Archive for June, 2009

An Unlikely Weapon: Eddie Adams Doc in Theaters

On February 1, 1968, Eddie Adams, an Associated Press photographer who had been covering the war in Vietnam for years, clicked the shutter on his 35-millimeter camera during the chaos of the Tet Offensive on the streets of Saigon. In one-five-hundredths of a second Adams, a 35-year-old former Marine, made history.

His photograph of Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, the chief of the South Vietnamese national police, summarily executing a Viet Cong suspect with a bullet to the head became one of a handful of photographs of the 20th century that, many believe, changed history.

“When I saw the picture, I was not impressed, and I’m still not impressed,” Adams, who died of Lou Gehrig’s Disease at age 71 in 2004, says in the excellent new documentary An Unlikely Weapon: The Eddie Adams Story. “It was just a news picture. I still don’t understand why it was so important.”

The film is opening at the Starz Theatre in Denver on July 3, followed the next week by a run at the Laemmle’s Music Hall 3 in Beverly Hills and the Regency South Coast Village in Santa Ana, Calif. The film will also be in theaters in July in Chicago and Palm Springs, and goes nationwide later this summer. For a list of openings, go to the doc’s web site

Adams, an iconoclast who never failed to speak his mind, goes on in the documentary to say how the light was all wrong in the photo and how the composition was not up to his standards. While that may have been true, that image could not have been more impressive if you measure its impact on the future of the American war in Vietnam.

The startling photo, which won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography in 1969, “brought home the brutality of the war” to the American people in a new and disturbing way, as former NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw puts it in the movie. The reaction to the photo also was an important factor in the Johnson administration’s decision to put the brakes on the war effort and begin disengaging the United States from the war that Johnson had greatly escalated four years earlier.

As The New York Times noted in Adams’ obituary: “Although there was little doubt that the captive [in Adam’s photo] was indeed a Vietcong infiltrator, his seemingly impromptu execution shocked millions around the world when the photograph was first published and it galvanized a growing antiwar sentiment in the United States.” The photo, The Times added, “reinforced a widespread belief that the South Vietnamese and American military were doing more harm than good in trying to win the war against an indigenous insurgency and the North Vietnamese army that sponsored it.”

That’s not how Adams saw it, however. “Two people’s lives were destroyed that day,” he tells cinematographer Isaac Hagy’s camera in the documentary—the VC suspect, that is, along with General Loan because he was all but branded a war criminal by the court of public opinion for the rest of his days.

Eddie Adams “was never proud of the picture,” his son August says in the documentary. “It haunted him for the rest of his life.”

Not that Eddie Adams stayed home and brooded about the picture. He regretted the firestorm of vitriol that came down on Gen. Loan, who, Adams said, told him afterward that he killed the man because the VC “killed many of my men and your people.” Eddie Adams, who was a Marine combat photographer in the Korean War, went on to become one of the world’s top photojournalists. He specialized in two very different things: portraits of the rich and famous and on-the-spot combat photographs.

During his 45-year career, as the film (produced and directed by Susan Morgan Cooper, co-produced by Cindy Lou Adkins and edited by Hagy) shows, Adams covered thirteen wars and won hundreds of photojournalism awards while working for AP, Time, and Parade. Adams also set up a state-of-the art photography studio in New York City where he did his celebrity portraits. He shot covers for Life, Time, Penthouse and Parade, including brilliant images of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Clint Eastwood, Mother Teresa, Pope John Paul, Bette Davis, Anwar Sadat, and Louis Armstrong.

In 1977, Adams was so moved by the plight of the thousands of Vietnamese who were fleeing their country by boat that he managed to get on board an overcrowded, thirty-foot vessel, bringing with him bags of rice and a large supply of gasoline. He stayed on board, taking a series of evocative photos, many of them of children. Those images were instrumental in Congress passing legislation allowing those “boat people” into the United States. “It was the only good thing I did in my life,” Adams says in his singularly blunt way, “but I’m not a good guy.”

The filmmakers made effective use of extensive interviews with Adams, many of his images, footage from the Vietnam War, and comments from his colleagues, many of who were Vietnam War photographers or correspondents. That list includes big network broadcasters Tom Brokaw, Morley Safer, the late Peter Jennings, and Bob Schieffer; photojournalists David Hume Kennerly, Nick Ut, and Gordon Parks; former Vietnam War newspaper correspondents Peter Arnett, George Esper, and Bill Eppridge; as well as Walter Anderson, the Vietnam veteran and former editor of Parade magazine.

