Roger Bamber – Out of the Ordinary

Roger Bamber/Topfoto

Back in the early eighties Nikon had decided to consult press photographers how to improve their flagship F3 camera for news work. Modifications included a hot shoe, covered shutter release, a stop on the film rewind to create the F3P. But at first only the ‘Nikon Favoured’ could lay their hands on one, and those so honoured would flourish their cameras at every photocall. Rare and special maybe, but most exclusive news camera of them all was The Gold Nikon.

Stuck on a more than usually pointless doorstep of a bleak moor in the aptly named ‘Dark Peak’ of the Pennines thanks to a tip off to The Sun that evil Myra Hindley, would take police to the buried body of one of her child victims meant days of tedium for The Sun team with Roger Bamber. As the days turned into weeks, Roger passed the time meticulously chipping the black paint off his elderly battered Nikon F, revealing the solid brass body underneath. And hence was born, with a little later help from Brasso, Roger’s unique Gold Nikon.

Back in 1963, and at just 19, Roger decided he would try his luck with the then best picture paper in the Street. Heading to the forbidding Daily Express building, he found the picture editor was busy, but the chief photographer Terry Fincher gave out some timely advice: Roger had a good folio, but there were 38 staffers on the Express as well as many freelances. Better to try the Mail. Round Carmelite House went Rogers’ book, to Arts, Sport, Features, News, and after two hours to his astonishment he was offered a job. Roger’s long career in Fleet Street had begun.

Bob Aylott remembers “I first met Roger back in 1967 when I joined Keystone. Micky Webb was the picture editor and he advised me that if I stood near Bamber or Fincher I’d never miss anything!”

When The Sun launched in late 1969, Roger was there on the first day, working alongside such legends as Beverly Goodway, who went first from football to studio ‘glamour’ on Page 3, and Tony Prime who later went to The Observer, being imprisoned by the Argentinians during the Falklands.

In 1989, after nineteen years on The Sun and winning ‘News Photograph of the Year’ twice, Roger made the move to freelance, and basing himself in Brighton, the city he had lived since 1973. He quickly built a reputation at a very different paper, The Guardian, with his mix of humour and creating something special out of the ordinary, whether that was transforming an old battered camera body, or creating a magic photograph from a simple Punch and Judy tent on the beach. Roger’s distinctive style then won him ‘Ilford Press Photographer of the Year’ in 1992, making a nonsense out of the so-called divide between the ‘redtops’ and the ‘heavies’. Roger strode across them both.

Roger first met Guardian staffer Denis Thorpe covering the investiture of Prince Charles in 1969 at Caernarfon Castle. They took their positions on a high scaffold tower early for the ceremony with firm instructions to stay put.

“I can’t really remember what we did when ‘nature called’, we were stuck up there together for hours, forbidden to move!” said Denis.

In the nineties, Roger and Denis having both once worked on the Mail, now found themselves working on the same newspaper again, The Guardian.

Denis recalls “Roger had an irresistible charm. He could persuade anyone to do anything. We had a very different way of working, but I guess we formed a mutual admiration society. I observed the surreal moments of ordinary things and Roger created wonderful pictures out of the ordinary. His pictures were like theatre.”

For Roger, Brighton beach became his studio, and his creative eye saw the potential to shoot striking pictures in the most ordinary scenes, winning huge shows time and time again from a perfect mirror reflection of the Brighton Pavilion, to striking images of his beloved steam trains, Roger showed that he could win space in the busy news agenda without heading to war zones, or winning favour on a Royal Rota.

What do I remember of the tall slim man sporting the trademark white trousers, always atop the tallest ladder in the pen? That above all Roger Bamber was the friendliest press photographer you could ever meet. He would talk to anyone, including this young ambitious local London weekly snapper hoping to ditch his Pentax for Nikon, and work in Fleet Street alongside the finest news photographers in the world. Roger told me that he’d soon see me dropping my film into the darkroom. And he was right, later when I joined The Times, within months we were sharing the same darkroom at Wapping, and Roger greeted this very ‘wet behind the ears’ new boy like an old friend.

