Shooting Stars
Photographer Jack Pashkovsky disarmed Hollywood's royalty with his ardor and persistence
- By Barry Avrich
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
I’ve shown some of the pictures to Mary Corliss, former assistant curator of the film stills archives at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. She particularly likes the way Pashkovsky caught stars at their ease. “They appeared fresher, more relaxed when they were away from the set, the portrait studio, the Hollywood première,” she says. “The beautiful people looked like real people, and that’s what makes his portraits illuminating. They have a startling immediacy.”
Whenever I visited him, Pashkovsky would be watching a classic movie on his small television in his overheated room. The old movies seemed to transport him back in time. Of the current stars, he liked Dustin Hoffman, Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall, Al Pacino and Michelle Pfeiffer. And he predicted, long before Legally Blonde made her one, that Reese Witherspoon would become a big star.
Pashkovsky died in his sleep at the age of 89 in April 2001. And I’m still working on that book.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (1)
I have some pictures Jack took, mostly self-portraits. Do you have any interest in them? I believe my mother knew him in the 1930s.
Posted by Elinor on February 25,2013 | 04:52 PM
How is the book about Jack's work comming along? I to loved his work, he use to take me on tours of the MPH and show me his work and tell me the stories behind the pictures. Did he ever tell you the story about his silver dollar? I use to work at the Sav-on's across the street from the MPH. Jack use to come over and make copies all the time.I still miss him. Do you know how I can contact his family? I would like to do some genealogy work on his family, I find his story of comming to America fascinating. Sybil
Posted by sybil on March 4,2008 | 10:27 PM