Nick Ut offers his thoughts on Adams’ work, as well as on the Vietnam War picture that Ut took that also became an iconic image of the war: the June 8, 1972, photograph of a young, naked Vietnamese girl fleeing her napalmed village. The girl in the picture, Kim Phuc, also offers her thoughts on the impact of the famed photos of the war.

The documentary, narrated by the actor Keifer Sutherland, lives up to its title, providing a full picture of Eddie Adams’ life and work. That includes the annual four-day free workshops he began in 1988 in upstate New York for aspiring photojournalists. The film offers more, though—a look at the life and work of photographers in general who covered the Vietnam War.

Posted on June 26th 2009 in Documentaries, Photography

Michael Norman’s latest

Michael Norman is a journalist, author, and Marine Vietnam War veteran, and the author of the excellent 1991 Vietnam War memoir, These Good Men. His latest book, written with his wife Elizabeth M. Norman, Tears in Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) has just been published to excellent reviews.

Dwight Garner, writing in The New York Times, for instance, called it “calm, stirring and humane” and a “narrative achievement” that “seamlessly blends a wide-angle view wit the stories of many individual participants.”

Posted on June 24th 2009 in Book News

Brotherhood book contributors wanted

Deborah McCabe, who created Military and Veteran Search in 2001 to help veterans find old buddies, is compiling a new edition of her book, Brotherhood. She would like to hear from Vietnam veterans who would like to contribute to the book by, among other things, writing a letter to the family of someone who never made it back or describing an act of bravery in battle.

You can learn more at her website or by emailing mavsnews@aol.com The deadline to contribute to the 2009 edition is August 15.

Posted on June 24th 2009 in Artistic Queries

Timeless Greek Drama–for Veterans

Bryan Doerries founded The Philoctetes Project, an innovative form of psychodrama using ancient Greek plays, in New York City last year as a way to help emotionally troubled active-duty military personnel and veterans.

In a recent article in the Kenyon College Alumni Bulletin Doerries said that he thought up the idea of inviting veterans and active-duty military to see 2,500-year-old dramas because they deal with timeless themes about combat stress. The idea of the program, which Doerries directs, is that professionally acted readings of his translations of two plays by Sophocles can help audience members, who often repress their feelings about these subjects, at least begin to examine the issues, and perhaps begin to deal with them.

The readings are bare-bones affairs. There are no costumes, sets, or props. The actors sit in a semi-circle on an otherwise empty stage, reading their lines from behind metal stands or tables holding their scripts.

“I’m astounded by how much these plays resonate with my experiences and those of my friends and colleagues,” one veteran who took in one reading in New York City said. “The commonalities are stunning. I can say with complete certainty that every military man and woman in this theater has seen something of themselves in those characters onstage.”

“I think the narrations are timeless,” another veteran said. “The weapons may have changed, but the results are the same as they were centuries ago. We’re still human beings killing each other.”

Posted on June 18th 2009 in Drama

William Keith Nolan dead at 44

William Keith Nolan, one of the most prolific and most accomplished military historians of the Vietnam War, died February 9 of lung cancer. He was 44 years old and was not a smoker; the disease was hereditary.

Nolan, known to his friends as Keith, pioneered and excelled at his own special brand of military history: the excellent combining of in-depth interviews with those who took part in the fighting and deep research into the official records.  That, along with a fluid writing style, added up to ten (eleven, counting one he co-authored) of the best books on Vietnam War military history.

We reviewed nearly all of his books in our “Books in Review” column in The VVA Veteran, including what turned out to be his last one, House to House:Playing the Enemy’s Game in Saigon. Here’’s what I wrote in the May-June issue:

Keith Nolan is one of the most accomplished chroniclers of Vietnam War military history. In his ten previous books—including Battle for Hue, Death Valley, and Operation Buffalo–Nolan used a deft combination of interviews with participants and in-depth research into official records to come up with incisive, readable battle narratives. Nolan continues to use his excellent M.O. to good effect in his latest book. This time Nolan recreates the fighting that took place between the Army’s 9th Infantry Division and several VC regiments who were holed up in Saigon three months after Tet ‘68.”

Other reviewers had similar thoughts about Nolan’s work. “I’ve never read a better account of a battle, and I’ve never been prouder of the American fighting man, nor more scornful of his political and high-ranking military leaders,” the historian Stephen Ambrose wrote about Nolan’s Ripcord: Screaming Eagles Under Siege, Vietnam 1970 “To those who want to know what it was like to be a grunt in Vietnam, I recommend Ripcord without stint or reservation.”

Kieth Nolan’s other books are Battle for Saigon: Tet 1968, Sappers In The Wire , A Hundred Miles of Bad Road (with Dwight Birdwell),The Magnificent Bastards: The Joint Army-Marine Defense of Dong Ha, 1968, Into Laos: The Story of Dewey Canyon Ii/Lam Son 719, Vietnam 1971.