Roger never really retired, his images recently gracing the cans of the local Brighton brewery ‘Unbarred’, driving higher sales. Next year, Spring 2023, to coincide with the launch of his book ‘Out of the Ordinary’, the Brighton Pavilion will host a retrospective exhibition both of his photography and his life. They’ll not only be his most celebrated pictures, but amongst press passes, his Rollie, cuttings, portfolios, Roger’s widow Shan Lancaster plans to polish up The Gold Nikon to join the display.’

Aperture, Life Through a Fleet Street Lens by John Downing MBE

It seems so odd to be reading Aperture, Life Through A Fleet Street Lens, by one of The BPPA’s founders and its chair, John Downing, without a drink being shoved into my hand, albeit cranberry juice, without a crumbled blunt in an scruffy suit chipping in unwelcome corrections, without the occasional well-wisher, old friend, colleague resting a hand lazily on John’s shoulder as he passes smiling cheerfully in my direction with a large theatrical wink as if to say, “it’s all made up this, son, don’t believe a word”.

Except of course it isn’t made up. Nor my vivid memories streaming back of hearing these stories from John, known universally as JD when I first started shifting in Fleet Street. I see him now sporting a thin leather tie over a poorly ironed shirt, perched on a stool by the bar at the City Golf Club off Fleet Street, that was neither part of ‘The City’, nor anything to do with golf. But unusually amongst the legendary staff news photographers I came across early in my career, JD would take the time to talk to someone like me, yet another ambitious news photographer dreaming of following in his footsteps.

The City Golf Club of course, now long gone, was named to get around the laws on ‘closing time’. Fleet Street had many pubs, but badly needed a watering hole that could stay open well into the small hours. Instead of being subject to licensing laws, it was exempt as a ‘sporting club’. An idea I found JD had borrowed as a description for our Association when he asked me to become Treasurer. New to the role I had been called to meet with the Inland Revenue keen to understand whether we had taxable income. We didn’t. And cheerfully our Chair quipped to his nervous Treasurer when I asked what exact sport did we represent?  “Sport: How better could our wonderful job be described?”

Indeed for JD I’d say press photography was often a sport, a competition to get to the nastiest places on the planet and not only survive, not only manage to take pictures, but return to the office with rolls of film for the darkroom. This was at a time before Nikon neg transmitters, satellite phones, and long before digital cameras that file images from the camera to the desk ‘in real time’. It was an incredible audacious skill that JD escaped from many of his assignments not only with his life, but with delicate exposed film from places as murderous as a jail in the seventies Uganda ruled by insane dictator Idi Amin.

If you never had the privilege to meet John Downing MBE, winner of British Press Photographer of the Year seven times, hear his stories, you’ll be amazed at this wonderfully evocative read of a world now gone, the ‘Black Lubyanka’ the gleaming ‘Art Deco’ Daily Express offices in Fleet Street. There, slung above the smartest entrance which suggested you were entering a grand hotel, lay slung low ceilinged filthy noisy offices of at one time, the finest picture led newspaper in the world. Newsrooms where hard metal upright typewriters crashed out copy on near transparent thin sheets of paper, the office where you always ‘had to get back to’, that darkroom who ‘could dig you out the shit’, and budgets that were, well, irrelevant.

John died two years ago after a battle with terminal cancer, sorely missed by so many. In his last years he would often refer to ‘when I’m gone’ and casually bat away any of us that saying we were sure he’d beat the odds. Those odds he knew he could not beat but he carried that astonishingly stoic attitude to fate and chance that had served him so well in his long career.

