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David Hume Kennerly

David Hume Kennerly (born March 9, 1947) is an American photographer. He won the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography for his portfolio of photographs of the Vietnam War, Cambodia, East Pakistani refugees near Calcutta, and the Ali-Frazier fight in Madison Square Garden.[1] He has photographed every American president since Lyndon B Johnson. He is the first presidential scholar at the University of Arizona.[2]

David Hume Kennerly
David Hume Kennerly speaks at opening of WAR/Photography exhibition at the Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City
Chief Official White House Photographer
In office
August 10, 1974 – January 20, 1977
PresidentGerald Ford
Preceded byOliver F. Atkins
Succeeded byMichael Evans (1981)
Personal details
Born (1947-03-09) March 9, 1947 (age 77)
Roseburg, Oregon, U.S.
Spouses
  • Susan Allwardt
    (m. 1967; div. 1969)
  • (m. 1983; div. 1988)
  • (m. 1989; div. 1992)
  • Rebecca Soladay
    (m. 1994)
Children3
Residence(s)Los Angeles, California, U.S.
EducationWest Linn High School
OccupationJournalist, photographer, producer
Websitekennerly.com

Early life edit

Kennerly is the son of O.A. "Tunney" Kennerly,[3] a traveling salesman, and Joanne (Hume) Kennerly.[4] His three younger sisters are Jane, Chris, and the late Mrs. Anne Strutzenberg.[citation needed]

His interest in photography started when he was only 12, and his career began in Roseburg, where his first published picture was in the high school newspaper The Orange 'R in 1962.[5]

Kennerly graduated from West Linn High School in West Linn, Oregon, in 1965.[6] He briefly attended Portland State College but left at 19 to become a staff photographer for The Oregon Journal.[7] In 1967 he entered the Oregon National Guard[8] and was sent to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, for basic training and then advanced training at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana. After completing six months of active duty in the US Army, he was hired as staff photographer by The Oregonian.[9]

During his early career in Portland he photographed some major personalities, including Miles Davis, Igor Stravinsky, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, the Rolling Stones, and the Supremes.[10] The encounter with Senator Kennedy gave him the determination to become a national political photographer.[11]

Professional life edit

In late 1967, he moved to Los Angeles to become a staff photographer for United Press International (UPI). On June 5, 1968, he took some of the last photos of Senator Robert F. Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel as he declared victory in the California presidential primary.[12] Moments later Kennedy was gunned down by the assassin Sirhan Sirhan. That night Kennerly also took a picture of Ethel Kennedy in the back of an ambulance.[13]

The following year (1969), Kennerly moved to New York for UPI, where among many other assignments he photographed the "Miracle" New York Mets winning the 1969 World Series.[14] In early 1970, he was transferred to the Washington, D.C. bureau of UPI. At age 23 he took his first ride on Air Force One with President Nixon as a member of the traveling press pool. However, Kennerly believed he was missing out on the biggest story of his generation, the Vietnam War. He said, "I felt like that scene in Mr. Roberts where Henry Fonda, an officer on a supply ship, watched the destroyers sail into battle while he was stuck in some South Pacific backwater port."[15]

Kennerly was sent to Saigon in early 1971 as a combat photographer for UPI. Unbeknownst to Kennerly, UPI photo editor Larry DeSantis started a portfolio of his favorite Kennerly photographs of the year, beginning with the Ali-Frazier fight photo that ran on the front page of The New York Times on March 9, 1971.[16] DeSantis submitted that photograph along with images of the Vietnam and Cambodia wars and refugees escaping from East Pakistan into India to the Pulitzer Prize Board for consideration. It was only when the winners were announced that Kennerly, who was still in Vietnam, learned he had been awarded the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography.[17] The committee noted that he "specialized in pictures that capture the loneliness and desolation of war."[18]

Kennerly became the photo bureau chief for UPI in Southeast Asia, but still spent most of his time in the field covering combat operations. In September 1972, he was one of three Americans to travel to the People's Republic of China to cover the state visit of Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka.[19]

While still in Vietnam, he joined Life in November 1972 as a contract photographer. After the classic picture magazine folded a few weeks later, Kennerly stayed on as a contract photographer for Time. Among the many stories he covered for them while still in Asia was the last American prisoner of war release in Hanoi, March 30, 1973.[20]

Kennerly returned to the United States in the summer of 1973 for Time, right in the middle of the Watergate story. He photographed the resignation of Vice President Spiro Agnew,[21] and the selection of Minority Leader Gerald R. Ford (R-MI) as Agnew's replacement. Kennerly's first Time cover was of Congressman Ford, a photo he took the day before Nixon selected Ford, and it was also Ford's first appearance on the front of Time.[22] That session with Ford led to a close personal relationship with him and his family. After Nixon resigned the presidency on August 9, 1974, the new president selected him to be his Chief Official White House Photographer.[23] Kennerly was only the third civilian to ever have that position (before him was President Lyndon B. Johnson's photographer Yoichi Okamoto, and Nixon's photographer Oliver F. Atkins).[citation needed]

Kennerly photographed major meetings, events, and trips during President Ford's tenure in office. He also arranged unique access for photographic colleagues from the magazines, newspapers, and wire service during that period. More than 50 photographers were granted exclusives with President Ford.[24] His staff consisted of four other photographers who divided coverage of the First Lady and Vice President, as well as presidential duties. He also directed the White House photo lab that was run by the military as part of the White House Communications Agency. Kennerly's White House photographs and negatives are physically housed at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library in Ann Arbor, Michigan,[25] on the campus of Ford's alma mater, the University of Michigan. Many of his photos are also on display at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

