear to him. But, she said, “It took a while for him to ask me where to pick up his paycheck. He found the subject embarrassing. ” The arrangement didnt last long, and Bill returned to freelancing until 1993, when he suffered serious injuries in a bicycle accident and quickly came back to the fold. According to Enid Nemy, “Bill had three main interests: fashion shows, big charity parties and, most enduringly, what people were wearing on the street. And he became enormously influential in all three. “For one thing, his knowledge of the history of fashion was simply more developed than anyone elses, ” she said. “He would look at a Dior design at a show and immediately be able to trace its lineage and influences. As for parties, his presence at them meant everything. The general feeling was that if Bill didnt show up to photograph a big event, well, it simply didnt really happen. “And he loved to be out on the street because he didnt like to miss anything, ” she added. “People were aware of him, knew where hed be near Bergdorfs, so thats where theyd be. And theyd talk about how many times they made Bills column. His impact was phenomenal. ” Bill preferred to call himself a fashion historian or, more modestly, a reporter, and he certainly fit those descriptions. As Ms. Loite points out in her preface to the book, he was reluctant to call himself a photographer. To which I want to say, “Oh please, Bill, give me a break. ” So what would Bill Cunningham, the reporter-historian-nonphotographer photographer, think of this book? Im pretty sure I know what hed say, which is something along the lines of “Well, child, its just a collection of stuff that helped fill space in the paper. ” And, you know something? Hed be right. But as far as stuff goes, kids, its not too bad. Alex Ward, who was the longtime editorial director of book development for The New York Times, retired from the company earlier this summer. Reprinted with permission from Random House, from the book “Bill Cunningham: On the Street” by The New York Times Company.

THE TIMES OF BILL CUNNINGHAM OPENS FRIDAY, MARCH 6 Click image to view trailer “If you have a subject as delightful and forthcoming as the self-invented shutterbug, not to mention decades worth of fabulous footage and photographic records of high and low fashion, you really cant have too much of a good thing. ” – David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter In his customarily cheerful and plainspoken manner, the iconic street photographer and fashion historian chronicles in his own words and pictures his lifes adventures: moonlighting as a milliner in France during the Korean War, his unique relationship with First Lady Jackie Kennedy, his four decades at The New York Times, and his democratic view of fashion and society. Narrated by Sarah Jessica Parker, The Times of Bill Cunningham features incredible photographs chosen from over 3 million previously unpublicized images and documents from Cunningham, himself. Not Rated. Director: Mark Bozek (US 2020) 74 min TO PURCHASE TICKETS, click the showtime on the date of your choice TICKETS BACK TO CART No Upcoming Shows.

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She's so so so pretty and talented. Bill Cunningham, Paris, 1971. Photo: Harold Chapman/Topfoto / The Image Works Before street-style photography was a cottage industry, it was just Bill Cunningham riding around on a bike. Known for cruising around New York City in his cobalt-blue jacket, snapping photos of expressively dressed Manhattanites, Cunningham was both anthropologist and photographer. And he was a fashion fixture. Hes quite possibly the most beloved photographer in the industry — possibly because almost everyone had a fond Cunningham story. Including director Mark Bozek. Cunningham invited Bozek to film him for a one-minute video for the CFDA awards. But the photographer wound up talking for four hours about his life in Carnegie Hall studios, his first camera, and his four decades working for the New York Times. That was in 1994. When Cunningham died in 2016, Bozek unearthed the interview and made it the center of a documentary, The Times of Bill Cunningham, narrated by Sarah Jessica Parker and featuring hundreds of Cunninghams photographs. It premiered in 2018 at the New York Film Festival but is just being released this Valentines Day. When it premiered, Variety called it, “a snapshot of a life that leaves you grateful for having encountered it. ” Even though Cunningham was 65 years old when he gave the interview that anchors the film, he still seems astonished by all thats happened to him. One moment hes talking about girls breaking down Marlon Brandos door, the next its on to Jackie Kennedy Onassis and her wardrobe. I have to say, watching it first thing this morning made me a lot more excited to get to work. Cunninghams wide-eyed, anything-can-happen attitude in the interview is infectious. Below is an exclusive look at the trailer, if you want to put yourself in a better mood. This New Fashion Documentary Will Cheer You Up.

