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Less publicized is the film, [19] shot by British television cameraman Alan Downes for the British Independent Television News and his Vietnamese counterpart Le Phuc Dinh, who was working for the American television network NBC, which shows the events just before and after the photograph was taken [20] [21] [22] In the top-left frame, a man ...
“I took the photo of [Phan Thi] Kim Phuc,” Ut wrote in a statement Wednesday posted to Facebook. “I took the other photos from that day that show her family and the devastation the war caused.
The picture of Kim Phuc running down a road in the village of Trang Bang, crying and naked because she had taken off clothes burning from napalm, instantly became symbolic of the horrors of the Vietnam War. Taken on June 8, 1972, the photo is credited to Ut, then a 21-year-old staffer in AP's Saigon bureau. He was awarded the Pulitzer a year later.
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One of the most influential photos in history has come under attack in a new documentary to debut at the Sundance Film Festival.. The Pulitzer Prize-winning picture of nine-year-old Kim Phuc ...
The photograph depicts a crowd of Vietnamese people running from napalm, among them a girl (later identified as Phan Thi Kim Phuc) who survived by tearing off her burning clothes. [ 63 ] [ s 1 ] [ s 2 ] [ s 3 ] [ s 5 ] [ s 6 ] [ s 7 ]
Directed by Bao Nguyen, the documentary claims that the photograph taken on June 8, 1972, of a naked 9-year-old girl named Phan Thi Kim Phuc as she fled a napalm attack on the village of Trảng ...
On June 8, 1972. Burnett was one of the photojournalists present at Trảng Bàng in Tây Ninh Province when Nick Ut of the Associated Press captured his famous image of the nine-year-old Vietnamese girl Phan Thị Kim Phúc and some other children fleeing a napalm attack.