John Godfrey Morris (December 7, 1916 – July 28, 2017) was an American picture editor, author and journalist, and an important figure in the history of photojournalism.
His father, John Dale Morris, born in 1869 on a Missouri farm, was a salesman who started out selling dictionaries, then encyclopedias. He founded a book publishing company named John D. Morris & Company of Philadelphia but went broke during the Panic of 1907.[1] His father later worked for Chicago-based La Salle Extension University that provided extension courses.
His mother, Ina Arabella Godfrey, was the daughter of a doctor in Colon, Michigan. She studied Greek and Latin classics and joined the Grand Tour of Europe before working for John D. Morris & Company. She met John Dale Morris and they married in 1908, giving birth to their first child, a girl, in 1909.[2]
At the University of Chicago, John G. Morris and friends issued a student newspaper Pulse in September, 1937 which they published until March, 1941, when America became involved in WW2. It was a bold attempt to launch their careers in journalism, described by Morris as; "a radically different college publication, its news section modelled on Time, a monthly survey in the manner of Fortune, and photographs of the candid-camera type, like those in Life"[2] The colleagues went into professional careers: Paul Berg became a staff photographer for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, John Corcoran for Science Illustrated,Myron Davis for Life, and David Eisendrath for the Chicago Times and New York's PM.[1]
Morris graduated in 1938, then obtained a job in the mailroom of Time-Life publications before moving up to a role as Life's Hollywood correspondent,[1] working for the weekly picture magazine throughout World War II and becoming Life's London picture editor.[3] There, he was responsible for the coverage of the invasion of France on June 6, 1944 – D-Day, and edited the historic photographs of Robert Capa.[1]
He continued his career during the Vietnam War. In 1968 he insisted that a photo by Eddie Adams of the Associated Press (AP), showing a South Vietnamese police official in the act of executing a Viet Cong prisoner with a shot to the head, be run on the front page of the New York Times. Four years later, he selected another photo by Nick Ut, showing a naked and screaming Vietnamese girl fleeing a napalm attack.[1]
In 1983, Morris moved to Paris, as the European correspondent of National Geographic.[2] As a freelance writer and editor, his primary concern was working for peace. He turned 100 in December 2016.[5]
Morris was married three times, first to Mary Adele Crosby who died in 1964 in childbirth along with the baby. His second wife, Marjorie Smith, died in 1981. His third wife, photographer Tana Hoban, died in 2006. He was survived by his partner, Patricia Trocme from Paris, along with four children (two children from his first marriage and another two from his second marriage) and four grandchildren. He died on July 28, 2017, at a hospital in Paris, aged 100.[6][7]
His autobiography, Get the Picture: a Personal History of Photojournalism, was published in 1998. He was co-author of Robert Capa: D-Day, in French and English (Point de Vues, 2004).
In 2014, his book, Quelque Part en France - L'Été 1944 de John G. Morris (Somewhere in France - The Summer 1944 of John G. Morris), was published.[11] The book was conceived by Robert Pledge of Contact Press Images. It contains the photographs Morris took during his Summer 1944 trip to Normandy, shortly after the D-Day landing on June 6, 1944, and the letters to his wife written "somewhere in France."[12]
1985: W. Eugene Smith: Let Truth Be the Prejudice. Illustrated biography by Ben Maddow, afterword by John G. Morris. Aperture.
1986: FD Paris 1986. Introductory chapter of Fodor's 1986 Travel Guide to Paris by John G Morris. Fodor's.
1998: Get the Picture: A Personal History of Photojournalism. Autobiographical book by John G.Morris. Random House, ISBN0-226-53914-8. Second edition, University of Chicago Press, 2002. Foreword by William H. McNeill, afterword by John G Morris. ISBN978-0-226-53914-0. Translated into French (Éditions de La Martinière, 1999), Japanese, Polish (Wydanie pierwsze, 2007), Italian (Contrasto Due, 2011), and Spanish (La Fabrica, 2013).
2011: Robert Capa - Traces d'une Légende. Monograph by Bernard Lebrun and Michel Lefèbvre, preface by John G. Morris. Éditions de la Martinière, Paris
2014: Quelque Part en France - L'Été 1944 de John G. Morris ("Somewhere in France - The Summer 1944 of John G. Morris"). Book by John G. Morris, conceived by Robert Pledge. Marabout.[11]
1987: Unterwegs. Werner Bischof - Photograph 51/52. Film by René Baumann and Marco Bischof. b/w, 50min (Switzerland)[13]
1989: W. Eugene Smith - Photography Made Difficult. Film by Kirk Morris, 89 min (Phaidon, US)
1997: Decisive Moments - The Photographs That Made History. Documentary series by Tim Kirkby and Deboarh Lee for the BBC
2000: Chosen People. Documentary about the 12 People Are People the World Over families. Directed by Seona Robertson (Caledonia, Sterne and Wyld for the BBC)[14]
2002: Guerre sans images - Algérie. Documentary by Mohammed Soudani (Amka Films)[15]
2004: Horst Faas, Heroes Never Die (Los héroes nunca mueren). Documentary by Jan Arnold (Marea Films, Spain)[16]
2004: Taking the Beach. Documentary by John Giannini for ABC News Nightline
2005: Looking for an Icon. Documentary by Hans Pool and Maaik Krijgsman (Nl)[17]
2010: John G. Morris - Eleven Frames. Documentary by Douglas Sloan
2012: Get the Picture. Biographical documentary on Morris told by himself by Cathy Pearson (Ferndale Films, IE)
^ abcMorris, John G. (John Godfrey) (2002), Get the picture : a personal history of photojournalism ([New ed.] / foreword by William H. McNeill ; afterword by the author ed.), University of Chicago Press, ISBN978-0-226-53914-0