Download torrent the times of bill cunningham jr. Download torrent the times of bill cunningham wife. Download torrent the times of bill cunningham book. Download torrent the times of bill cunningham full. ALL THIS DRAMA BEHIND A MAN. OH YEAH THE WORLD IS ENDING. Download torrent the times of bill cunningham death. Download torrent the times of bill cunningham online. Download torrent the times of bill cunningham show. Arts & entertainment 'The Times Of Bill Cunningham' documentary screened last night as crowds of friends, family and fans celebrated the photographer's legacy. By Daniela Kirsch, Patch Staff Nov 12, 2018 4:05 pm ET On Sunday night an illustrious crowd was invited to watch a private screening of the new documentary 'The Times of Bill Cunningham. Friends and fans of the late New York Times street photographer Cunningham gathered at 583 Park Avenue to reminisce about his legacy. Bill Cunningham was the most influential street and fashion photographer. His weekly column in the New York Times was a must-read and the bible to fashion lovers all over the world. Cunningham died in 2016 at the age of 87. Take a look below through Daniela's Lens to see highlights from the evening: Bill Cunningham taking a photo of Jean Shafiroff 6:50 p. m. I got introduced to Bill Cunningham at an event in late 2015, by another photographer, Steve Eichner. I vividly remember how sweet and kind Bill was at all times and to everybody. In the cutthroat business of fashion and celebrity photography, this is not normal at all. Bill wore his signature blue French workman's jacket, his uniform. And at the age of 87, he was still riding his bike every day, no matter what weather. In contrast to other photographers, he wasn't hunting big A-list names; he was looking for the most fashionable outfits. It didn't matter to him who wore it. He even explained that he dislikes celebrities because they don't style themselves, they get styled by a stylist. Bill was always all about the fashion. 7:00 p. I enter 583 Park Avenue, a beautiful event space on the upper east side. Anna Sui and Fern Mallis 7:10 p. Many of Bill's friends are here. Emma Snowdon-Jones 7:11 p. Di Mondo 7:15 p. 7:19 p. Alina Cho and her mother. 7:23 p. Mark Bozek, who directed the documentary, did a video interview with Bill in 1994. It was planned only to take 10 minutes. "Instead of 10 minutes, it was four hours, and he told me his whole life story. says Mark. Daniela Kirsch is an entertainment photographer and founder of NameFace — an event photo agency based in New York City. Through her creative expertise and unique visual style, Kirsch not only knows more than a thing or two about photographing A-list events, but is forever changing the way we interact with the entertainment industry. In June 2018, Kirsch teamed up with Patch to launch the photo series Daniela's Lens, offering weekly features from local events to red carpet magic. Check out more coverage from Daniela's Lens here: Daniela's Weekly Recap: Brooke Shields, Nathan Lane And More Brooke Shields, Spike Lee And More Attend CMX CineBistro Opening Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick At The 35th Drama League Awards Bill Burr Talks 'F Is For Family' Season 3 At NYC Paley Center Rachel Roy, Derek Blasberg Attend 'The Price Of Free' Screening The Spookiest Costumes At 45th Annual Village Halloween Parade Read more local news from New York City.

The Times of Bill Cunningham Summary: Told in Bill Cunninghams own words from a recently unearthed six-hour 1994 interview, the iconic street photographer and fashion historian chronicles, in his customarily cheerful and plainspoken manner, moonlighting as a milliner in France during the Korean War, his unique relationship with First Lady Jackie Kennedy, his four decades at The New York Times and his democratic view of fashion and society. Narrated by Sarah Jessica Parker, The Times of Bill Cunningham features incredible photographs chosen from over 3 million previously unpublicized images and documents from Cunningham. By Metascore By User Score.

 

 

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