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Did you ever stop to wonder about how the tabloids get those
utterly fantastic photos of your favorite stars for their covers each week? "It's
simple, really," says European paparazzi Jean Luc Meyer. "I go to where the beautiful
people are, or where I think they will be soon, and I wait. Sometimes for hours.
Sometimes for days. And when they come, I wait some more ... for just the right
moment. Then, 'Snap,' and the rest is history!"
It's
not usually the celebrity, alone, that sells the photos, of course. Otherwise,
the tabloids would simply publish one of the thousands of studio pix that Hollywood
cranks out by the truckload. The thing that makes the tabloids pay tens of thousands
of dollars for a single shot of Frank Sinatra, Barbara Bush, or Marlon Brando
is the person caught in the act.
Of what?
"Ahh," Meyers smiles. "That is the key. Maybe I'll catch a
movie star in the act of swallowing a huge fork full of spaghetti or a professional
athlete playing catch with a dog. It's catching someone doing the unexpected that
makes my work valuable" While Meyer's work is confined to shooting celebrities,
his approach is applicable to photographer's everywhere. Although a photograph
of a five-year-old boy swallowing a fork full of spaghetti might not be so valuable
to a publication as a similar shot of an actress doing the same, it would certainly
be no less endearing.
It's called candid photography-taking photographs of people
doing something. And while it's not as simple as standing someone against a wall
and firing, it's well within the scope of most amateur shooters. To take candid
portraits, a photographer needs three things-a telephoto lens, fast film, and
patience. The rest comes courtesy of the subject, himself. And if you're worried
about invasion of privacy, don't be. As a general rule of thumb, people can be
photographed anywhere they appear in public, although most professionals shy away
from shooting subjects engaged in religious services or in compromising positions
... for obvious reasons.
Here are a few tips to help you bring home those once-in-a-lifetime
candid shots.
Stay back. Unless the person you're photographing is comatose,
you're going to need to be 20 to 50 feet away in order to catch him unaware. From
that distance, you should be able to crank off as many shots as you want without
arousing suspicion. Shooting from that distance requires a good telephoto lens-preferably
a telephoto zoom so that you can zero-in on the subject without sacrificing composition.
Some of today's new generation of cameras feature built-in telephoto lenses, while
others accept them as accessories.
Use a motor. Cameras with either built-in or accessory motor
winders or drives enable you to reel-off several shots in a row without drawing
attention to your-self by having to lower the camera from your eye to cock the
shutter.
Select a fast enough film. A film with an ISO of 4OO to 1000
(depending upon the amount of available light) will allow you to shoot with a
shutter speed capable of stopping fast action. Just how fast the film should be
depends upon the action. If you're photographing a jogger in medium light, a film
of 400 IS0 and a shutter speed of 1/250 second should be sufficient. For shooting
a bicyclist in low light, a film of 1000 ISO and a shutter speed of 1/500 second
should work.
Be devious. That's especially important when you come up against
a subject who suspects he's being photographed. Pros like Meyer use tricks such
a pretending to shoot something between the intended subject and the camera while
actually focusing on the subject in the distance. Mike Erickson, another candid
specialist, has even gone so far as to switch to a wide-angle lens and walk right
up to the subject to snap the shutter. It may sound drastic," admits Erickson,
"but it's sometimes the only way to get a candid shot. I've used it in Buddhist
temples and in political caucus rooms, as well as with kids at the zoo. It's amazing
what you can come up with when you're sneaky enough. And the low camera angle
adds an exotic flavor to the shot." 
Choose interesting subjects. They might include members of
your own family caught in the everyday act of living or perfect strangers trying
to get through another day. Some examples: people nodding on the bus, walking
their dogs, planting a new garden, diving off a springboard, hailing a taxicab,
and even eating a huge hamburger.
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