Reading Aperture, Life Through A Fleet Street Lens makes me fondly recall that JD had a story for every occasion. Years later when he’d left the Express and although semi-retired was still keeping his hand in doing shifts on The Sunday Telegraph, I called asking if he would be a judge for our Press Photographers’ Year (PPY) competition. He’d been keeping a very much hands off approach to the newly reborn British Press Photographers Association. He had said to me that he knew only one or two of the people now running the show, wished us all well, and felt the new generation should be left to it.  Then he asked: “But how did you get not only a competition, an exhibition, but also a book off the ground?”  I told him that we’ve had some but not enough money from Canon, and that I’d managed to get the rest in sponsorship from Diageo, who owned amongst other brands, Johnnie Walker.  “Have I told you about the fake Pernod I brewed and the bottle of Black Label I got with it when I was in Afghanistan?”, he asked.

And if you haven’t heard that story, I suggest you read the book.

Aperture, Life Through a Fleet Street Lens by John Downing MBE published by Seren Books £19.99

www.serenbooks.com

Tim Bishop

Letter to the joint Chairs of The Conservative Party

One of our members who regularly covers the party conferences brought the fact that the Conservative Party has introduced charges for media to attend their annual conference. The BPPA Chair Paul Ellis wrote to the joint Chairmen of the Party to ask why this was. Here is the text of his letter:

To: Ben Elliott & The Rt Hon Oliver Dowden CBE MP

Dear Sirs

For as long as any of our members can remember the major political parties have welcomed members of the media to attend annual conferences and, as long as they registered in good time, they were invited to do so without charge. We acknowledge that the cost of additional telephone lines and private office spaces were always subject to fees but this years Conservative party Conference appears to have broken with convention and imposed an application fee for independent and freelance members of the media – payable before their accreditation was assessed.

As an association working on behalf of press photographers we are disappointed that, as the governing party in our country, The Conservatives have broken with long-standing convention which has always allowed the wide reporting of your conference by accredited media to take place without there being a fee.

It isn’t clear whether this is a revenue generating exercise, a way of limiting access to the conference or merely an oversight by a junior member of the organising team.

We would be grateful if you could let us know which of the above is the case and we would be equally grateful if you could withdraw the fee for media wishing to attend.

The BPPA's Press Photographer of the Year winner

Getty Images photographer Chris Furlong received his trophies today after winning three categories in the recent The BPPA Press Photographer of the Year competition as well as the main prize.

Chris had winning portfolios in the news, art and entertainment and covid essay categories.

Press Photographer of the Year 2021 Chris Furlong said:

“I’m absolutely delighted. That’s just brilliant! It’s been another tough year and I’m really very happy to pick up three category awards as well as the main prize.

“The BPPA has once again showcased press photography in Britain at its best and it’s great to be recognised by my peers, particularly as it’s a member vote. I’d like to thank them all for voting .”

Chris, who is currently on assignment in eastern Europe, put his success down to hard work, putting in the hours and the miles on the road, having the backing of the team at Getty Images and the support of fellow photographers around the country.

Chair of The BPPA Paul Ellis said:

The standard of photography was excellent once again and I’m delighted to see Chris pick up the main award. The most satisfying aspect of the competition this year is to see a variety of well-established and up and coming photographers picking up awards in all categories. Newspaper staffers, agency photographers and freelancers have all done well.

I’ve enjoyed looking at the photographs as they’ve come in and I’d recommend spending time viewing all the entries in the galleries to anyone. I’d like to thank everyone who entered, those members who voted, and of course our friends at Canon who have continued to support this competition and the work of The BPPA.

The winning galleries and all the entries can be viewed at The BPPA competition website: https://thebppa.zenfoliosite.com/home

The BPPA's Press Photographer of the Year 2021 results


We are delighted to announce that the British Press Photographers’ Association ‘Press Photographer of the Year 2021’ is Chris Furlong of Getty Images.

Here is a full list of the winners.

