Terry O'Neill

Capturing The Beatles, Bowie,

and More Iconic Faces

of the Sixties

David Bowie poses with a large barking dog
for the artwork of his 1974 album ‘Diamond Dogs’ in London.
©TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES

It was 1974. Terry O’Neill (already by then a global photo luminary) was shooting studio portraits of glam rock star David Bowie – and an extremely large dog. “It was a promotional shoot for Bowie’s ‘Diamond Dogs’ album,” said Terry smiling. “The problem was that when a strobe went off in the studio, the absolutely barking mad dog decided to jump up and try and kill it. The entire studio staff instinctively recoiled but David didn’t even blink.”

David Bowie photographed for the 'Diamond Dogs' album cover, circa 1974.
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES

Terry was the photographer of choice for some of the most influential celebrities of the past half century. The roll call just goes on and on, including:

The Beatles; Audrey Hepburn; Brigitte Bardot; Sean Connery; Rod Stewart; Clint Eastwood; Ava Gardner; Dean Martin; Muhammad Ali; John Lennon; Tom Jones; Elton John; Peter Sellers; David Bowie; Robert Redford; Bruce Springsteen; Frank Sinatra; Peter O’Toole; The Who; Steve McQueen; Dustin Hoffman; Michael Caine; Eric Clapton; Faye Dunaway; The Stones; Sir Winston Churchill; Chuck Berry; Peter Cook and Dudley Moore; Marlene Dietrich; Jane Fonda; Ursula Andress; Roman Polanski and Sharon Tate; Groucho Marx

Elton John at his home in Windsor, England, 1974
from the album cover shoot for his Greatest Hits album.
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES

FROM JAZZ DRUMMING TO PHOTOGRAPHY

Considering his world class list of photographic subjects, the amazing thing is that Terry really fell into photography by accident. He spent two years of his childhood training for the priesthood but his true love as a fourteen-year-old was jazz drumming. When he was seventeen, Terry had worked out that he would stand a much better chance of mixing with the big-name jazz players in the States if he could just find a way to ‘cross the pond’.

He decided the answer was to apply to be an air steward with BOAC (the former long-distance arm of British Airways). He recalls: “In those days you’d do the trip to New York and get three days off before flying home. I thought that would be my best chance of getting some jazz gigs out there. But I got offered a ‘foot in the door’ job at the airline’s photographic unit, so I took it just to get into the corporation. Then I got hooked and one thing led to another.” Then came the first break – “I took a photograph of Rab Butler who was then Britain’s Home Secretary, asleep in a waiting room at the airport. He was surrounded by a number of African chieftains.” The picture made the front page of the Sunday Dispatch the next day.

The Daily Sketch noted his emerging talent and offered him a staff job. One of his earlier jobs was to trek to Abbey Road Studios and take a picture of four young musician hopefuls. “Well it turned out to be The Beatles,” says Terry. “The next morning the paper completely sold out. My pictures were some of the very first press photographs ever taken of the group. It was the beginning of pop pictures in newspapers.”

Faye Dunaway takes breakfast by the pool with the day’s newspapers
at the Beverley Hills Hotel, 29 March 1977.
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES

TERRY AND HIS 500CM

For many decades, Terry was a loyal disciple of Hasselblad. And one of his most iconic images – a picture of an exhausted Faye Dunaway (who was, at the time, his wife) slumped in a poolside chair at 6.30am at a top Hollywood hotel after just winning an Oscar – was captured with his beloved Hasselblad 500CM. “She wasn’t very pleased. She had been up all night at the ceremony and didn’t really want me to take the shot,” he admits.

Terry and Hollywood got on like a house on fire. It was Ava Gardner who secured him the plum job of following and photographing Frank Sinatra. “Ava wrote me a letter of introduction to Frank. I handed it to him and he said, ‘Kid, you’re with me.’ Then for the next three weeks he allowed me to go anywhere I wanted to with him, but completely ignored me.” After that, Sinatra gave Terry access to his inner sanctum for years.

