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Weegee the Famous (2009)

Amber Films

Weegee the Famous (2009) image
Still from Weegee The Famous, 2009 ©Amber Films

Weegee the Famous (2009)

A 2009 documentary film about 1930s-1950s New York photographer Weegee, his photographic legacy and the making of the Weegee Collection, featuring interviews with Wilma Wilcox and Sid Kaplan.
  • Film and Video
  • Portraits
  • Popular Cultures
  • Historical Documentary
  • International Documentary
  • 2000 – 2010
  • World

Amber Films, 27 minutes, 2009

A documentary film exploring the life and work of the legendary New York photographer Weegee, developed around the Weegee Portfolio, a set of 16" x 20" full negative prints produced in the early 1980s.

The film reflects on Weegee’s iconic street photography and the gritty, nocturnal New York he made famous through his lens. Centring on the creation of the Weegee Collection, it features interviews with Wilma Wilcox, Weegee’s widow and former assistant, and Sid Kaplan, the master printer who collaborated on the project. Together they reveal the thinking behind the prints and their place within Weegee’s legacy. Combining archive imagery, interview and film work, Weegee The Famous is a reflection on authorship, myth and the relationship between legendary photographer and iconic city.

Arthur Fellig was born in Austria in 1899. Coming to the USA in 1909, he ended up in Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Leaving school in 1914 to help support the family, he worked for a time as a street photographer. In 1923 he joined Acme News Services as a darkroom operator. In 1935, he left to work as a freelance photographer.

He acquired the name "Weegee" early on, a reference to the Ouija board and his uncanny ability to arrive quickly at crime scenes – sometimes, even before the police (from 1937, he was the only civilian allowed to install a police radio in his car).

From 1940 to 1944, Weegee worked on a retainer to PM newspaper, free to choose his own stories and making many of his best pictures in this period. 1945 saw an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art and the publication of his best seller Naked City. The following year Weegee’s People was published - opening up on the stories of New York: its streets, its bars and tenements, its crimes, tragedies and entertainments, he helped to shape urban America’s consciousness of itself, his images defining both the myth and reality of the city.

Emerging as a national celebrity, he travelled to Hollywood, lecturing and photographing for Naked Hollywood (1953). He travelled widely and continued to work up until his death in 1968.

© Amber Films

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