Keith Nolan left a nine-year-old daughter, Anna Britt Nolan. A trust fund has been set up in her name.

Anna Britt Nolan Trust
c/o First Bank
6211 Midriver Mall Drive
St. Charles, MO 63304

Posted on June 16th 2009 in Book News, Obituaries

Veteran Art wanted in Chicago for July 4

The organizers of “Salute,” a 4th of July art exhibit in Chicago’s historic Flat Iron Arts Building in the Wicker Park area, are looking for veteran artists. The event is billed as “The art show that celebrates patriotism, embodies the American experience and appreciates military personnel.”

The show is sponsored by The Flatiron Artist’s Association, a private, not-for-profit company dedicated to the promotion of the arts in the Wicker Park/Bucktown area. For more info, go to their web site.

Posted on June 15th 2009 in Art Exhibits, Artistic Queries

Missing Pages at D.C. Fringe Festival

Susan Austin Roth’s play, Missing Pages, which we’ve written about in these web pages, is a taut drama that zeroes in on the relationship between a World War II veteran with Alzheimer’s disease and his Vietnam veteran son, from whom he has been estranged for several years.

The latest production will be take place at the upcoming Capitol Fringe Festival,which will be held July 9-26 in Washington, D.C. There will be five performances of Missing Pages, on the 16th, 19th, 23, 25th and 26th.

For more info, go to Roth’s website or check out our previous entry.

Posted on June 15th 2009 in Plays

Jack Lewis, 1924-2009

Jack Lewis, a Marine who served in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam and who also was a screenwriter, pulp novelist, and the co-founder of Gun World magazine, died May 24 at age 84 of lung cancer in Hawaii.

Lewis enlisted in the Marines at age 18 and served from December 1942 to September 1946. A machine-gunner in WWII, he was awarded the Bronze Star for bravery as a combat correspondent in Korea during his 1950-56 second stint of active duty. Lewis then went into the Reserves, and was discharged in 1958, but was recommissioned in 1969 and went to Vietnam where he served with III Marine Amphibious Force.

While on reserve duty at Camp Pendleton after World War II, he was a technical adviser on the famed 1949 John Wayne film Sands of Iwo Jima. He later wrote the screenplay for the 1963 movie A Yank in Vietnam, which was filmed in South Vietnam. Lewis went on to write hundreds of magazine articles about Hollywood stars, a ton of western and detective novels, and several other books including Tell It to the Marines (1966).

There was an extensive obituary of Lewis in The Los Angeles Times.

Posted on June 12th 2009 in Obituaries

Ten Years of “Lessons of Vietnam”

The latest Bridges:The Lessons of Vietnam, the newsletter written and produced by Lindy Poling’s (above) Lessons of Vietnam history students at Millbrook High School in Raleigh, North Carolina, is a special 10th Anniversary Edition. The issue may be found on line on the course’s website, which also features a new podcast.

The featured article on the front page is “Vietghanistan?” in which student Andy Chenlo examines the similarities and differences between the Vietnam War and the current war in Afghanistan. There’s also an article by 2003 graduate Susan Woodson reflecting on the class’s big impact on her life.

Posted on June 10th 2009 in In the Classroom

The Way We Get By: A Stirring Doc

One of the highlights of the 2008 Vietnam Veterans of America’s National Leadership Conference was a screening of the stirring documentary The Way We Get By presented by the filmmakers, Gita Pullapilly and Aron Gaudet.

Since then, the film–which looks at three people in Bangor, Maine, (Bill Knight, Joan Gaudet, and Jerry Mundy, above) who greet American troops flying to and from Iraq and Afghanistan–has been screened in many places around the country. It had its premier at the South by Southwest Film Festival, where it won the Special Jury Award.

The film went on to take the Audience Award at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, Best Documentary at the Atlanta, Little Rock, and Phoenix Film Festivals; the Greg Gund Memorial Award for Documentaries at the Cleveland International Film Festival; the Camden International Film Festival Audience Award; and Honorable Mention at Independent Film Festival in Boston. In addition, Maine Gov. John Baldacci presented Pullapilly and Gaudet with a special award for the film and community service.

There will be two special screenings on June 19 and 21 at the SilverDocs Film Festival at the AFI Silver Theater in Silver Spring, Maryland. All three subjects of the film, along with, Gaudet and Pullapilly, will be there. The SilverDocs showings, Pullapilly told us, “will be special and extremely memorable.”

Posted on June 10th 2009 in Documentaries