Apr 09

Lebrecht images of Margaret Thatcher – British Prime Minister 1979 -1990

Obituary pictures for Margaret Thatcher, British Prime Minister from 1979-1990 died yesterday. (13 October 1925 – 8 April 2013)

Lebrecht has photos of her in her kitchen from Joe Bangay, in her home in 1973 by Brian Seed and posing in front of workers by Graham Gough.

Margaret Thatcher - portrait of the British politician and former Prime Minister in her London apartment, January 1973.
Margaret Thatcher in her London apartment, January 1973.
©Brian Seed

Margaret Thatcher with Husband Denis Thatcher
Photographed here with her husband Denis Thatcher outside their home in Flood Street Chelsea in 1970.
©Joe Bangay

' Handbagged ' play by Moira Buffini
‘Handbagged’ play by Moira Buffini, Stella Gonet (T) and Heather Craney (Mags) Tricycle Theatre, London.
©Tristram Kenton

Margaret Thatcher
Margaret Thatcher in her kitchen 1970 after becoming Minister of Education.
©Joe Bangay

Margaret Thatcher
Meeting workmen while visiting a building site in Coseley, West Midlands during September 1987.
©Graham Gough

Feb 13

How to succeed using Lebrecht images

ENO’s (English National Opera) stunning poster and promotional image for its production of Handel’s Julius Caesar / Giulio Cesare at the end of 2012 was based on a rare Lebrecht Music & Arts photo. The photo of Lawrence Zazzo in the title role was taken by Daniel Gonzalez Acuna at the Maestranza Theatre, Seville. Our breadth of coverage enables us to maintain our position as the number one specialist library for music.

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Original image:
Lawrence Zazzo as Julius Caesar

Lebrecht Music & Arts image used on the cover of bestseller book HHhH by Laurent Binet was one of the highly commended designs at the British Book Design and Production Awards 2012.

book cover

Original image:
Reinhard Heydrich

Feb 12

Valentine’s Day at Lebrecht Music & Arts

Love is in the air at Lebrecht! To celebrate Valentine’s Day, we’re taking you on a visual tour of love through the ages, from two lovers walking through the snow in eighteenth-century Japan to intimate moments captured on camera in 1930s Paris.

Click HERE to see some of our favourite romantic pictures.

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Feb 06

Mary Robert and her exhibition The Transgender Community Living in Istanbul

Lebrecht photographer, Professor Mary Robert’s exhibition of photographs opened at Michigan State University Museum on 21st January about The Transgender Community of Istanbul.

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An exhibit exploring sexual identity and transition in transsexuals of Istanbul

This exhibition gives a rare insight into the lives of people in transition – one of the most dramatic and absolute transitions that can be embarked upon by any individual. The photographic portraits explore the complex identities of the members of a community of male-female transsexuals living in Istanbul, Turkey. Robert’s photographs focus on the human qualities of the subjects who have developed a new, unique aesthetic.

Of the reported 2,000-3,000 transsexuals in Istanbul at various stages of transition from male to female, the vast majority exist in difficult circumstances and are often ostracized by their families.

By embarking on this path, they venture into the twilight world of a no man’s land between macho Turkish male culture and that of the liberated glamorous female. Here they live and operate in the shadowy edges beyond the well lit norms of society and its conventions. As expected in such territory, there is danger, no real protection and plenty of skirmishes and sniping. They are constantly pressurized by the locals, periodically harassed by the police and suffer prejudice from the political system which denies them the right to work legitimately until they successfully convert their blue (male) national identity card to a pink (female) card. This long road of conversion is arduous and expensive. Some work as cabaret entertainers but most survive and pay for their medical treatment by prostitution. In spite of their problems, at home the women are warm, generous, fun-loving people. They provide physical and emotional support for one another with some of the more experienced acting as mentors to new members.

For more information click HERE.

Feb 04

Remains of King Richard III found in car park

A skeleton found beneath a Leicester city council car park has been confirmed as that of English King Richard III. Experts from the University of Leicester said DNA from the bones matched that of descendants of the monarch’s family.