In late March 1975, Kennerly accompanied U.S. Army Chief of Staff General Frederick Weyand who had been dispatched on a presidential mission to South Vietnam to assess what was becoming a rapidly deteriorating military situation. The president privately told Kennerly he wanted his view of what was happening.[26]

In his autobiography Ford wrote, "I knew David wouldn't try to give me any propaganda about 'enemy body counts' or 'light at the end of the tunnel.' He had been shot at many times by the North Vietnamese. As an American, he felt ashamed that we weren't doing more to help a loyal ally, and he thought that once I saw the photographs he took of the suffering there, I would have a better feel for what we had to do."[27] Kennerly flew around the country, escaped from Nha Trang before it fell to the advancing communists, was shot at by retreating South Vietnamese soldiers at Cam Ranh Bay, and landed under fire in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, for a quick visit and assessment of the situation. When he returned from the trip, both Weyand's and Kennerly's assessments were bleak. The President ordered that Kennerly's stark black-and-white photos of the tragedy be put up in the halls of the West Wing of the White House to remind the staff just how bad things were. Saigon fell a month later. Before the fall, Ford had ordered the evacuation of the last Americans and many Vietnamese who had been working for the United States. The photos that Kennerly took on that mission helped convince Ford to open the doors to allow tens of thousands of other Vietnamese refugees into the country.[28]

The day before the Fords were turning over the keys to the White House to incoming President Jimmy Carter, Kennerly accompanied Betty Ford around the West Wing as she said goodbyes to the staff. They walked by the empty Cabinet Room and a mischievous look came across her face. "I've always wanted to dance on the Cabinet Room table", she said. The former Martha Graham dancer kicked off her shoes, jumped up on the middle of the table, and struck a pose. The photo was published for the first time 15 years after he took it in Kennerly's book Photo Op.[29]

During the Carter presidency there was no official White House photographer, in part because Carter did not like Kennerly's high public profile during Ford's administration.[30][31]

After the White House, Kennerly went back on contract for Time magazine, where he covered some of the biggest stories of the 1970s and 1980s for them; Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's trip to Israel,[32] the horror of Jonestown,[33] exclusive photos of President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev's first meeting in Geneva in 1985,[34] the Fireside Summit, and many other stories around the world. When Life made a brief comeback for Desert Storm in 1991, he shot an inside story on Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell called "Men of War".[35]

In 1996, Kennerly became a contributing editor for Newsweek[36] where he produced inside stories on President Bill Clinton,[37] Senator Bob Dole, the impeachment hearings, special prosecutor Kenneth Starr, the 2000 elections, the 9/11 attacks on the Pentagon, and other top stories. Kennerly also had a contract with John F. Kennedy Jr.'s magazine George.

While still working for Newsweek, Kennerly was assigned to cover the 2000 presidential election campaigns, initially covering the candidacy of Senator John McCain until his withdrawal on March 9, 2000. On election night November 7, Kennerly was at the Governor's Mansion in Austin with Governor George W. Bush after Vice President Al Gore first conceded the election and later recanted.[38] Kennerly has covered every presidential campaign from 1968 through 2020 with the exception of 1972, when he was in Vietnam.[39]

Throughout his journalism career, Kennerly has photographed more than 35 covers for Time and Newsweek, and covered assignments in over 130 countries.[39]

Kennerly was a fellow in the American Film Institute directing program from 1984 to 1986. He was nominated for a Primetime Emmy as executive producer of NBC's The Taking of Flight 847, and was the writer and executive producer of a two-hour NBC pilot, Shooter, starring Helen Hunt, based on his Vietnam experiences. Shooter won the Emmy for Outstanding Cinematography.[40] He was executive producer of the Academy Award short-listed documentary Portraits of a Lady for HBO, directed by Neil Leifer and starring former Justice of the Supreme Court Sandra Day O'Connor.[41]

In 2013, Kennerly collaborated with Emmy Award-winning filmmakers Gedeon Naudet, Jules Naudet, and producer Chris Whipple on a documentary The Presidents' Gatekeepers, a four-hour Discovery Channel documentary about the White House chiefs of staff. The team joined forces again in 2015 to produce The Spymasters, a documentary for CBS/Showtime about the directors of the CIA.[41]

In 2016, Kennerly covered the presidential election for CNN, and took an exclusive of President-elect Donald Trump for the cover of their book Unprecedented. Trump tweeted that it was "the worst cover photo of me!" even though he had told Kennerly he liked it when he saw it in the back of the camera during the shoot.[42]

Kennerly is a frequent public speaker, and has appeared at events such as TEDx,[43] RootsTech,[44] the University of Arizona, and a multitude of corporate events.[45][46]

In addition to his photojournalism work, Kennerly has also worked as a corporate photographer, and for the last ten years his main client has been Bank of America.[39] In 2010, Kennerly photographed a campaign for the Girl Scouts of the USA that included new images for the outside of the Girl Scout cookie boxes, pictures that endured for more than ten years.

