THOUGHT PHOTOGRAPHY:
A PHOTOGRAPHER'S ACCOUNT
by Lawrence Fried, President of the American Society of Media
Photographers, The Society of Photographers in Communications.
Lawrence Fried's photographs have appeared in such publications
as the Saturday Evening Post, Life, Look, Woman's Day, Paris
Match, Vogue, Holiday, and Newsweek, and Fried is the
recipient of the Overseas Press Club Photography Award and seven
different awards from Popular Photography magazine. He
is Director Of Photography for the Image Bank, Inc., New York,
New York.
Because of the impromptu nature of the "thought photography"
session between Lawrence Fried and Uri Geller, the following report
cannot be taken as positive proof of the occurrence of a paranormal
event. Fried's account of what he and his two colleagues witnessed
in Geller's Manhattan apartment on a day in mid-1973 is an anecdote
at best. Fried, an experienced photographer, is convinced that
Geller could not have removed the lens cap from the camera to
take the "thought" image that appeared on the developed
film. The lens cap had been tightly taped on; Fried (and his
two assistants) had watched Geller throughout the session, photographing
him with another camera, and when Geller returned the camera he
had been using, it showed no signs of having been tampered with.
The circumstances under which the film was developed also convinced
Fried that Geller could not have used trickery at the developing
stage of the photograph. Fried recounts all of these things in
his brief report, which is included in this book because of Fried's
unimpeachable professionalism and expertise with a camera.
Published for the first time, with the permission of the
author.
IN MID-1973, I received a photographic assignment from Human
Behavior magazine to photograph the Israeli psychic Uri Geller.
I had not met Mr. Geller before this meeting took place, and,
in fact, was not familiar with his psychic abilities. At one
point during our photographic session, Geller mentioned, casually,
that he had once or twice before been able to project his own
image on film through a completely closed camera. He was eager
to try to do it again.
I suggested that I put the lens cap on one of my lenses and cover
it with tape to make it entirely light-tight and then have Geller
attempt to take his own photograph. He agreed to make the attempt.
He said he had never done it with color film before, so I put
color in the camera. I fastened the lens cap very securely onto
a 5o-mm Nikkor lens and then, using generous amounts of photographer's
gaffer tape (a two-inch-wide, silvery, clothlike tape), I put
two complete layers of said tape across the lens cap, overlapping
at least an inch onto the barrel of the lens. I then wound another
long piece of tape around the lens barrel itself, covering the
ends of the first two layers that had gone across the lens cap.
I immediately handed the Nikon camera to Geller and with another
Nikon proceeded to photograph him.
Geller held the camera at arm's length, pointing it at his head
and tripping the shutter. (See Plate 47.) He repeated this at
various distances from his head until he had the camera pressed
directly against his forehead. He did this many times until the
entire roll of 35-mm exposures had been "exposed." All
the time Geller was tripping the shutter, I was photographing
him. My two assistants, Hank Gans and Laurel Gallagher, were
present, standing on either side of me and never taking their
eyes off Geller. In addition, there was also a reporter from
the New York Post in the room at the time. No one else
was present.
I took the camera from Geller's hands upon completion of the
experiment and personally removed the roll of film. I marked
it to keep it separate from the rest of the exposed film and put
the roll in an inside pocket of my jacket. We packed our equipment
and left Geller's apartment. At no time after I loaded the camera
before the start of the experiment was I separated from that camera.
It was never out of my hands until the second I handed it to
Geller, from which time I never took my eyes off it and was never
more than three to five feet away from it. This can be corroborated
by my two assistants.
The film (high-speed Ektachrome) was sent to Berkey-K&L Laboratory,
in New York, for processing, with instructions that the processor
not cut the roll or mount any slides if there were any pictures
on the film. Mr. Geller, incidentally, was never advised as to
where my film was to be processed.
The next morning I received the processed roll from the lab and
opposite frame marker number 10, on the edge of the roll, was
an image of Geller. It was somewhat out of focus and slightly
underexposed, but unmistakably a photograph of Geller taken at
the exact spot where the experiment had been conducted. (See Plate
48.) When I finally removed the tape from the lens that Geller
had used, there was absolutely no indication that it had been
disturbed in any manner whatsoever.
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