image
image
image


Jeremy Irons steps into the photo booth for UNICEF charity

Source

Face Booth: shooting stars

A decade-long project has asked stars to take a self-portrait and offer a millennium message.

By Sarah Crompton
Published: 4:12PM GMT 30 Dec 2009

 

In 1998, the photographer Alistair Morrison came up with an intriguingly simple idea. To mark the coming millennium, he would invite famous people from all walks of life to take their own photographs in the kind of photo booth the rest of us use for passport snaps. Then he would ask them to attach a suitable message for the future and display them as a portfolio of images, to solicit donations towards children’s charities administered by Unicef.

His idea centred on identity. “One of the key themes of this millennium,” he says, “is the fact that we all have an identity and we all have a right to our say. The passport photograph is a universal means of establishing your identity and we were also asking people to identify themselves through the message they give to the world.”

More than 800 people were initially approached over a two-year period and with a lot of persistence, hundreds of celebrities from Martin Amis to Frankie Dettori, from Tom Cruise to Henry Kissinger, from Tom Hanks to Jessye Norman, from Darcey Bussell to Margaret Atwood agreed to take part. The results, which were published in a special issue of the Telegraph Magazine, featured not only established stars, but rising talents such as Jude Law, Kate Winslet, Rachel Weisz and Rufus Sewell.

The project has already raised £350,000 for Unicef. Now, as we reach the start of another decade, Morrison has returned to it, in order to collect more funds for Children’s Emergency Fund. “It feels as if it is ingrained in my soul,” he says. “A new decade felt like a good opportunity to revisit some of the old faces and find some fresh ones, too.” To that end, followed by a Sky Arts documentary team, he chased across New York to catch up with Jude Law whose career has taken off in the intervening years. He photographed Jeremy Irons once more, older but still unmistakable. He captured the cast of the new movie Nine, including Penelope Cruz.

One thing that is noticeable about the new portraits is the way the technology has changed: photographs taken in today’s photo booths, such as the one of Daniel Day-Lewis, are digital and of exceptional quality. But even in the age of the camera phone, the appeal of walking into a small booth and precisely controlling the image that emerges has remained strong. “What they liked,” says Morrison, “was the element of control. It is less like having your picture taken than taking a self-portrait.”

To donate to the Children’s Emergency Fund, call 0800 037 9797 quoting Telegraph or log on at www.unicef.org.uk/reflect or use the coupon right. 'Face Booth’ is on Sky Arts at 8pm on January 2 and repeated on February 7.

Supported by:

www.thedorchester.com

www.photo-me.co.uk

www.boothnation.com

www.photoboothca.com

 


 

To see photos of Jeremy from the previous photo booth shots from Time to Reflect, click here!

Here is an interview with Time to Reflect creator, Alistair Morrison

A list of other celebrities who contributed to Face Booth

Face Booth will be broadcast on Sky TV on Saturday, 2 January 2010

 

 

 

Back to Articles

Back to Home







image


image
image