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Dave
Friedman is a world renowned photographer and motion
picture still photographer known for his pictures of
celebrities, cinema, racing and classical ballet.
At 23, the
California
native became the company photographer for Shelby
American from 1962 to 1965, capturing some of the
biggest icons in racing.
When the Shelby Cobra racing program was
terminated, Friedman was hired to work on the Ford Le
Mans Program as an outside contractor in 1966 and
1967.
Wanting
to spread his wings, Friedman was given an opportunity
to work in the motion picture industry in July 1965.
That’s when he was given his first assignment
as an assistant cameraman at 20th Century
Fox. The
choice was not a difficult one for Friedman, whose
father had been in the industry since 1919 and his
mother a silent film actress. His
goal at the time was to become a still photographer,
but at the time, unions had very strict grouping
policies and It was virtually impossible to get work
in that classification and it took about five years to
reach the top grouping. During
his brief career as an assistant cameraman, Friedman
worked on some of the biggest classics in film
history. They
included The
Sound of Music, Doctor Doolittle, The Sand
Pebbles, Butch
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Wild Bunch, Hello
Dolly and
Tora! Tora! Tora!
“I’ve
worked with some of the most talented people in the
film industry. They
taught me to work hard, be professional, watch
everything going on around me, improvise, always get
the shot no matter what, and never to accept second
best,” says Friedman. When
Friedman finally achieved still photographer status in
June 1969, his first assignment was Little Fauss and Big Halsey, a motorcycle racing film starring
Robert Redford and Lauren Hutton.
Over the next two decades, his film resume
swelled and he shot some of celluloid’s biggest
stars, including Steve McQueen, Bruce Lee, Robert
Redford, Ann-Margret, Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty,
Michael Caine, Diane Keaton, Donald Sutherland, Jodie
Foster, Eva Marie Saint, Charles Bronson, Christopher
Reeves, John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, George
Burns, Gene Tierney, Tony Curtis, Jon Voight, Richard
Dreyfuss, Sissy Spacek,
Sylvester Stallone, Goldie Hawn, Jessica Lange,
James Caan, Arnold Schwarzenneger and Sean Penn.
Friedman
was also on the set of many modern-day classics.
They include: Summer
of ’42, Brian’s Song, Day of the
Locust, Enter
The Dragon, Harry
and Walter Go to New York, Carrie,
Grease, Superman, King
Kong, Ice Castles, Butterflies Are
Free, Tom
Horn, The
Hunter, That Championship Season, Stop
Making Sense, The
Falcon and the Snowman, Rambo:
First Blood Part II, Midnight
Run, Rambo III, Rocky IV and The
Running Man.
The
photographer also lent his considerable skills to
television, snapping photos for classic shows such as M*A*S*H,
Happy Days, The Dukes of
Hazzard, Laverne
& Shirley, Julia,
Room 222, Mork & Mindy,
The Ghost &
Mrs. Muir and the epic mini-series The Thorn Birds.
In
1986, Friedman became the first and only Still
Photographer to be voted in to the Motion Picture
Academy of Arts and Sciences. By
the 1990s, the film industry had drastically changed
and Friedman didn’t like what he saw.
He decided to move on to other photographic
challenges such as international endurance racing and
classical ballet, for which his pictures have won
numerous awards. “Looking
back, I realize that I worked with, and learned from,
the very best in all aspects of my photographic career
and for that, I will always be eternally thankful,”
Friedman says.
Dave
has authored or co-authored over 30 books on motor
racing and been published in every major magazine and
newspaper in the world. Dave
Friedman currently resides in Southern California and
has just completed a photo book regarding his
Hollywood
years, called My Life In The Movies. (
Dalton
Watson Fine Books, 2008).
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