News – Chris Furlong – Getty Images

Arts & Entertainment – Chris Furlong – Getty Images

Portrait – Peter Jordan – The Sun

Royal – Kelvin Bruce

Business – Phil Wilkinson

Sport Action – Molly Darlington – Action Images/Reuters

Sport Away from the Action – Eddie Keogh – The FA

Essay – Adam Gray – SWNS

Covid-19 – Chris Furlong – Getty Images

Young Photographer – Ryan Jenkinson – Story Picture Agency

And entries judged as Highly Commended:

News – Hannah McKay – Reuters

Arts & Entertainment – Samir Hussein

Portrait – Samir Hussein and Peter Flude

Royal – Chris Jackson – Getty Images

Business – Leon Neal – Getty Images

Sport Action – Clodagh Kilcoyne – Reuters

Sport Away from the Action – Marc Aspland – The Times

Essay – Dan Kitwood – Getty Images

Covid-19 – Hannah McKay – Reuters

Young Photographer – Molly Darlington Reuters/Action Images

Press Photographer of the Year 2021 Chris Furlong said: “I’m absolutely delighted. That’s just brilliant! It’s been another tough year and I’m really very happy to pick up three category awards as well as the main prize. “The BPPA has once again showcased press photography in Britain at its best and it’s great to be recognised by my peers, particularly as it’s a member vote. I’d like to thank them all for voting .”

Chris, who is currently on assignment in eastern Europe, put his success down to hard work, putting in the hours and the miles on the road, having the backing of the team at Getty Images and the support of fellow photographers around the country.

Chair of The BPPA Paul Ellis said: “The standard of photography was excellent once again and I’m delighted to see Chris pick up the main award. The most satisfying aspect of the competition this year is to see a variety of well-established and up and coming photographers picking up awards in all categories. Newspaper staffers, agency photographers and freelancers have all done well. I’ve enjoyed looking at the photographs as they’ve come in and I’d recommend spending time viewing all the entries in the galleries to anyone. I’d like to thank everyone who entered, those members who voted, and of course our friends at Canon who have continued to support this competition and the work of The BPPA.”

The winning galleries and all the entries can be viewed at The BPPA competition website: https://thebppa.zenfoliosite.com/home

Press Photographer of the Year 2021 update

The BPPA are delighted to say that following a great response to this year’s Press Photographer of the Year competition that voting will go live today. All members are invited to view the galleries online before choosing their favourite in each category.

You will be sent an email to the address your membership is registered with. The individual category winners will then go forward to be judged by the board members of The BPPA to decide who become the Press Photographer of the Year.

Following last year’s success it has once again been a pleasure to see entries pour in. It’s a real showcase of British press photography. Voting is open now via the google form and will close at 10pm on Tuesday 1st March.

Thanks as always for your support and also to our friends at Canon who have once again sponsored the competition.

All entries can be viewed at https://thebppa.zenfoliosite.com/ppoty-2021-galleries

The BPPA Press Photographer of the Year awards update

Thanks to everyone who has entered this year’s Press Photographer of the Year competition. Entries are coming in steadily and we’re looking forward to seeing many more in the coming days!

This year we’re using an automated system to process your images. It is therefore really important that before uploading your pictures that you read the ‘How to Enter’ page on the competition website. This will make it easier for everyone!

Entries for the awards are currently open and will close for entries on the 18th of February. To find more details visit the separate competition website at the link below.

https://thebppa.zenfoliosite.com/home

The BPPA's Press Photographer of the Year Awards

We’ve all cursed at picture editors’ infamous inability to use the right picture, and know that the very best judges of our work are ourselves, and our peers. What matters is the photography, not what’s on the menu at a gala dinner, and whether you can look like an extra in a Bond film squeezed into a hired black tie jacket.

And last year’s inaugural BPPA Press Photographer of the Year competition, supported by Canon, with over 2400 images entered from 183 photographers, all being judged online by 140 BPPA members, awarding Adam Gray of SWNS the top prize, brought just that, a competition for press photographers designed and judged by press photoraphers.

