Tag Archives: Lynsey Addario

Breaking News — Tyler Hicks And Lynsey Addario Missing In Libya

Westport natives Tyler Hicks and Lynsey Addario are  missing in Libya.

The 2 photographers were in a group of 4 New York Times journalists whose last contact with editors was yesterday.  Executive editor Bill Keller said that Libyan authorities are trying to locate the group.

“We are grateful to the Libyan government for their assurance that if our journalists were captured they would be released promptly and unharmed,” Keller said.

Also missing  are Pulitzer-Prize-winning reporter Anthony Shadid — the newspaper’s Beirut bureau chief — and Stephen Farrell, a reporter and videographer.

Both Tyler (Staples Class of ’88) and Lynsey (Staples  ’91) won Pulitzer Prizes for their Times work.  Lynsey also received a MacArthur “genius” award.

“Their families and their colleagues at The Times are anxiously seeking information about their situation, and praying that they are safe,” Keller said.

Lynsey And Tyler’s Libya Lens

The New York Times’ “Lens” page is always fascinating.  Each day it features fantastic photographs — and a back story, courtesy of the photographer.

Today’s “Lens” highlights Staples graduate Lynsey Addario.  She’s in Libya — working with fellow Stapleite and Times photographer Tyler Hicks.

Her story begins:

It’s been a rough day.  From where we are in Benghazi, the opposition sent hundreds of troops — if not more — toward the front line to fight against the government troops.

Tyler Hicks and I went forward.  Tyler was about two hours ahead of me.  We decided that I would stay back and see what was happening and then follow, depending on the situation.

At the send-off point for the opposition troops, people were pouring water on them and cheering.  Hundreds of people came out to send the fighters forward.  Everyone was armed to the teeth on the back of these trucks.

You could hear the airstrikes.  There was a lot of machine-gun fire, Kalashnikov fire.  People were shooting in the air.  It was really chaos.

That’s just the start.  Click here to see Lynsey’s amazing shots — and read more of her and Tyler’s harrowing experiences in a world far from Westport. 

(Photo: Lynsey Addario/New York Times)

Lynsey Addario’s Afghan Women

Lynsey Addario

Proud Westporters know Lynsey Addario as a Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times photographer.  Her haunting images from the world’s hot spots bring disaster, disease and deprivation into our comfortable homes.

Now she’s featured in National Geographic.

Elizabeth Rubin’s story in the December issue — “Veiled Rebellion” — is lavishly illustrated by the Staples grad.

The subhead reads:  “Afghan women suffer under the constraints of tribalism, poverty, and war.  Now they are starting to fight for a just life.”

Lynsey’s photos are intimate looks into seldom-seen sights:  two women on the side of a mountain, unaccompanied by a man.

Two women on an Afghan mountain. (Photo by Lynsey Addario for National Geographic)

A strong woman driving a car — her face, hair and arms in full view.

A young woman who set herself on fire, for reasons no one knows.

Last year, Lynsey won a $500,000 MacArthur “genius grant.”

Now National Geographic readers around the world know why.

(Lynsey’s next project:  a story from Iraq, also for National Geographic.)

Lynsey Addario’s Lens

A couple of days ago, the New York Times’ “Lens” blog — featuring photos, videos and back stories — featured Westport’s own Tyler Hicks.

Today the spotlight is on his former Staples classmate and current Times colleague Lynsey Addario.

Photo by Lynsey Addario/The New York Times

The MacArthur “genius grant” winner was in India when the Haiti earthquake hit.  Instead of documenting the immediate effects of that tragedy, she decided to wait a few weeks — then focus on the long-term effects, after other photographers left.

When Lynsey finally arrived in Haiti, she was surprised to find bodies still on the streets, and children still foraging for food and water.

Hoping for an uplifting scene, Lynsey found — and photographed — a woman giving birth in a tent camp.

Click here for the Times‘ take on Lynsey’s latest work — and what it means to her to create it.

Photo by Lynsey Addario/The New York Times

Lynsey Addario In Afghanistan

Westport is justly proud of our trio of world-famous photojournalists:  Lynsey Addario, Tyler Hicks and Spencer Platt.  All are Staples graduates from the 1980s.

Last week, both Lynsey (the recipient of a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship and a 2009 Pulitzer Prize) and Tyler (who shared that 2009 Pulitzer for International Reporting) have had gripping photos in the New York Times, from Afghanistan and Haiti.

Now check out the February 21 edition of Time magazine.  Lynsey has contributed an insightful photo-essay on medical evaluation units in Afghanistan.

In the 1950s and ’60s, Famous Photographers School made Westport proud.  Five decades later, 3 home-grown photojournalists are doing the same.

Lynsey Addario captures the urgency of a medical evacuation. (Photo courtesy of Time magazine)

Three Shots

Westport — long known as an artists’ colony — has been home to photographers too.  For a few years, we were even the site of the Famous Photographers’ School.

Today, though, is our true photographic heyday.  Three of the top photojournalists in the world hail from Westport.  All attended Staples  in the 1980s.

American Photo Magazine’s current issue includes — in a story on small-town newspapers — this amazing trio:  Tyler Hicks, Spencer Platt and Lynsey Addario.

Tyler Hicks was there in Baghdad during the early days of the Iraq war. (Photo courtesy of the New York Times)

Tyler Hicks was in Baghdad during the early days of the Iraq war. (Photo courtesy of the New York Times)

Hicks and Platt both started their professional careers not in Westport, but at the small Troy (Ohio) Daily News. Hicks moved quickly to the New York Times, where since 2001 he has covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Platt now works for Getty Images.  He photographed the Israel-Lebanon conflict of 2006 (and won the World Press Photo of the Year award for his shot of grinning Lebanese girls in front of a devastated building).  He also worked in Iraq, Liberia, Congo and Indonesia.

Lynsey Addario took these striking images of Darfur.  (Photo courtesy of Lynsey Addario)

Lynsey Addario took these striking images of Darfur. (Photo courtesy of Lynsey Addario)

Addario — another prize-winner — is a noted Times photographer herself.

The American Photo Magazine piece examines the role small-town newspapers play in a photographer’s career — and what those photos mean to a community.  In the internet age, photographers lament the loss of a reliable, professional outlet for their work.

Platt says of his early days:  “We awoke each morning excitedly going through the paper to see how big our images appeared.  Front page, a photo spread, a bad crop, 6 columns, color, black and white.  We were either mortified or euphoric.”

He recalls covering his 1st tragedy:  a car accident outside of Troy.  He photographed a grieving mother.

In the years since, he says, he has covered wars and disasters throughout the world.  But the 1 person he will never forget is “that young man spread out in the field under a beautiful blue sky.  It was my introduction to the news.”