Personal Photographer Remembers Michael

GreenEyes

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Michael Jackson's Personal Photographer Remembers How They Met

By Anna Hiatt
June 29, 2014


Harrison Funk remembers being captivated by Michael Jackson's eyes. “Michael had the most beautiful eyes I’ve ever photographed," he told me recently. "They were large. They were expressive. They were deep. I don't mean that physically. It was a picture into his soul. I think Michael, he knew in every picture what he wanted to convey. Even when he was completely natural he could convey a message to the camera."

Funk began shooting Michael in the early 1980s and continued on and off until his death five years ago on June 25, 2009. Funk was in his twenties when he made his first shot of Michael, before the singer launched his solo career. Funk had been invited to a party at New York City's Tavern on the Green, and he found himself shooting pictures of Michael and the rest of the Jackson family backstage. Shortly afterward, Funk got a call from Michael's publicist, inviting him to Los Angeles. Without promise of a job or even reimbursement, Funk got on the plane.

He remembers the day that he and Michael connected—really connected—for the first time. Tito Jackson's kids were playing in a softball game, and while a couple of the brothers hung out on the sidelines, Michael sat by himself in a parked car down the block. When he saw Funk approach, Michael told him to get in and the two sat talking about “everything in the world, and baseball.”

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Harrison Funk

"Michael used to do something when he wanted the attention of the camera. He would practice his moves. Like when he'd go ‘hee hee,’ and I could tell that was the moment to pick up my camera and shoot."

Funk chronicled Jackson's career, starting with the Jacksons' Victory Tour in 1984 and Michael's first solo tour, Bad (1987-89). “He taught me so much about observing, seeing the moment and capturing the moment," Funk said. "He taught me so much about perfection and Michael was a perfectionist. He wanted everything to be just so, even when it was spontaneous, it was just so. That was part of his brilliance, the ability to make that happen without any effort."

Access and trust are key to making documentary images, especially with publicity-conscious celebrities. “I was just myself," Funk said. "There was no pretense. I am who I am. I was open, and they knew that no picture would leave my hands without approval. And it got to the point to the middle of the tour where I was able to approve images. They trusted me."

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Harrison Funk

"I think that image represents a slice of the 80s and the culture of the 80s that's unbelievable. Here you have the first African American man running for president, Jesse, and the most famous human being alive, and Jesse is giving him advice."

Funk remembers vividly the day he photographed Jesse Jackson and Michael Jackson. Jesse was running for president, and he was planning to attend an NAACP convention the candidate near a location where Michael would be performing. The candidate asked for a meeting with the pop star to talk about how few black workers the pop star had on his crew.

Funk and Jesse Jackson's personal photographer, Bruce Talamon, sat on the floor shooting as the two Jacksons talked, and suddenly Jesse turned and dismissed his photographer. “’Alright, photo op's over.' Michael turns to me and says, ‘Harrison, stay.’” Turning back to Jesse, Michael said, 'My photographer shoots everything.'”

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Harrison Funk

"He got to meet Kermit!"

Musicians started restricting photographic access in the 80s, Funk remembers. “They didn't want to be photographed snorting a pound of coke." But Michael Jackson and his family were different, and to them, Funk was a friend. They welcomed him onto the tour and into their lives.

“He liked to play practical jokes, and he liked to have fun. He was a big kid. There was one food fight where I wore a bucket of shrimp...after they poured it all over me,” Funk said.
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Harrison Funk

This week, in Los Angeles, is Michael week, Funk said, and he’s been documenting the gathering crowds who considered Michael Jackson a prophet. Funk still grieves for his friend, but quietly, away from the fans who gather to pay tribute.

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/118407/michael-jackson-photographer-harrison-funk-remembers
 
“Michael had the most beautiful eyes I’ve ever photographed," he told me recently. "They were large. They were expressive. They were deep. I don't mean that physically.

WHO-CAN-RESIST-THESE-EYES-michael-jackson-32830345-600-618.jpg
 
Paris78;4025189 said:
“Michael had the most beautiful eyes I’ve ever photographed," he told me recently. "They were large. They were expressive.
They were deep. I don't mean that physically."

WHO-CAN-RESIST-THESE-EYES-michael-jackson-32830345-600-618.jpg
Thanks for the picture Paris. Hope this one stays a bit longer. ;)
so_close_to_kiss_him_by_countrygirl16mj-d5qa1rp.jpg


Thanks for the post GreenEyes.
Great article about a great photographer with a really great subject.
 
Harrison Funk...Cool .Yeah he has always been cool....And deep eyes I agree its a beautiful thing to say. :( Aww yeah :) I loved when Michael met the Kermit :( :) :angel::cry:
Thanks for posting !
 
