Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Oddmund, Just a minor point of order, on July 11, 1920 there was no Soviet Union.=20 Chris At 01:43 PM 4/17/97 -0700, you wrote: >Someone mentioned Yul Brynner as a passionate Leica photographer some time >ago. I was very surprised when I found his tomb the other day, just about= 10 >miles from where I am living. He is buried in the Orthodox Monastery of= Luze >from the 12th century (Abbaye Saint Michel de Bois Aubry). I was told that >this has been a "secret" for many years.=20 > >Yul Brynner was born in Vladivostok, Soviet Union July 11 1920 and died in >New York, October 10 1985. According to his last will, his ashes was >transferred to this silent place, so far away from the World. There is a >simple, beautiful tomb stone, almost Zen, on an open place, and the wind >blows even on sunny days. A handful of Orthodox monks and nuns still live >and work there. > >Oddmund =20 > > >PS: I found a short book review... > >"Yul Brynner: Photographer (Abrams. $39.95) Turns out the late Yul Brynner >liked working the other side of a camera, too, so his daughter Victoria >Brynner has compiled his photographs into this book. Yul had advantages in >this avocation, of course, starting with access to co-stars like Anthony >Quinn and Ingrid Bergman (who turns out to be one of his best subjects).= But >he also shot children =97 famous children, children in refugee camps =97= and the >collective work is not uninteresting." > > >