When He Said "Jump..."
Philippe Halsman defied gravitas.
- By Owen Edwards
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
"Some of Halsman's sitters were more skillful at hiding their true selves than he was at cracking their facades, so he started to look at his jump pictures as a kind of Rorschach test, for the sitters and for himself," says Callahan, who now teaches the history of photography at the Parsons School of Design and Syracuse University, both in New York. "Also, I think Halsman came to the idea of jumping naturally. He was quite athletic himself, and well into his 40s he would surprise people at the beach by doing impromptu back flips."
The idea of jumping must have been planted in Halsman's mind even before his experience with the Fords. In 1950, NBC television commissioned him to photograph its lineup of comedians, including Milton Berle, Red Skelton, Groucho Marx and a fast-rising duo named Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Halsman noticed that some of the comedians jumped spontaneously while staying in character, and it was unlikely that any of them jumped with more antic enthusiasm than Martin, a crooner and straight man, and Lewis, who gave countless 10-year-old boys a class clown they could look up to.
It may seem like a stretch to go from seeing funnymen jumping for joy to persuading, say, a Republican Quaker vice president to take the leap, but Halsman was always on a mission. ("One of our deepest urges is to find out what the other person is like," he wrote.) And like the true photojournalist he was, Halsman saw a jumpological truth in his near-perfect composition of Martin and Lewis.
In the book, Martin and Lewis appear on a right-hand page, juxtaposed with other famous pairs on the left: songwriters Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein, and publishers Richard L. Simon and M. Lincoln Schuster. "Each of the four men on the left jumps in a way which is diametrically opposed to the jump of his partner," Halsman wrote. "Their partnerships were lasting and astonishingly successful. The two partners on the right, whose jumps are almost identical, broke up after a few years."
Owen Edwards is a former critic for American Photographer magazine.
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Comments (4)
BRILLIANT!!!!!!
Posted by mariano on August 11,2010 | 10:28 PM
STILL THE SAME OLD JERRY.
Posted by Dean Martin on November 5,2009 | 07:12 AM
NO WAY.
Posted by Jerry Lewis on October 21,2009 | 01:30 PM
One word answers are quite rude.
Posted by Holly on May 1,2009 | 04:42 AM
NO.
Posted by Jerry Lewis on April 17,2008 | 07:37 AM
Hello, I am a biology education major at college right now with an art minor. For one of my art classes I did a 14x17 rendering in charcoal of the picture above (Jerry Lewis/Dean Martin). In order to support myself through college I would like to start selling some of my art; however, since Smithsonian Magazine has the copyright on this picture (I assume) I cannot legally sell it without your permission. Can I get permission to sell my charcoal renderings of this picture? Thank you for your time. Joel Brown
Posted by Joel Brown on December 19,2007 | 06:15 AM