Jimo perini biography of williams
Home / Celebrity Biographies / Jimo perini biography of williams
But, you can’t judge people by names or color or religious preference. “Here I was based in San Francisco, one of the most attractive and vibrant cities anywhere.
The things he's done and seen could fill a book and he's been at work on one for some years now. Later she began shooting photo stories for Vanity Fair.
They stole a car, robbed a store at gunpoint and headed out across the country going they knew not where. In Nebraska they robbed another store and were caught. Imagine me to be about seven-years-old, elbow high, black-eyed, golden brown, fast with my shoe-shine box, having a family of thirteen for the American Tourists’ Record and a family of eight for the Welfare Department, fasted than a bullet, clever, totally enchanting, a kid in America who wants to make it.
He spent his boyhood in an area near the Pacific Ocean, which in those days was mostly sand dunes. I know...you'd think you'd have seen more of his books around...but the award wasn't given for popularity or marketability. “I was re-inventing myself as a magazine photographer,” he recalls. He also spoke with detectives to assure them my son was far better off where he was.
he's paid the price, but is far more interesting for it...though he is taciturn and not too talkative. Just happens I guess. last time I saw him he looked good. He and Imogen Cunningham used to wander the streets of San Francisco years back. Most either admired him for his obvious talent, or disliked him for his brash, often arrogant and combative manner.
It was Fred Lyon. So I wrote him a fan letter, and I mailed it to “Fred Lyon, General Delivery, Sausalito, California.” A few weeks later I got a telephone call. Jimo's mother died when he was five or six.
While he was still very young, his father was deported back to Italy and his mother died.
How many of your neighbors do you know?"
Jimo’s Story
Jimo Perini was an accomplished and revered photographer who traveled all over the world but always called "the city by the bay" his home.
Living on the streets was different back then...what wasn't? After a while I began getting those coveted magazine assignments.”
JIM MARSHALL
It was hard to be neutral about Jim Marshall.