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Photographer Eddie Adams, photographed at the
Republican (GOP) National Convention in Houston, Texas in August
1992. (Reuters) |
American photojournalist Eddie Adams, whose searing picture of the
execution of a communist guerrilla during the Vietnam War defined his
career, died on Sunday aged 71, U.S. media reported.
Adams, who died at his New York home of Lou Gehrig's disease, won a
Pulitzer Prize for his 1968 photograph of a South Vietnamese colonel
executing a communist North Vietnamese Vietcong prisoner in a Saigon
street.
One of the most memorable images of the Vietnam War, Adams' photo for
the Associated Press showed the exact moment when the bullet entered the
prisoner's head and has been called one of the most shocking and moving
pieces of war photography.
Adams' photographs graced the covers and front pages of magazines and
newspapers around the world, including Time, Newsweek, Life, Paris Match,
Vogue, Stern and The New York Times, and he won numerous awards for his
work.
Born in New Kensington, Pennsylvania, Adams served as a Marine Corps
combat photographer in the Korean War, worked for the AP between 1962-72
and 1976-80, and for Time-Life among other publications.
AP President and CEO Tom Curley said: "Eddie Adams was an enormous
talent and an inspiration to generations of AP photographers and staffers.
His courage and creativity left a mark that will live forever," AP
reported.
(Agencies) |