Silouette;4025204 said:
Thanks for the picture Paris. Hope this one stays a bit longer. ;)
so_close_to_kiss_him_by_countrygirl16mj-d5qa1rp.jpg


Thanks for the post GreenEyes.
Great article about a great photographer with a really great subject.

Harrison Funk remembers being captivated by Michael Jackson's eyes. “Michael had the most beautiful eyes I’ve ever photographed," he told me recently. "They were large. They were expressive. They were deep. I don't mean that physically. It was a picture into his soul. I think Michael, he knew in every picture what he wanted to convey. Even when he was completely natural he could convey a message to the camera." :give_heart:
 
http://www.finditinfondren.com/2014/06/25/remember-emerson-recalls-mj-connection/

Remember: Emerson on The King of Pop

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Derek with Michael in 1984 | Image: Sam Emerson

Growing up in Beverly Hills, California, Derek Emerson lead a charmed life.

“It was nice to always have an all-access pass,” he laughs.

His father, photographer Sam Emerson, worked the rock music scene where Derek met the likes of Stevie Ray Vaughn, Cheap Trick, Fleetwood Mac, The Police, Billy Idol and Elton John. The list, he says, “Goes on and on.”

But there was that one performer, one icon, that Derek fondly recalls. On the fifth anniversary of his untimely death, Derek reminisces about Michael Jackson.

Derek’s dad was Michael’s personal still photographer from 1980 to 1993. He shot the album cover for Bad, worked on the ‘Beat It,’ ‘Billie Jean,’ ‘Bad’ and ‘Smooth Criminal’ videos and traveled the world – three times over – with the King of Pop. “Any photos released from ’82 to ’94 were mostly my dad’s,” Derek explains.

At the age of 12, Derek met a then 24 year-old Michael for the first time. It was in Michael’s house on Hazlehurst – before Neverland Ranch – that Sam was shooting photos of Michael’s gloves, nearly a dozen of them. “I was playing Frogger and, all of a sudden, I felt this weight on my back,” Derek recounts. “It was Michael’s pet snake, Muscles. He set it there and just started laughing. He was a little prankster.” That was the same day he says Michael took him and Quincy Jones’ daughter for a golf cart ride.

When Sam was working, Derek was always welcome to hang out. He’d play video games and Michael would join him on breaks. “I remember going to Neverland, to the candy shop, riding rides and talking about my cycling or school,” Derek says. “There was a train around the property and big forts with water cannons. I’d be playing and he’d come play, too. It really was like hanging out with another kid who just didn’t want to grow up.”

Derek recalls Michael’s sense of humor. “I remember one time in New Orleans, probably in ’84, where we were in the hotel after a show. Sugar Ray Leonard and Stevie Wonder were hanging out and we wanted to pick up something to eat. Stevie said, ‘Give me the keys and I’ll drive.’ Michael thought that was so funny.”
"It was always Michael's running joke, that he didn't want to be shorter than me in the photo," says 6'5" Derek. "So I was squatting down in this picture." | Image: Sam Emerson
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“It was always Michael’s running joke, that he didn’t want to be shorter than me in the photo,” says 6’5″ Derek. “So I was squatting down in this picture.” | Image: Sam Emerson

Thanks to his dad’s job and Michael’s tours, Derek saw the world. As Sam’s assistant at 18, Derek would set up lights and sort slides. “My dad was shooting forty rolls of film over a two-hour period,” he recalls. “That was in Tel Aviv, Turkey – and Europe twice, for months at a time. I went to something like 40 plus shows one summer! And I was on the Victory tour with the (Jackson) brothers in 1984.”

“It was a good time to be around, that ten-year time period from ’82 to ’92, when he was the hottest thing in the world,” Derek says. “You’re talking about selling out Wembley Stadium, 70,000 people in seven shows back to back?” Derek chuckles reminiscing about those days. “Not everyone can say that, I guess.”

When news came, just five years ago today, that the King of Pop had died, Derek was water skiing in South Carolina. “I called my dad and just couldn’t believe it,” he says. “I can still see it in my dad’s eyes when you talk about it. That was someone he spent a very long part of his life with. It still chokes him up.”

Derek says it’s still hard to believe Michael is gone. “He was the biggest performer in the world and a super nice guy who treated me well – and respected me enough to know who I was. He always asked about what I had going on in my life. He always remembered me.”

Here’s to remembering Michael…

Chef Derek Emerson and wife Jennifer are owners of Walker’s Drive-In and Local 463.
 
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