In October 2018, University of Arizona President Robert C. Robbins named Kennerly as the university's first presidential scholar. "The images captured by David Hume Kennerly document some of the most important moments in history over the past 60 years, and they have changed how several generations have viewed the world. We are honored to have David share his experience with our students and community."[2]

The following year, UA's Center for Creative Photography (CCP) announced the acquisition of the David Hume Kennerly Archive, which features more than one million images, prints, objects, memorabilia, correspondence and documents dating back to 1957.[47] In announcing the acquisition CCP director Anne Breckenridge Barrett said "Adding the Kennerly Archive to our collection allows the Center to connect the relevance of Kennerly's work to the photographic legacies we house. It is a critical contribution to the Center's commitment to expanding the understanding of the role photography plays in today's society."[48]

The acquisition highlights the decades long relationship between Kennerly and Ansel Adams, one of the co-founders of CCP. The two first became acquainted when Kennerly invited Adams to the White House to meet with President Ford in 1975.[49] In 1979 Kennerly photographed Adams for the cover of Time,[50] the only time a photographer has been featured on the cover of the magazine.

Personal life edit

He was married to Susan Allwardt from 1967 to 1969, actress Mel Harris from 1983 to 1988, actress Carol Huston from 1989 to 1992, and Rebecca Soladay from 1994 to the present.[51]

Accomplishments edit

 
Kennerly at the White House in 1981
  • Trustee, Gerald R. Ford Foundation, (2008–2024)[52][53]
  • Contributing editor, NBC News (2006–2008)
  • Contributing editor, Der Spiegel (2008)
  • Contributing editor, Newsweek (1996–2006)
  • Personal photographer to President Gerald R. Ford, (1974–1977)
  • National program chair for Washington Mutual's, Home of the Free Student Photojournalism Project
  • Contributing correspondent, ABC's Good Morning America Sunday (1996–98)
  • Contributing photographer, George (1996–1999)
  • Executive producer, Portraits of a Lady, HBO (2011)[54]
  • Co-executive producer, Profiles from the Front Line, ABC reality series with Jerry Bruckheimer and Bertram van Munster (2003)
  • Executive producer and writer, Shooter, NBC Television movie based on his book about Vietnam combat photographers (1988)
  • Executive producer, The Taking of Flight 847, NBC movie (1989)
  • American Film Institute directing fellow, 1984–1985
  • Contract photographer, Time (1973–1974, 1977–1990)
  • Contributing photographer, Life (1972, 1993–1996)
  • Staff photographer, United Press International (1967–72)
  • Staff photographer, The Oregon Journal (1966–1967)
  • Staff photographer, The Oregonian (1967)
  • Producer, Discovery Channel's four-hour documentary The Presidents' Gatekeepers about the White House chiefs of staff (2014)[54]
  • Executive producer CBS/Showtime documentary The Spymasters: CIA in the Crosshairs (2015)[54]
  • Contributing photographer, Politico Magazine (2015-2016)
  • Member Canon Explorer of Light program (1995–present)[55]
  • Contributing photographer, CNN, 2016 election

Selected honors and awards edit

  • Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography (1972)
  • Five prizes in the 2001 and 2003 White House Press Photographer's contest
  • Named one of the top 50 top Washington journalists in the March 2001 issue of The Washingtonian, the only photographer on the list
  • Photo Media magazine's 2007 Photographer of the Year
  • 1997 President's Award for Excellence in Journalism from the Greater Los Angeles Press Club
  • 2015 Lucie Award for Achievement in Photojournalism
  • 1989 Emmy nomination for Outstanding Drama as executive producer of NBC's The Taking of Flight 847: The Uli Derickson Story
  • Overseas Press Club Award for Best Photographic Reporting from Abroad (Olivier Rebbot award), 1986
  • 1976 World Press Photo contest (two first place prizes for Cambodian coverage)
  • National Press Photographers Association contest (first place)
  • Honorary Doctorate, Lake Erie College, 2015
  • Named "One of the 100 Most Important People in Photography" by American Photo magazine

Selected exhibitions edit

  • Extraordinary Circumstances, various locations 2008
  • Savannah College of Art and Design, Lacoste France 2007. Retrospective.
  • University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication 2006–2007.
  • University of Texas at Austin - permanent. Photo du Jour exhibition.
  • Houston Museum of Fine Arts – 2004. Photo du Jour exhibition.
  • Smithsonian Institution's Arts and Industries Building 2002. Photo du Jour exhibition
  • New York Historical Society from 2002 - 2003.
  • Visa Pour L'Image, Perpignan France. 2000 Retrospective.
  • U.S. Capitol, Cannon Building Rotunda. 1995 Photo Op exhibition.
  • Portland Art Museum, Portland Oregon. 1995 Photo Op exhibition.
  • The Harry Lunn Gallery, 1979
  • Moderator – World Press Photo. Moderated conversation among 2006 award winners, USC, 2007
  • Guest lecturer - Savannah College of Art and Design, Lacoste France 2007.
  • Keynote speaker - Eddie Adams Workshop 2000 – present;[56]

Works edit

Photographs edit

Kennerly's photographs include:

Books edit

Kennerly has authored six books:

  • Shooter, Newsweek books, 1979
  • Photo Op: A Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photographer Covers Events That Shaped Our Times, University of Texas Press (1995) ISBN 0-292-74323-8
  • Sein Off: The Final Days of Seinfeld, HarperCollins, (1998)
  • Photo du Jour: A Picture-a-Day Journey through the First Year of the New Millennium, University of Texas Press, (2003)
  • Extraordinary Circumstances: The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford, The University of Texas Center for American History, (2007)
  • On the iPhone: Secrets and Tips from a Pulitzer Prize-winning Photographer. Goff Books, 2014

