Huynh Cong Ut
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Huynh Cong Út, also known as Nick Ut (born March 29, 1951) is a photographer for the Associated Press (AP) who works out of Los Angeles. Perhaps his best known photo is the Pulitzer Prize-winning picture of Phan Thị Kim Phúc, who was photographed as a naked 9 year old girl running toward the camera to flee a napalm attack near Trang Bang during the Vietnam War.
Born in Long An, Vietnam, Ut began to take photographs for the Associated Press when he was 16, just after his older brother Huynh Thanh My, another AP photographer, was killed in Vietnam.
Before delivering his film with the Kim Phuc photo, he took her to the hospital. Horst Faas ordered the photo transmitted despite the AP bureau's debate about transmitting a naked girl's photo over the wire.
He was wounded three times in Vietnam. Ut has since worked for the Associated Press in Tokyo, South Korea, and Hanoi and still maintains contact with Kim Phuc, who now resides in Canada.
Recently released audio tapes of then-president Richard Nixon in conversation with his chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, show that Nixon doubted the veracity of the photograph, musing whether it may have been "fixed."[link] Following the release of this tape, Ut commented:
- "Even though it has become one of the most memorable images of the twentieth century, President Nixon once doubted the authenticity of my photograph when he saw it in the papers on June 12, 1972.... The picture for me and unquestionably for many others could not have been more real. The photo was as authentic as the Vietnam war itself. The horror of the Vietnam war recorded by me did not have to be fixed. That terrified little girl is still alive today and has become an eloquent testimony to the authenticity of that photo. That moment thirty years ago will be one Kim Phuc and I will never forget. It has ultimately changed both our lives" (from program booklet for Humanist Art/Symbolic Sites: An Art Forum for the 21st Century).
External links
- http://www.digitaljournalist.org/issue0008/ng6.htm
- http://www.asiansinamerica.org/museum/1003_museum.html
- http://www.watermargin.com/vietret/vietret4.html
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