Yasushi Nagao

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Yasushi Nagao (1961)

Yasushi Nagao (長尾 靖, Nagao Yasushi, 20 May 1930 – 2 May 2009) was a Japanese Pulitzer Prize-winning press photographer.

Nagao is best known for his photograph of Otoya Yamaguchi assassinating Japanese Socialist Party politician Inejiro Asanuma. At the time Nagao was a cameraman working for Mainichi Shimbun; Hisatake Abo, Nagao's picture editor, told Nagao to cover a debate at Hibiya Hall. As Yamaguchi challenged Asanuma, Nagao changed the focus to fifteen feet from ten feet.[1]

"Tokyo Stabbing", Nagao's famous photograph

Nagao won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize and the 1960 World Press Photo of the Year award. The second award allowed Nagao to travel abroad widely, impossible for most Japanese people at the time.[2]

Nagao left the newspaper in 1962 and became a freelance photographer.[3]

Nagao was discovered collapsed in his bathroom on 2 May 2009. It is believed he died of natural causes.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ John Faber, Great News Photos and the Stories Behind Them, 2nd ed. (New York: Dover, 1978), no. 58, p. 126 (Google Books).
  2. ^ Untitled page about this photograph, "In pictures: 50 years of photojournalism", BBC
  3. ^ a b "Japan's first Pulitzer Prize winning photo journalist dies" Archived 2009-05-05 at the Wayback Machine. The Mainichi Daily News. May 4, 2009.

External links

  • Faber, John. Great News Photos and the Stories Behind Them. 2nd ed. New York: Dover, 1978. ISBN 0-486-23667-6. Google Books.