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Nightclub hostess in ‘Golden Alaska’, Japan, 1964 ... - Vintage Japan
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Nightclub hostess in ‘Golden Alaska’, Japan, 1964 Ph. Michael Rougier
Nightclub hostess in ‘Golden Alaska’, Japan, 1964 ... - Vintage Japan
The Photography of Michael Rougier | LIFE
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According to LIFE lore, Michael Rougier (1925-2012) is the only unknown who walked into the office and was hired right then and there as a staff photographer. His feat had been to get pictures of a then-camera shy Eva Peron and smuggle the film out of Argentina. It turned out, however, that celebrities would seldom be his subject. As a war correspondent in Korea, he did not aim for action shots but instead focused on “the stresses and strains of a soldier’s mind.” He also showcased the plight of a Korean orphan in “The Little Boy Who Wouldn’t Smile,” a story that brought Rougier acclaim and the boy clothes, medicine and toys from readers. Once, while trailing a geological survey crew up a nameless Antarctic mountain, Rougier tumbled down its side and was badly hurt. The peak now bears the name Mount Rougier.
The Photography of Michael Rougier | LIFE
Life magazine has dug into its vault and recently released a treasure trove of photos that photojournalist Michael Rougier took for a Life special issue on Japan, published in September 1964. Many of them have never been published before. Rougier contrasted the outer appearance of "youth who seem as wholesome and happy as a hot fudge sundae" with the subcultures he found hanging out in jazz clubs and taking drugs at all-night beach parties.
Rediscovering Japan's 'lost generation' and Tokyo Beatles - The Japan Times
Morse and Rougier documented the kids who rebelled against their parents through pill popping, motorcycle riding, swigging booze — and gyrating to the sounds of the Tokyo Beatles. The band was a relatively short-lived phenomenon, with only one album to show for its three years in existence. The music is covers of Beatles' songs rendered in a mix of Japanese and English. It sounds at once like a straight copy and like something completely new. Judging from the photographs, it hit the right chords with the teens of Tokyo. We strongly recommend that you see the full gallery of photos and read more at LIFE.com. It won't be time wasted.
https://web.archive.org/web/20120511095355/http://life.time.com/culture/teenage-wasteland-japanese-youth-in-revolt-1964/#1
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