Lead archaeologist Richard Buckley, from the University of Leicester, told a press conference to applause: “Beyond reasonable doubt it’s Richard.” Read full story HERE.

Richard III of England - portrait
© Lebrecht

Richard III by William Shakespeare.  Act V. Scene 4
© Lebrecht Authors

William Shakespeare 's play 'Richard III' -
© Tristram Kenton/Lebrecht Music & Arts

Jan 29

Doctor Who 50th anniversary – Lebrecht Music & Arts’ artist creates special caricatures

Artist Neale Osborne, one of the most original contributors to Lebrecht Music & Arts, has created modern caricatures of all the actors who have ever played the iconic BBC sci-fi role of Doctor Who on television and film. This cult television favourite was first broadcast on 23 November 1963.

The actors who have created and developed this much loved role during the last fifty years on television and film are (left to right): Peter Cushing, William Hartnell, Patrick Troughton, Jon Pertwee, Tom Baker, Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy, Paul McGann, Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant, Matt Smith.

Actors from 'Doctor Who'
Click image for lightbox.

Jan 28

PICTURE OF THE DAY: Russian pianist Sviastoslav Richter and Benjamin Britten by Brian Seed

Russian pianist Sviastoslav Richter discussing his forthcoming performance of Mozart’s piano concerto in B flat major at the June 1965 Aldeburgh Festival with its conductor, Benjamin Britten. Their location is Blythburgh church, Suffolk. Photographer: Brian Seed.

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Jan 24

David Farrell – Lebrecht Music & Arts photographer obituary

Lebrecht Music & Arts announces with deep regret the passing away of their photographer David Farrell on January 3rd aged 93. David has been represented by this photo library for seventeen years. He was not only a true gentleman but also he had an extraordinary career. From an early age he had shown an exceptional talent for the violin and was accepted at the Royal Academy of Music, later studying under Max Rostal. He enthralled everyone in the library with his memories of the major young violinists of this time – of sheltering from the Blitz in St John’s Wood Station together with the short-lived violinist Joseph Hasid; and of sitting in on classes with Ginette Neveu and Ida Haendel when they were studying under Carl Flesch .

David went into Bomber Command during World War II as a pilot officer. Demobbed in 1946, his growing family responsibilities and financial circumstances led to the difficult decision to give up his ambitions to become a solo violinist. He turned to music recording and then photography and print media for a living. His role model was Cartier Bresson and he soon gained a local reputation for excellence, often portraying people naturalistically in their own environments. Gloucestershire, where he lived with his family in the 1950s was the home for a wide range of intellectuals and artists and, David and his wife Manning, were an important part of this circle, counting Jacob Bronowski, Lynn Chadwick and Peter Nichols as close friends. Under a major commission from the British Council David photographed many famous artists and their work, providing the Council with some definitive portraits and photos of the work of contemporary sculptors, including Chadwick, Eduard Paolozzi, Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth.

In 1955 David’s first music assignment was to photograph Yehudi Menuhin and Sir Thomas Beecham at the Bath Festival. This was the beginning of a lifetime friendship with Menuhin and of a career photographing classical musicians at work and in less formal moments. Across the next thirty years he photographed virtually every classical musician who performed in the UK, providing intimate performance photographs of musicians ranging from Louis Armstrong, Leonard Bernstein and Jacqueline du Pré to Kennedy and Ravi Shankar.

He liked to tell that he was present the night that Margot Fonteyn, deeply involved with Rudolf Nureyev and dancing at Menuhin’s Bath Festival, was told that her husband had been shot in Panama – and it was his unique photograph that captured this historical moment.

He also took early sessions of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in the 1960s . In the 1970s and 1980s he turned to photographing theatre and film.

David is survived by his wife Manning, whom he married in 1942, by two of his three sons, and by two daughters. He was a delightful man, with a ready smile and a passion for music that remained fresh to the end. He will be greatly missed by everyone who had the privilege of knowing him.

Thackeray David Farrell, photographer, born 28 August 1919, died 3 January 2013

Farrell