Rolling Stones in Leicester Square in London, 1964
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES
AC/DC photographed through glass in London, late 1990
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES
Sean Connery as James Bond plays golf on set in Pinewood Studios
in London during the filming of ‘Diamonds Are Forever’, 1971.
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES

THE ART OF BLENDING IN

Terry O’Neill freely admitted he didn’t really have a set shooting style. He was adamant that the real secret to great photography was for the photographer to learn the art of fading into the background. “When Sinatra ignored me, it was the best gift he could have given me. It enabled me to just get on with the job I do best.” He adds: “I’ve had no training other than working in a darkroom; I’ve never been near a photo seminar in my life. I just try to take pictures that tell a story – perhaps in a candid and unconventional way. I think you can either see a picture or you can’t. I just capture the moment as it is.”

Kate Moss, March 1993
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES

TELLING A STORY IN SQUARE FORMAT

But when the subject was about camera choice, it was all Hasselblad. Up until his last days, he still had that old 500CM (he was a silver halide fanatic). “I love film, but I do shoot digitally when a client demands it,” he says. “I just know that medium format Hasselblad is the way to go at the high-end. I do believe that when image is everything, bigger really is better. I discovered I could tell more of a story in square capture format and for that reason my love affair with Hasselblad has never waned. I used a Hasselblad for my most celebrated portraits of The Queen, Nelson Mandela, Amy Winehouse and Elton John.” Terry commented: “Many professionals still want the quality and feel that only medium format is capable of delivering. In the business I have been in for fifty years, there is no room at all for equipment compromise. I just don’t believe a smaller sensor can ever beat the quality delivered by the medium format platform.” 

Naomi Campbell, 1993
© TERRY O'NEILL / ICONIC IMAGES

30 July 1938 – 16 November 2019

Terence “Terry” Patrick O’Neill lives on as one of the world's most celebrated photographers and a beloved part of Hasselblad history.

© ICONIC IMAGES / TERRY O'NEILL

GERED MANKOWITZ | MUSIC LEGENDS CAPTURED ON THE 500C

THE HISTORY BEHIND THE 500 SERIES CAMERAS

More Hasselblad stories

All stories

Ottavio Giannella

THE EARTH AWAKENS

Photographer Ottavio Giannella flies with his X1D II 50C from Italy to Frankfurt and then on to Keflavík Airport in Iceland. He makes a 40-minute drive to the valley of the Reykjavík peninsula and a two-hour walk to his destination, the Fagradalsfjall eruption site.

Dayanita Singh

Books, Boxes, and Museums - Exhibits Reconstructed

On the 15th of October, Dayanita Singh was presented with the 2022 Hasselblad Award by the Hasselblad Foundation. Often referred to as "the Nobel Prize" in photography, the Hasselblad Award celebrates one artist's pioneering achievements in the photographic arts and their impact on the next generation of photographers. The Hasselblad Foundation highlights Singh's unique archival work, that not only documents the lives of archives but brings about a new way to interact and experience the art of photography.

Ali Rajabi

Pausing New York With the X2D

Every photographer knows about the Hasselblad brand, whether they're an amateur, enthusiast, or professional because the history of photography is on the shoulders of Hasselblad. For me, it's an investment in my career, to move to the next level. It's always important to have the right tools in the right moments to make great photographs.

Hans Strand

Iceland in Mesmerising 100MP Detail

For me as a photographer, the X2D is what a Stradivarius violin might be for a violinist. It's the ultimate camera.

Flora Borsi

Magical Realism With The X2D

The X2D is like a camera for painters. The pictures have the taste and technical background of a painting. I almost couldn't differentiate the two because it's just so perfect. This camera produces all the data I could ever use to convey the tales I want to tell with my pictures.

Heath Holden

Disappearing Doha

Discovering his new home of Doha, Qatar through the lens of street photography, Heath Holden explored the older and more traditional neighborhoods of the historical city.