Kennerly has been a major contributor to the following:

  • Unprecedented: The Election That Changed Everything, CNN, 2017
  • Barack Obama: The Official Inaugural Book
  • A Day in the Life book projects: America, Spain, the Soviet Union; The People's Republic of China; the United States Armed Forces, Hollywood

Cultural depictions edit

Kennerly was portrayed in the Showtime television series The First Lady, by Cody Pressley, depicting the scene where he shot the photos of First Lady Betty Ford on the Cabinet Room table.[57]

References edit

  1. ^ "Dave Kennerly of United Press International". Pulitzer. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  2. ^ a b "Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photographer Named UA Presidential Scholar". University of Arizona. 2018-10-02. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  3. ^ "Twitter Post by David Hume Kennerly". Twitter.
  4. ^ "Anne Kennerly Strutzenberg Obituary". Oregon Live.
  5. ^ Kennery, David (1979). Shooter. p. 10. ISBN 0-88225-265-8.
  6. ^ "Oregon native David Hume Kennerly captured history as a presidential photographer". The Oregonian. 2010-11-23. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  7. ^ "David Hume Kennerly". Pulitzer. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  8. ^ Kennery, David (1979). Shooter. p. 18. ISBN 0-88225-265-8.
  9. ^ Kennery, David (1979). Shooter. p. 19. ISBN 0-88225-265-8.
  10. ^ "Cultural Icons". Center for Creative Photography. 2016-07-01.
  11. ^ "A witness to history: 50 years of presidential politics". CNN. 2016-07-01.
  12. ^ "Campaign Trail". Center for Creative Photography. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  13. ^ Kennery, David (1979). Shooter. p. 29. ISBN 0-88225-265-8.
  14. ^ Kennery, David (1979). Shooter. p. 30. ISBN 0-88225-265-8.
  15. ^ "David Hume Kennerly: This Kind Of Career Doesn't Happen Anymore". Samys Camera Photo Blog. 2017-10-05. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  16. ^ Anderson, Dave (March 9, 1971). "Frazier Outpoints Ali and Keeps Title". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  17. ^ Kennery, David (1979). Shooter. p. 69. ISBN 0-88225-265-8.
  18. ^ "Imagine my surprise". March 9, 1971. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  19. ^ Kennery, David (1995). Photo Op. p. 44.
  20. ^ Kennery, David (1995). Photo Op. p. 49.
  21. ^ "Trump Falls Under the Shadow of Spiro Agnew". August 7, 2017. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  22. ^ "Gerald Ford". October 22, 1973. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  23. ^ "A witness to history: 50 years of presidential politics". July 1, 2016. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
  24. ^ "Worth Reposting". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-02-26.
  25. ^ "Trustee David Kennerly". Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation.
  26. ^ Kennery, David (1979). Shooter. ISBN 0-88225-265-8.
  27. ^ Ford, Gerald (1979). A Time to Heal. p. 251. ISBN 0060112972.
  28. ^ Ford, Gerald R. (1979). A Time to Heal. p. 253.
  29. ^ Kennerly, David Hume (1995). Photo Op. p. 103.
  30. ^ Carter Says He'll Do Without A Personal Photographer. 1977. p. 9.
  31. ^ "Hot Shot". Los Angeles Times.
  32. ^ "How Jimmy Carter Brokered a Hard-Won Peace Deal Between Israel and Egypt". History.
  33. ^ "Jonestown, a Personal Recollection". Kennerly.
  34. ^ "President Ronald Reagan". The University of Texas at Austin.
  35. ^ "Life February 25, 1991". Original Life Magazines.
  36. ^ "Hot Shot". Los Angeles Times.
  37. ^ "Bill Clinton Admonishes Trump Over Impeachment Behavior". Newsweek.
  38. ^ "Election 2000: Over/Time". Apple Podcasts.
  39. ^ a b c "About David Hume Kennerly". Kennerly. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  40. ^ "Shooter". IMDB.
  41. ^ a b "David Hume Kennerly". IMDB.
  42. ^ "Donald Trump Blasts CNN Book Cover Portrait He Liked Back When It Was Shot". Deadline.
  43. ^ "Telling the Story in 1/60th of a Second: David Hume Kennerly at TEDxBend". Youtube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21.
  44. ^ "Meet keynote Speaker David Hume Kennerly!". Rootstech.
  45. ^ "Presentation By David Hume Kennerly". University of Arizona.
  46. ^ "Documenting History Through Photography". C-SPAN.
  47. ^ "David Hume Kennerly: Witness to History [At the UA Old Main Building]". University of Arizona. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  48. ^ "Announcing the David Hume Kennerly Archive". Center for Creative Photography.
  49. ^ "A Photojournalist's Life in Pictures". Center for Creative Photography.
  50. ^ "Ansel Adams". Time. 3 September 1979.
  51. ^ Brennan, E.A.; Clarage, E.C.; Topping, S. (1999). Who's who of Pulitzer Prize Winners. Oryx Press. p. 206. ISBN 978-1-57356-111-2. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
  52. ^ https://www.politico.com/f/?id=0000018e-c50a-d904-afbe-d59a1d1a0000&nname=playbook&nid=0000014f-1646-d88f-a1cf-5f46b7bd0000&nrid=0000014c-2414-d9dd-a5ec-34bc527c0005&nlid=630318
  53. ^ "Officers and Trustees". Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation.
  54. ^ a b c "David Hume Kennerly". IMDB.
  55. ^ "Explorer David Hume Kennerly". Canon USA.
  56. ^ "Getty Images exclusively represents Kennerly's images".
  57. ^ Kennerly, David Hume (27 August 2022). "The First Lady". Kennerly.com. Retrieved 26 April 2023.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • "David Hume Kennerly" 2020-06-08 at the Wayback Machine, Photojournalism and the American Presidency, University of Texas.
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Finding Aid for the David Hume Kennerly Collection at the Center for Creative Photography

