sabato 7 maggio 2011

Aria3 > Intervista Ron Galella "Paparazzo Superstar"

Aria3 intervista Ron Galella, il paparazzo più famoso d'America.
L'intervista è parte del Documentario "ITALIANS: Emigrati che hanno fatto la storia"
Ron Galella è il paparazzo più famoso d'America, ha scattato più di 3 milioni di foto di celebrità in 40 anni di carriera, "Ovviamente, senza il loro permesso, Marlon Brando arrivò a rompergli la mascella con un pugno e lui continuò a seguirlo indossando un casco da football." 
Gli scatti di Ron Galella, italo-americano, sono una testimonianza esclusiva dei divi internazionali negli anni '60-'80.
Il premio Oscar Leon Gast ha diretto un documentario "Smash His Camera" presentato al Sundance Film Festival 2010 che racconta la carriera e le avventure del "paparazzo extraordinaire".

About Ron Galella.
Much has been written of Ron Galella. Widely regarded as the most famous and most controversial celebrity photographer in the world—he's been dubbed “Paparazzo Extraordinaire” by Newsweek and “the Godfather of the U.S. paparazzi culture” by Time and Vanity Fair—Galella is clearly willing to take great risks to get the perfect shot. As a result, he has endured two highly publicized court battles with Jacqueline Kennedy-Onassis, a broken jaw at the hands of Marlon Brando, and a serious beating by Richard Burton’s bodyguards before being jailed in Cuernavaca, Mexico. But ultimately, it is his passion for the fine art of photography, coupled with a dedicated do-it-yourself approach to his craft—few artists can claim his level of skill in making their own prints—that sees Ron's body of work exhibited at museums and galleries throughout the world, including the Museum of Modern Art in both New York and San Francisco, the Tate Modern in London, and the Helmut Newton Foundation Museum of Photography in Berlin. Ron's passion for photojournalism has also given rise to many highly acclaimed books including Disco Years (PowerHouse, 2009), which was honored as Best Photography Book of 2006 by The New York Times, and Smash His Camera, a documentary of his life and career by Oscar-winning director, Leon Gast (When We Were Kings, 1996), which premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and received the Grand Jury Award for Directing in the U.S. Documentary category. 
Tantamount to his recognition here at home, the government of Basilicata graciously honored Ron, whose father, Vincenzo Galella, was born in Muro Lucano, by making him an honorary citizen of the Italian region in 2009. Basilicata also opened Ron Galella: Italian Icons, a traveling exhibit of over 70 of Ron’s photos, at Palazzo Lanfranchi’s Carlo Levi Hall in Matera. In conjunction with the opening, Ron launched his most recent title, "Viva l’Italia!" a collection of over 225 images of Italian and Italian-American celebrities from Frank Sinatra to Sophia Loren.
A native New Yorker, Ron served as a United States Air Force photographer during the Korean conflict before attending the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles, where he earned a degree in Photojournalism.