BPPA Chairman Paul Ellis says “Last year’s competition was an overwhelming success with so many fantastic entries from our membership, showcasing the best of British press photography, and we’re thrilled to be running it again this year”

Launching in February, we’ll be doing it all over again, supported by Canon, with the same categories and the same rules. Entry is open to all press photographers with a modest fee, but will be free for BPPA members. The images will then be judged and voted on by the BPPA membership with a smart trophy prize awarded in each category. Please find a list of the categories below.

News Photographer of the Year

Arts and Entertainment Photographer of the Year

Portrait Photographer of the Year

Royal Photographer of the Year

Business Photographer of the Year

Sport Photographer of the Year (Action)

Sport Photographer of the Year (Away from the Action)

Young Photographer of the Year

Photo Essay Photographer of the Year

Covid-19 Photo Essay Photographer of the Year

Remembering Tom Stoddart

Remembering Tom Stoddart

by Tim Bishop

Tom Stoddart was a very open man in his work, ready to generously share his experiences, his knowledge, his thoughts and wisdom from a remarkable career at the very front of Fleet Street’s finest, working for so many differing news organisations and outlets, from national tabloids and broadsheets in the UK, to news magazines and agencies all over the world.

So yesterday it was for me, and so many others, a profound sense of shock when I was called by The BPPA Secretary Neil Turner with the news Tom had died. Neil asked that the news be kept within a close circle of friends at the request of the family, and that we shouldn’t post anything on social media.

For though Tom was so well known by so many within our profession, spanning generations of photographers, both those who worked alongside him, and those younger who have been inspired and emboldened by meeting him, and seeing his work, in his personal life he was a very private man.

And of all the friends and colleagues I’ve spoken to over the last 48 hours, not one had any idea our friend was fighting cancer.

Tom Stoddart represented the very best of us, working in news from tabloids to broadsheets, and later magazines shooting some astonishing imagery. But he always found time for others, to encourage, to inspire, and back in the day on the road for UK nationals, to help out a colleague.

It means there is so much for so many of us to recall, me joining him on the site of an Alpine coach crash on a Saturday, quietly greeting me with a nod, he with that boxer stance, feet apart, and looking away back and forth as he staccato de-briefed me in his strong Geordie voice, his pictures safely filed to the office deadline for his paper The Sunday Times. He had no special reason to help this young guy from his sister paper The Times, but he did, tipping me off on what he thought might make a picture for me ‘Sunday for Monday’.

Later years, after an injury sustained covering a war zone, Tom joined us on the Sunday Telegraph when I worked the picture desk. Tom was doing ‘light duties’, and it was my occasional privilege to brief him, and edit his ‘contacts’. Later I will never forget the pictures he filed to us from Sarajevo and then the first free elections in South Africa. Now exhibited and in books all over the world, these images were a ‘first use’ for us on the Sunday Telegraph and I recall the gasps even from the hardened hacks in our newsroom as they came in.

He was a brilliant photographer with the most extraordinary gift, but never once let you know it.

Jeff Moore, past Chair of The BPPA, remembers the man who never said no when asked if he would get involved in our Association projects, present an award, judge some pictures, attend an event.

“I remember the first time I met Tom and him coming up to me saying that me and him ‘were the youngest.’ Of course I knew he had to be older than me, he’d been a hero to me for a long time, back when I first started photography. I was astounded he was so nice and I was really pleased. He was so encouraging. I didn’t expect him to come up and just start talking to me, as I was then, a young agency photographer just starting.”

Peter Summers, The BPPA Young Photographer of the Year, recalls “Tom was always there to offer support and encouragement, and how it was a real boost seeing he’d messaged you about a photo or liked something on Instagram or Twitter.”

A former picture editor back then new to his role at The Sunday Times remembers being alarmed with having to brief Tom with an exceptionally dull diary job on a Saturday morning. He’d just had a big row with another contract photographer who had turned the assignment down, and in a typical busy desk style, he called the next name on the list. “Tom listened in silence, he knew it was crap, I knew it was crap, but it had to be done. He didn’t complain or comment. But there was an ominous silence and I had already had a slagging off from one of our ‘star photographers’. Ok, Tom said, but send a bike. It was his way of telling me he was doing me a favour without making me feel a complete arse.”