david, hume, kennerly, this, biographical, article, written, like, résumé, please, help, improve, revising, neutral, encyclopedic, june, 2020, major, contributor, this, article, appears, have, close, connection, with, subject, require, cleanup, comply, with, w. This biographical article is written like a resume Please help improve it by revising it to be neutral and encyclopedic June 2020 A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message David Hume Kennerly born March 9 1947 is an American photographer He won the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography for his portfolio of photographs of the Vietnam War Cambodia East Pakistani refugees near Calcutta and the Ali Frazier fight in Madison Square Garden 1 He has photographed every American president since Lyndon B Johnson He is the first presidential scholar at the University of Arizona 2 David Hume KennerlyDavid Hume Kennerly speaks at opening of WAR Photography exhibition at the Annenberg Space for Photography in Century CityChief Official White House PhotographerIn office August 10 1974 January 20 1977PresidentGerald FordPreceded byOliver F AtkinsSucceeded byMichael Evans 1981 Personal detailsBorn 1947 03 09 March 9 1947 age 77 Roseburg Oregon U S SpousesSusan Allwardt m 1967 div 1969 wbr Mel Harris m 1983 div 1988 wbr Carol Huston m 1989 div 1992 wbr Rebecca Soladay m 1994 wbr Children3Residence s Los Angeles California U S EducationWest Linn High SchoolOccupationJournalist photographer producerWebsitekennerly wbr com Contents 1 Early life 2 Professional life 2 1 Personal life 2 2 Accomplishments 2 3 Selected honors and awards 2 4 Selected exhibitions 3 Works 3 1 Photographs 3 2 Books 4 Cultural depictions 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editKennerly is the son of O A Tunney Kennerly 3 a traveling salesman and Joanne Hume Kennerly 4 His three younger sisters are Jane Chris and the late Mrs Anne Strutzenberg citation needed His interest in photography started when he was only 12 and his career began in Roseburg where his first published picture was in the high school newspaper The Orange R in 1962 5 Kennerly graduated from West Linn High School in West Linn Oregon in 1965 6 He briefly attended Portland State College but left at 19 to become a staff photographer for The Oregon Journal 7 In 1967 he entered the Oregon National Guard 8 and was sent to Fort Leonard Wood Missouri for basic training and then advanced training at Fort Benjamin Harrison Indiana After completing six months of active duty in the US Army he was hired as staff photographer by The Oregonian 9 During his early career in Portland he photographed some major personalities including Miles Davis Igor Stravinsky Senator Robert F Kennedy the Rolling Stones and the Supremes 10 The encounter with Senator Kennedy gave him the determination to become a national political photographer 11 Professional life editIn late 1967 he moved to Los Angeles to become a staff photographer for United Press International UPI On June 5 1968 he took some of the last photos of Senator Robert F Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel as he declared victory in the California presidential primary 12 Moments later Kennedy was gunned down by the assassin Sirhan Sirhan That night Kennerly also took a picture of Ethel Kennedy in the back of an ambulance 13 The following year 1969 Kennerly moved to New York for UPI where among many other assignments he photographed the Miracle New York Mets winning the 1969 World Series 14 In early 1970 he was transferred to the Washington D C bureau of UPI At age 23 he took his first ride on Air Force One with President Nixon as a member of the traveling press pool However Kennerly believed he was missing out on the biggest story of his generation the Vietnam War He said I felt like that scene in Mr Roberts where Henry Fonda an officer on a supply ship watched the destroyers sail into battle while he was stuck in some South Pacific backwater port 15 Kennerly was sent to Saigon in early 1971 as a combat photographer for UPI Unbeknownst to Kennerly UPI photo editor Larry DeSantis started a portfolio of his favorite Kennerly photographs of the year beginning with the Ali Frazier fight photo that ran on the front page of The New York Times on March 9 1971 16 DeSantis submitted that photograph along with images of the Vietnam and Cambodia wars and refugees escaping from East Pakistan into India to the Pulitzer Prize Board for consideration It was only when the winners were announced that Kennerly who was still in Vietnam learned he had been awarded the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography 17 The committee noted that he specialized in pictures that capture the loneliness and desolation of war 18 Kennerly became the photo bureau chief for UPI in Southeast Asia but still spent most of his time in the field covering combat operations In September 1972 he was one of three Americans to travel to the People s Republic of China to cover the state visit of Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka 19 While still in Vietnam he joined Life in November 1972 as a contract photographer After the classic picture magazine folded a few weeks later Kennerly stayed on as a contract photographer for Time Among the many stories he covered for them while still in Asia was the last American prisoner of war release in Hanoi March 30 1973 20 Kennerly returned to the United States in the summer of 1973 for Time right in the middle of the Watergate story He photographed the resignation of Vice President Spiro Agnew 21 and the selection of Minority Leader Gerald R Ford R MI as Agnew s replacement Kennerly s first Time cover was of Congressman Ford a photo he took the day before Nixon selected Ford and it was also Ford s first appearance on the front of Time 