Leo Friedman was born in Brooklyn in 1919. His father wanted him to go to design school,
but Friedman chose the stage, appearing with
Kitty Carlisle
in
White Horse Inn in 1936. In the late '30s, he got a job with producer
Mike Todd. At one point, Todd, who was producing
some attractions for the
New York World's Fair, shoved a camera in Friedman's hands and told him to take some pictures. During
World War II, Friedman served as a photographer in the
Army Signal Corps in Europe.
After the war, he befriended stripper
Gypsy Rose Lee and shot her midnight wedding
to actor
Alexander Kirkland.
photo by Leo Friedman
photo by Leo Friedman
photo by Leo Friedman
. . . Jane Fonda in
There Was a
Little Girl, as well as what he called “the first undress rehearsal” of
the nude musical
Oh! Calcutta! and glimpses of the backstage romance
of
Elizabeth Taylor and
Richard Burton during
Hamlet.
haircut,
Toronto - 1964
photo by Leo Friedman
In 1954, Friedman and
Joseph Abeles, a portrait photographer, became partners in a studio at 351 West 54th Street. “The
way it worked, Abeles would be the portrait photographer, if you
wanted studio shots,” recalled
Sol Jacobson, 96, a press agent
who often hired the two to shoot his shows. “You wanted scene shots, Leo
took them.”
Audrey Hepburn
photo by Leo Friedman
The two split acrimoniously, dissolving their Friedman-Abeles
partnership around 1970, and Friedman claims that a large portion of
his work was misappropriated by Abeles and donated to the
New York Public Library’s performing arts collection at
Lincoln Center,
as Abeles’s own.
Afterwards, Friedman decided to give his archive to New York
Public Library's performing arts as well. The
contribution led to an extended disagreement between Friedman and the
library. According to Eric Friedman, Friedman's son, the library failed
to credit Mr. Friedman with any of the Friedman photos they send out and
collect monies on. Now the photos are in limbo, largely uncatalogued, caught in a dispute between the photographer and the Library.
At stake is an extraordinary theater archive: about 4,580 prints and
2,655
contact sheets representing 168 stage productions from the 1950s
and ’60s, the golden age of the Broadway musical.
Citing
library policy, Scher declined to allow a reporter to view
the two collections in the stacks. When several sample boxes of
photographs in both collections were pulled out and provided for
examination, notations on the back of many of the pictures showed that
the original credit to the Friedman-Abeles studio had been scratched out
and replaced with a label solely crediting “Joseph Abeles Studio.” He
defended the library’s practice of charging fees for reproduction
rights to the pictures as an arrangement “Mr. Friedman was comfortable
with.”
photo by Leo Friedman
But in an interview on a visit to New York from his home in Las
Vegas, Mr. Friedman, then 89 and a cancer survivor, said he was most
certainly not comfortable with that, not without being paid, and, in
fact, was quite unhappy. “They’re waiting for me to die,” he said.
Friedman died of complications from pneumonia at his home in
Las Vegas on December 2, 2011. He was 92
years old.