The Lost Photos: When Hollywood Was Hollywood
The late Julian Wasser had unprecedented access to stars at their most unguarded

Jennifer Laski is an Emmy-winning photo and video producer, and director, based in L.A.
Private and candid moments with Hollywood royalty caught on camera are rare today in this age of everything-is-perfect Instagram, TikTok, and publicist restrictions. But in an earlier era, Los Angeles photographer Julian Wasser straddled the worlds of journalism and the bohemian-celebrity era of the 1960s and 70s with ease. He died at the age of 89 on Feb. 8 in L.A., having led a life behind the camera of unprecedented access. His secret? “My dad always had a camera on him. We had this Ryan O’Neal-Tatum O’Neal Paper Moon-esque relationship where we were sidekicks and I would be his assistant and carry his bags,” says his daughter, actress and producer Alexi Celine Wasser. “He was granted access because he was on assignment but the reason he got the shot is, he was always paying attention, and he knew when to get the shot.” He was also fearless. “He was an old-timey-back-east-kind-of-guy, born in Philadelphia but grew up in the Bronx, and he would just use phrases, like when he was trying to tell me something that would toughen me up, ‘That’ll put hair on your chest, man.’ He was a great dad.” (Wasser is also survived by a son, James.)
Though Wasser would accept assignments, often from Time magazine, he also was a consummate hustler — using a police scanner and his gift of gab to put himself in the middle of the action. Which didn’t detract from his artistry. Craig Krull of Santa Monica’s Craig Krull Gallery represented Wasser for more than 30 years, and says of one famous image, “Though Julian often sarcastically joked that his photo of Marcel Duchamp playing chess with a nude Eve Babitz was made just so he could see her boobs, the photo was actually a stroke a genius. It has become one of the most recognized images of staged conceptual photography of the 20th century.” (The picture is among those shown below.)
David Geffen, Elton John, Carly Simon, James Taylor, 1974

Alexi’s favorite photo of her father’s is “Jack and Anjelica Huston running around their house and there’s a record player. It’s fun and sexy and then in the background, Jennifer Nicholson is like a little girl in the background. You can see and it’s funny because we are friends on Instagram now. ‘I’m like, oh my God, is that you?’”
Jane Fonda, 1973

The Jackson 5, 1971

Robert F. Kennedy, 1968

Steve McQueen, 1963

Jayne Mansfield, 1964

The Charlie’s Angels Cast, 1976

James Baldwin, 1965

Linda and Paul McCartney, Cher, Greg Allman, Bob and Sara Dylan, 1976

Joan Didion, 1968

“I am in charge of his estate now, of his archive, so I am aware of everything he has ever taken photos of and there’s some photos that haven’t been used even of Joan Didion by the Corvette,” says daughter Alexi. “There is this sinewy, willowy-esque (pose), she’s smoking a cigarette and there’s smoke in front of her face. It’s like a really sexy, cool photo, a version of that shoot that maybe people haven’t seen.”
Natalie Wood, Marilyn Monroe, 1962

Eve Babitz and Marcel Duchamp, 1963

Martin Luther King Jr., 1963

Robert Evans and Mia Farrow, 1967
Andy Warhol, Irving Blum, Billy Al Bengston, Dennis Hopper, 1963

David Bowie and Rodney Bingenheimer, 1972

Julian Wasser, c. 1960

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Gorgeous photos of ICONS! Thank you Julian! It'd be wonderful to see these on display in LA somewhere soon... :-)
When everyone was skinny because they smoked.