22 That session with Ford led to a close personal relationship with him and his family After Nixon resigned the presidency on August 9 1974 the new president selected him to be his Chief Official White House Photographer 23 Kennerly was only the third civilian to ever have that position before him was President Lyndon B Johnson s photographer Yoichi Okamoto and Nixon s photographer Oliver F Atkins citation needed Kennerly photographed major meetings events and trips during President Ford s tenure in office He also arranged unique access for photographic colleagues from the magazines newspapers and wire service during that period More than 50 photographers were granted exclusives with President Ford 24 His staff consisted of four other photographers who divided coverage of the First Lady and Vice President as well as presidential duties He also directed the White House photo lab that was run by the military as part of the White House Communications Agency Kennerly s White House photographs and negatives are physically housed at the Gerald R Ford Presidential Library in Ann Arbor Michigan 25 on the campus of Ford s alma mater the University of Michigan Many of his photos are also on display at the Gerald R Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids Michigan In late March 1975 Kennerly accompanied U S Army Chief of Staff General Frederick Weyand who had been dispatched on a presidential mission to South Vietnam to assess what was becoming a rapidly deteriorating military situation The president privately told Kennerly he wanted his view of what was happening 26 In his autobiography Ford wrote I knew David wouldn t try to give me any propaganda about enemy body counts or light at the end of the tunnel He had been shot at many times by the North Vietnamese As an American he felt ashamed that we weren t doing more to help a loyal ally and he thought that once I saw the photographs he took of the suffering there I would have a better feel for what we had to do 27 Kennerly flew around the country escaped from Nha Trang before it fell to the advancing communists was shot at by retreating South Vietnamese soldiers at Cam Ranh Bay and landed under fire in Phnom Penh Cambodia for a quick visit and assessment of the situation When he returned from the trip both Weyand s and Kennerly s assessments were bleak The President ordered that Kennerly s stark black and white photos of the tragedy be put up in the halls of the West Wing of the White House to remind the staff just how bad things were Saigon fell a month later Before the fall Ford had ordered the evacuation of the last Americans and many Vietnamese who had been working for the United States The photos that Kennerly took on that mission helped convince Ford to open the doors to allow tens of thousands of other Vietnamese refugees into the country 28 The day before the Fords were turning over the keys to the White House to incoming President Jimmy Carter Kennerly accompanied Betty Ford around the West Wing as she said goodbyes to the staff They walked by the empty Cabinet Room and a mischievous look came across her face I ve always wanted to dance on the Cabinet Room table she said The former Martha Graham dancer kicked off her shoes jumped up on the middle of the table and struck a pose The photo was published for the first time 15 years after he took it in Kennerly s book Photo Op 29 During the Carter presidency there was no official White House photographer in part because Carter did not like Kennerly s high public profile during Ford s administration 30 31 After the White House Kennerly went back on contract for Time magazine where he covered some of the biggest stories of the 1970s and 1980s for them Egyptian President Anwar Sadat s trip to Israel 32 the horror of Jonestown 33 exclusive photos of President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev s first meeting in Geneva in 1985 34 the Fireside Summit and many other stories around the world When Life made a brief comeback for Desert Storm in 1991 he shot an inside story on Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell called Men of War 35 In 1996 Kennerly became a contributing editor for Newsweek 36 where he produced inside stories on President Bill Clinton 37 Senator Bob Dole the impeachment hearings special prosecutor Kenneth Starr the 2000 elections the 9 11 attacks on the Pentagon and other top stories Kennerly also had a contract with John F Kennedy Jr s magazine George While still working for Newsweek Kennerly was assigned to cover the 2000 presidential election campaigns initially covering the candidacy of Senator John McCain until his withdrawal on March 9 2000 On election night November 7 Kennerly was at the Governor s Mansion in Austin with Governor George W Bush after Vice President Al Gore first conceded the election and later recanted 38 Kennerly has covered every presidential campaign from 1968 through 2020 with the exception of 1972 when he was in Vietnam 39 Throughout his journalism career Kennerly has photographed more than 35 covers for Time and Newsweek and covered assignments in over 130 countries 39 Kennerly was a fellow in the American Film Institute directing program from 1984 to 1986 He was nominated for a Primetime Emmy as executive producer of NBC s The Taking of Flight 847 and was the writer and executive producer of a two hour NBC pilot Shooter starring Helen Hunt based on his Vietnam experiences Shooter won the Emmy for Outstanding Cinematography 40 He was executive producer of the Academy Award short listed documentary Portraits of a Lady for HBO directed by Neil Leifer and starring former Justice of the Supreme Court Sandra Day O Connor 41 In 2013 Kennerly collaborated with Emmy Award winning filmmakers Gedeon Naudet Jules Naudet and producer Chris Whipple on a documentary The