13.44 GMT
First published on Tue 2 Nov 2021 07.00 GMT
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Albert Einstein at home in New Jersey, 1948This image was featured in the Guardian’s My Best Shot series
Photograph: Marilyn Stafford
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Girl with milk bottle, Cité Lesage-Bullourde, Paris, circa 1950Stafford befriended the famous war photographer Robert Capa in Paris and met Henri Cartier-Bresson, who acted as a mentor, encouraging her to take street photographs
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Edith Piaf, Paris, 1950This photograph of Piaf – dressed in white and laughing – was the opposite of how you’d expect to see her. “That’s why I like the photograph….because she’s laughing, and she did laugh.” Stafford said
Photograph: © Marilyn Stafford
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The activist Francesca Serio, who sued the mafia
Photograph: Marilyn Stafford
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Model having fun at the end of the fashion shoot, Ready-to-wear, Louvre, Paris, circa 1950Stafford worked as a fashion photographer but preferred to shoot the models on the streets of Paris rather than in studios.
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Model wearing a short lace dress – for Paris Haute Couture 1960 – Chanel Willow Series
Photograph: Marilyn Stafford
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Street sleepers, Boulogne-Billancourt, 1950Stafford once said: ‘Photographers don’t grow old – they just grow out of focus’
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Model in Givenchy dress Paris, in Haute Couture circa 1955
Photograph: Marilyn Stafford
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Fruit and tin-smith market, Tripoli, Lebanon, 1960Two years after marrying the British journalist Robin Stafford, she travelled to Tunisia while six months pregnant, on a mission to document the Algerian refugees fleeing France’s ‘scorched earth’ aerial bombardment in the Algerian war of independence. The Observer published two of the images on its front page. The family moved around and Stafford would shoot wherever they went – from Italian writers in Rome to the people of Beirut and Tripoli in Lebanon
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Baalbeck village, Lebanon, 1960Stafford would shoot all across Lebanon. But after separating from her husband, Stafford moved back to London with her daughter and worked for the Observer among other UK and international publications such as Vogue. She photographed the likes of Donovan, Twiggy and Ossie Clark and also took pictures on the film set for Sir Richard Attenborough’s 1969 directorial debut Oh! What a Lovely War
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Weightlifter, Sidon, Lebanon, 1960Stafford was one of few female photographers working for national and international newspapers and magazines at the time. Later she would set up the Marilyn Stafford FotoReportage award to support female photographers around the world
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Twiggy, with press, London, 1960
Photograph: Marilyn Stafford
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Singer Donovan and poet Christopher Logue, pictured in London, circa 1960
Photograph: © Marilyn Stafford
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A model in the Biba Dressing Room with Dogs, London, 1970
Photograph: Marilyn Stafford
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Indian writer Mulk Raj Anand comforting a victim of the Bangladesh war of independence in 1972After a chance encounter on a train Stafford became great friends with Anand – it was through him that she was first introduced to Cartier-Bresson
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Indira Gandhi boarding a plane, New Delhi, 1972Stafford spent a month photographing Gandhi, India’s only female prime minister, at home and at work after the war with Pakistan, which created the new state of Bangladesh
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Indira Gandhi speaking at mass rally in Kashmir in 1972 following the India-Pakistan warAt a time when women were expected to be mothers and wives, not professional photographers, Marilyn Stafford blazed a trail. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1925, she originally intended to become an actress and singer before a friend gave her a Rolleiflex camera after she had moved to New York City. Marilyn Stafford: A Life in Photography is available from Bluecoat Press
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