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world21h ago
The true story behind Robert Capa's iconic D-Day photo
- Capa joined the D-Day assault at Omaha Beach and began taking photos as bullets flew around him.
- Only 11 of Capa’s D-Day negatives survived, despite reports of a darkroom disaster.
- Some critics questioned whether the darkroom disaster ever happened, challenging Capa’s full account of D-Day.
- The surviving images, including the photo of a lone soldier in the surf, helped shape how the world remembers D-Day.
- Capa’s career spanned prior conflicts, including the Spanish Civil War, where his work documented brutal realities and anti-fascist fighters.
- Capa’s partner Gerda Taro, another photographer, was killed in 1937 while covering the Spanish Civil War.
- Capa’s D-Day report for Life magazine included a will and farewell letter due to the invasion’s risks.
- Directors like Steven Spielberg later drew inspiration from Capa’s D-Day images for major films.
- The National Geographic piece emphasizes the human face of war captured in the lone soldier’s image.
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