Presidents Gatekeepers a four hour Discovery Channel documentary about the White House chiefs of staff The team joined forces again in 2015 to produce The Spymasters a documentary for CBS Showtime about the directors of the CIA 41 In 2016 Kennerly covered the presidential election for CNN and took an exclusive of President elect Donald Trump for the cover of their book Unprecedented Trump tweeted that it was the worst cover photo of me even though he had told Kennerly he liked it when he saw it in the back of the camera during the shoot 42 Kennerly is a frequent public speaker and has appeared at events such as TEDx 43 RootsTech 44 the University of Arizona and a multitude of corporate events 45 46 In addition to his photojournalism work Kennerly has also worked as a corporate photographer and for the last ten years his main client has been Bank of America 39 In 2010 Kennerly photographed a campaign for the Girl Scouts of the USA that included new images for the outside of the Girl Scout cookie boxes pictures that endured for more than ten years In October 2018 University of Arizona President Robert C Robbins named Kennerly as the university s first presidential scholar The images captured by David Hume Kennerly document some of the most important moments in history over the past 60 years and they have changed how several generations have viewed the world We are honored to have David share his experience with our students and community 2 The following year UA s Center for Creative Photography CCP announced the acquisition of the David Hume Kennerly Archive which features more than one million images prints objects memorabilia correspondence and documents dating back to 1957 47 In announcing the acquisition CCP director Anne Breckenridge Barrett said Adding the Kennerly Archive to our collection allows the Center to connect the relevance of Kennerly s work to the photographic legacies we house It is a critical contribution to the Center s commitment to expanding the understanding of the role photography plays in today s society 48 The acquisition highlights the decades long relationship between Kennerly and Ansel Adams one of the co founders of CCP The two first became acquainted when Kennerly invited Adams to the White House to meet with President Ford in 1975 49 In 1979 Kennerly photographed Adams for the cover of Time 50 the only time a photographer has been featured on the cover of the magazine Personal life edit He was married to Susan Allwardt from 1967 to 1969 actress Mel Harris from 1983 to 1988 actress Carol Huston from 1989 to 1992 and Rebecca Soladay from 1994 to the present 51 Accomplishments edit nbsp Kennerly at the White House in 1981 Trustee Gerald R Ford Foundation 2008 2024 52 53 Contributing editor NBC News 2006 2008 Contributing editor Der Spiegel 2008 Contributing editor Newsweek 1996 2006 Personal photographer to President Gerald R Ford 1974 1977 National program chair for Washington Mutual s Home of the Free Student Photojournalism Project Contributing correspondent ABC s Good Morning America Sunday 1996 98 Contributing photographer George 1996 1999 Executive producer Portraits of a Lady HBO 2011 54 Co executive producer Profiles from the Front Line ABC reality series with Jerry Bruckheimer and Bertram van Munster 2003 Executive producer and writer Shooter NBC Television movie based on his book about Vietnam combat photographers 1988 Executive producer The Taking of Flight 847 NBC movie 1989 American Film Institute directing fellow 1984 1985 Contract photographer Time 1973 1974 1977 1990 Contributing photographer Life 1972 1993 1996 Staff photographer United Press International 1967 72 Staff photographer The Oregon Journal 1966 1967 Staff photographer The Oregonian 1967 Producer Discovery Channel s four hour documentary The Presidents Gatekeepers about the White House chiefs of staff 2014 54 Executive producer CBS Showtime documentary The Spymasters CIA in the Crosshairs 2015 54 Contributing photographer Politico Magazine 2015 2016 Member Canon Explorer of Light program 1995 present 55 Contributing photographer CNN 2016 election Selected honors and awards edit Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography 1972 Five prizes in the 2001 and 2003 White House Press Photographer s contest Named one of the top 50 top Washington journalists in the March 2001 issue of The Washingtonian the only photographer on the list Photo Media magazine s 2007 Photographer of the Year 1997 President s Award for Excellence in Journalism from the Greater Los Angeles Press Club 2015 Lucie Award for Achievement in Photojournalism 1989 Emmy nomination for Outstanding Drama as executive producer of NBC s The Taking of Flight 847 The Uli Derickson Story Overseas Press Club Award for Best Photographic Reporting from Abroad Olivier Rebbot award 1986 1976 World Press Photo contest two first place prizes for Cambodian coverage National Press Photographers Association contest first place Honorary Doctorate Lake Erie College 2015 Named One of the 100 Most Important People in Photography by American Photo magazine Selected exhibitions edit Extraordinary Circumstances various locations 2008 Savannah College of Art and Design Lacoste France 2007 Retrospective University of Southern California s Annenberg School for Communication 2006 2007 University of Texas at Austin permanent Photo du Jour exhibition Houston Museum of Fine Arts 2004 Photo du Jour exhibition Smithsonian Institution s Arts and Industries Building 2002 Photo du Jour exhibition New York Historical Society from 2002 2003 Visa Pour L Image Perpignan France 2000 Retrospective U S Capitol Cannon Building Rotunda 1995 Photo Op exhibition Portland Art Museum Portland Oregon 1995 Photo Op exhibition The Harry Lunn Gallery 1979 Moderator World Press Photo Moderated conversation among 2006 