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Interview transcript,
by Lew and Gail Steiger
Career Path
Interviewer: If we could get from you just a little background
info, like where'd you grow up, a teeny bit of your circumstances.
Dykinga: Okay. I was born the son of a poor black sharecropper ...
(laughter) Okay, I was born in Chicago outside of Chicago, actually and
was there 'til I came to Arizona, went to high school there, did
a little bit of college and a little bit of working for the Chicago
Tribune. Then I went to college and [worked at] the Tribune
at the same time, so I was getting a formal education in two different
ways. And then I went to work for the [Chicago]Sun-Times,
and then I went back to the Tribune. I won a Pulitzer at
the Sun-Times, then I went back to the Tribune as
management as the photo editor. And then I quit, to kind of go find
myself (chuckles) and instead they gave me a leave of absence, and
I went west and discovered Arizona in about 1972. And I named the
state "Arizona." (laughter)
Interviewer: So how'd you first get interested in photography?
Dykinga: I started off in high school, takin' pictures for
the school newspaper, basically, 'cause my brother took pictures
and I got one of his cameras. And I won a Look magazine photo
contest when I was, I think, a sophomore in high school which was
really pretty neat, for a little kid. And that sort of put a stamp
on me
Interviewer: Tell us about the contest. You won it?!
Dykinga: Yeah. Well, I won a category, I got a "first".
It was a football picture, nothing really that good. I look back
at it now and it was just terrible, but back then it was a big deal.
I had really gotten into photography to make money. I was gonna
process film (laughs) and make money. Boy! Did I have a lot to learn.
Interviewer: In junior high?
Dykinga: No, high school.
Yeah. So then I worked for the school newspaper, and that leads
me into the thing about "your disabilities becoming your benefit."
You know? Because back then they didn't really test you that much.
And I had a problem reading in high school, and so I really was
drawn to visual publications, like [National] Geographic.
I was probably the only kid that looked at Geographic not
for the naked breasts, but I really got into the visuals of it.
So it was a way to push me towards communicating visually my inability
to read. I would always do well on tests, but I never finished the
test, so therefore I didn't do well. So nowadays, you know, they
find out that I'm left-handed, pretty well dyslexic. If I type things,
it's all inverted, which are all great attributes for somebody to
choose four-by-five landscape. So it turned into a real boon.
Interviewer: So you were gonna process film to make money.
You won this contest...
Dykinga: It was published, so I kinda had a reputation at
a camera store as a kid who knew what he was doing. And a job came
up from a guy that took pictures of celebrities at O'Hare Airport.
Actually, back then, it was Midway Airport. He wanted me to go out
and photograph celebrities. So I did that for a while. Anyway, I
don't know if I told you guys, I can remember the day that Kennedy
was shot. I was photographing Andy Williams at the airport. Actually,
I told him the president had been shot. Whew! You can always remember
that date. So I did that for a couple of years, and then my images
or pictures snaps started making their way into local newspapers.
So again, your reputation kinda is built that way.
Interviewer: Now, you're outta high school by then?
Dykinga: Oh, yeah. Yeah, I'm out of high school. I'm like
about eighteen.
Interviewer: Aside from Andy Williams, were there any celebrities
that leaped out?
Dykinga: I photographed Barry Goldwater a lot. It turns
out Barry Goldwater was a friend of my old boss, a guy named Mike
Rotunno, who is, in himself, pretty famous. He was a good friend
of Harry Truman's, and people like that. But Goldwater used to always
stop in his office and raise hell with him. So I photographed him
a few times. Photographed Nixon a few times. You know, pretty much
anybody who passed through the airport. Back in those days you photographed
celebrities in such a way that there was an American Airlines tail
of an airplane in the background. Every time it would appear in
the paper, [Mike] would make money from the different airlines,
as a way of publicizing. He was hired by the publicity department.
And it sounds like a scam, but it was actually legitimate in a sense.
So any of these pictures of Howard Hughes or any of these guys comin'
off these ramps that were in Chicago, they were shot by Mike Rotunno,
and he got paid from the airlines.
Interviewer: And he just had a spot where he lined it up
so you'd see ...
Dykinga: No, no, you just did that in the composition. I
mean, it was always on the run. But sometimes it was before jetways,
you know, and they had ladders and things like that. But it was
interesting.
He also shot aerial photos, so I started taking aerial photos too.
Some of the pictures made their way into the newspapers, so you
gained a little bit of a profile that way.
continued: career path >>
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