Composograph
The Graphic was dubbed "The Porno-Graphic" by critics of the time[1] and has been called "one of the low points in the history of American journalism".[2] Exploitative and mendacious, in its short life (it closed operations in 1932) the Graphic defined "tabloid journalism and launched the careers of Ed Sullivan and Walter Winchell, who developed the modern gossip column there. Film director Sam Fuller worked for the Evening Graphic as a crime reporter.
"Composographic" images were literally cut and pasted together using images of the heads or faces of current celebrities, glued onto staged images created in Macfadden's in-house studio, often using newspaper staffers as body doubles. They represented events that were inconvenient to photograph, particularly with the equipment of the day: private bedrooms and bathtubs, Rudolph Valentino's unsuccessful surgery, Valentino's funeral, and notably on March 17, 1927, a full-page image of Valentino meeting Enrico Caruso in heaven. The very first faked photograph—that of Alice Jones Rhinelander baring her breast in court (part of the Kip Rhinelander divorce trial)—is said to have boosted the Graphic's circulation by 100,000 copies.[3]
Apart from their sensational subject matter, composographs have relevance as a historical reference point in the current debate over staged and doctored news photos. Some of the Graphic composographs have an unforgettable eerie visual impact. In a 1997 academic paper called "Staged, faked and mostly naked: Photographic innovations at the Evening Graphic, 1924–1932"[4] and a shorter online essay, "The Evening Graphic's Tabloid Reality," Radford University professor Bob Stepno points out that the Graphic was published before improvements in photojournalism technology and standards that made possible the photo realism of Magnum Photos, Black Star and others during World War II.
References
- ↑ Hunt, William R. Body Love: The Amazing Career of Bernarr Macfadden. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1989: 135.
- ↑ Yagoda, Ben. "The True Story of Bernarr Macfadden." American Heritage 33.1 (December 1981).
- ↑ "The Press: Pastepot Wonder". Time. Feb. 27, 1950. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
- ↑ AEJMC Archives - September 1997, week 3 (#11)