award winners USC 2007 Guest lecturer Savannah College of Art and Design Lacoste France 2007 Keynote speaker Eddie Adams Workshop 2000 present 56 Works editPhotographs edit Kennerly s photographs include nbsp President Ford and his golden retriever Liberty 1974 nbsp First Lady Betty Ford dances on the Cabinet room table in the White House 1977 nbsp President Ford and Leonid Brezhnev 1974 nbsp Billy Preston George Harrison Gerald Ford Ravi Shankar 1974 nbsp CIA Director George H W Bush 1976 nbsp President and Mrs Ford as they watch the presidential election returns 1976 Books edit Kennerly has authored six books Shooter Newsweek books 1979 Photo Op A Pulitzer Prize Winning Photographer Covers Events That Shaped Our Times University of Texas Press 1995 ISBN 0 292 74323 8 Sein Off The Final Days of Seinfeld HarperCollins 1998 Photo du Jour A Picture a Day Journey through the First Year of the New Millennium University of Texas Press 2003 Extraordinary Circumstances The Presidency of Gerald R Ford The University of Texas Center for American History 2007 On the iPhone Secrets and Tips from a Pulitzer Prize winning Photographer Goff Books 2014 Kennerly has been a major contributor to the following Unprecedented The Election That Changed Everything CNN 2017 Barack Obama The Official Inaugural Book A Day in the Life book projects America Spain the Soviet Union The People s Republic of China the United States Armed Forces HollywoodCultural depictions editKennerly was portrayed in the Showtime television series The First Lady by Cody Pressley depicting the scene where he shot the photos of First Lady Betty Ford on the Cabinet Room table 57 References edit Dave Kennerly of United Press International Pulitzer Retrieved 2020 01 24 a b Pulitzer Prize Winning Photographer Named UA Presidential Scholar University of Arizona 2018 10 02 Retrieved 2020 01 24 Twitter Post by David Hume Kennerly Twitter Anne Kennerly Strutzenberg Obituary Oregon Live Kennery David 1979 Shooter p 10 ISBN 0 88225 265 8 Oregon native David Hume Kennerly captured history as a presidential photographer The Oregonian 2010 11 23 Retrieved 2020 05 30 David Hume Kennerly Pulitzer Retrieved 2020 05 30 Kennery David 1979 Shooter p 18 ISBN 0 88225 265 8 Kennery David 1979 Shooter p 19 ISBN 0 88225 265 8 Cultural Icons Center for Creative Photography 2016 07 01 A witness to history 50 years of presidential politics CNN 2016 07 01 Campaign Trail Center for Creative Photography Retrieved December 26 2022 Kennery David 1979 Shooter p 29 ISBN 0 88225 265 8 Kennery David 1979 Shooter p 30 ISBN 0 88225 265 8 David Hume Kennerly This Kind Of Career Doesn t Happen Anymore Samys Camera Photo Blog 2017 10 05 Retrieved 2020 05 30 Anderson Dave March 9 1971 Frazier Outpoints Ali and Keeps Title The New York Times Retrieved 2020 05 30 Kennery David 1979 Shooter p 69 ISBN 0 88225 265 8 Imagine my surprise March 9 1971 Retrieved 2020 05 30 Kennery David 1995 Photo Op p 44 Kennery David 1995 Photo Op p 49 Trump Falls Under the Shadow of Spiro Agnew August 7 2017 Retrieved 2020 05 30 Gerald Ford October 22 1973 Retrieved 2020 05 30 A witness to history 50 years of presidential politics July 1 2016 Retrieved 2020 05 30 Worth Reposting Facebook Archived from the original on 2022 02 26 Trustee David Kennerly Gerald R Ford Presidential Foundation Kennery David 1979 Shooter ISBN 0 88225 265 8 Ford Gerald 1979 A Time to Heal p 251 ISBN 0060112972 Ford Gerald R 1979 A Time to Heal p 253 Kennerly David Hume 1995 Photo Op p 103 Carter Says He ll Do Without A Personal Photographer 1977 p 9 Hot Shot Los Angeles Times How Jimmy Carter Brokered a Hard Won Peace Deal Between Israel and Egypt History Jonestown a Personal Recollection Kennerly President Ronald Reagan The University of Texas at Austin Life February 25 1991 Original Life Magazines Hot Shot Los Angeles Times Bill Clinton Admonishes Trump Over Impeachment Behavior Newsweek Election 2000 Over Time Apple Podcasts a b c About David Hume Kennerly Kennerly Retrieved 9 August 2020 Shooter IMDB a b David Hume Kennerly IMDB Donald Trump Blasts CNN Book Cover Portrait He Liked Back When It Was Shot Deadline Telling the Story in 1 60th of a Second David Hume Kennerly at TEDxBend Youtube Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Meet keynote Speaker David Hume Kennerly Rootstech Presentation By David Hume Kennerly University of Arizona Documenting History Through Photography C SPAN David Hume Kennerly Witness to History At the UA Old Main Building University of Arizona Retrieved 9 August 2020 Announcing the David Hume Kennerly Archive Center for Creative Photography A Photojournalist s Life in Pictures Center for Creative Photography Ansel Adams Time 3 September 1979 Brennan E A Clarage E C Topping S 1999 Who s who of Pulitzer Prize Winners Oryx Press p 206 ISBN 978 1 57356 111 2 Retrieved 2020 06 23 https www politico com f id 0000018e c50a d904 afbe d59a1d1a0000 amp nname playbook amp nid 0000014f 1646 d88f a1cf 5f46b7bd0000 amp nrid 0000014c 2414 d9dd a5ec 34bc527c0005 amp nlid 630318 Officers and Trustees Gerald R Ford Presidential Foundation a b c David Hume Kennerly IMDB Explorer David Hume Kennerly Canon USA Getty Images exclusively represents Kennerly s images Kennerly David Hume 27 August 2022 The First Lady Kennerly com Retrieved 26 April 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to David Hume Kennerly Official website David Hume Kennerly Archived 2020 06 08 at the Wayback Machine Photojournalism and the American Presidency University of Texas Appearances on C SPAN Finding Aid for the David Hume Kennerly Collection at the Center for Creative Photography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Hume Kennerly amp oldid 1218220913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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