From: News Times
This 2009 photo taken by R. David Marks and released courtesy of the Monroe Gallery shows photographer Bill Eppridge. |
The violence and heroism of Vietnam; Latin American revolutions; the aftermath of murder during the Civil Rights movement; frolicking in the mud at Woodstock; the mop-topped Beatles; even New York drug abusers were subjects for his prolific work.
But it was Eppridge's charming personality and tenacious professionalism that won him access behind the scenes, from inside Kennedy's ill-fated presidential campaign to the Beatles' antic residency at New York's Plaza Hotel.
Like that June night in a California hotel when an assassin's bullets tore through Kennedy, Eppridge kept clicking the shutter of his Nikon cameras, piling up images in a career that stretched from his Virginia childhood to his recent hospitalization.
Eppridge, 75, of New Milford, died Thursday morning at Danbury Hospital after a brief illness, just months before the scheduled release of a collection of previously unpublished photographs, "The Beatles: Six Days That Changed the World. February, 1964."
He is survived by his wife, Adrienne Aurichio.
See more of his work here!
Shirtless man in Levi Strauss jeans lying on motorcycle seat at Woodstock music festival. Photo: Bill Eppridge, Time & Life Pictures/Getty Image |
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