Sir Don McCullin said that “I hear this news with great sadness. Not only a friend, but Tom was one of the great documentary photographers of his generations with an honesty and compassion that shown through his work.”

Jeff Moore recalls “. I don’t think I ever had a conversation with Tom about photography. But as a true freelance, Tom truly only worked for the people he photographed. His work was for them to tell them their story. Everything he did had integrity and humanity. Not only a great photographer but a fine human being.”

“But though he didn’t tell me this being around him and seeing his pictures I know this to be true….”

“Whether joyful or a moment of terror when people allow you into their lives you kind of have a contract with that person. You have to be truthful and honest and use your integrity to tell the story.”

“Tom Stoddart made thousands of those contracts in his career and he never broke it once.”

Tom Stoddart, documentary photographer, supporter of The BPPA, died 17th November 2021, aged 67.

The BPPA Press Photographer of the Year 2020 – RESULTS

Photo: ©Adam Gray/SWNS for Daily Mail |


The results are in for the first British Press Photographers’ Association Press Photographer of the year competition.

We were delighted to receive more than 2400 photographs from 183 photographers, members and non-members, into the ten categories.

The competition was then judged by our members, 140 of them took part, viewing the 408 entries. The photographer with the most votes in each category went through to be voted on by members of The BPPA board to become ‘The BPPA Press Photographer of the Year’.

We are delighted to announce that The BPPA Press Photographer of the Year 2020 is Adam Gray of SWNS.

Adam took first place in two categories, Photo Essay and the Covid-19 Essay. The board members who voted thought his Covid-19 folio in particular stood out and that he deserved the top award in this, out first, Press Photographer of the Year competition. You can see Adam’s winning folios along with the rest of the winners at thebppa.pixelrights.com

The winning portfolios, voted for by members of The BPPA are:

  • News Photographer of the Year – Dylan Martinez – Reuters
  • Arts and Entertainment Photographer of the Year Neil Hall – EPA
  • Portrait Photographer of the Year – Christopher Furlong – Getty Images
  • Royal Photographer of the Year – Samir Hussein
  • Business Photographer of the Year – James Hardisty – The Yorkshire Post
  • Sport Photographer of the Year (Action) – Tom Jenkins – The Guardian
  • Sport Photographer of the Year (Away from the action) Lee Smith – Action Images/Reuters
  • Young Photographer of the Year – Peter Summers
  • Covid-19 Photo Essay of the Year – Adam Gray – SWNS
  • Photo Essay of the Year (non-Covid-19) Adam Gray – SWNS

Highly Commended :

  • News – Hannah McKay – Reuters
  • Arts and Entertainment – Samir Hussein
  • Portrait Photographer – Dan Charity – The Sun
  • Royal Photographer – Chris Jackson – Getty Images
  • Business Photographer – Christopher Furlong – Getty Images
  • Sport Photographer (Action) – Clive Mason – Getty Images
  • Sport Photographer (Away from the action) Carl Recine – Action Images/Reuters
  • Young Photographers – Molly Darlington – Action Images/Reuters, James Speakman – Mercury Press, Jordan Pettitt – Solent News
  • Covid-19 Photo Essay – Christopher Furlong – Getty Images
  • Photo Essay (non-Covid-19) Kiran Ridley

Lindsey Parnaby, Chairman of The British Press Photographers’ Association, said: “We’ve had an amazing response from photographers entering our first Photographer of the Year competition. It really is a showcase of fantastic press photography from what really was a very memorable year. 2020 will be remembered for many reasons and these collections of photographs document it in a very special way.Many thanks to everyone who entered and thanks must go to our sponsors Canon and Pixelrights. I really hope you enjoy viewing the galleries.”

Adam Gray makes his acceptance speech from New York.