This is a frame from the film of the assassination of John F. Kennedy shot by Abraham Zapruder on Nov. 22, 1963, in Dallas, that was released by LIFE Magazine. Time-Life, Inc. This story originally ...
Abraham Zapruder, a home movie camera in his hand, found his unlikely niche in American history as the other shooter in Dealey Plaza. The photography buff aimed his 8mm Bell & Howell at President ...
(CBS News) In the nearly 50 years that have passed since the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, only one film has emerged that shows the shooting from start to finish. Anthony Mason has ...
A Dallas clothing manufacturer made the most important movie of all time. Abraham Zapruder set out to record a visit from John F. Kennedy and ended up chronicling a national catastrophe. For 35 years ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This image made available by the National Archives shows a 1963-1964 photograph of the movie camera used by Abraham Zapruder when ...
When she began to research her grandfather's famous film of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Alexandra Zapruder confronted a family taboo topic. A Dallas businessman and dressmaker, ...
NEW YORK (PIX11) — Without question, it is the most complete and most chilling visual record of a murder ever filmed. A Dallas dress manufacturer and Kennedy admirer was filming President John F.
Abraham Zapruder in his office at Jennifer Juniors, late 1960s, from Alexandra Zapruder's book “Twenty-Six Seconds: A Personal History of the Zapruder Film.” (Zapruder Family/Hachette Book Group ) ...
Abraham Zapruder recorded a tragic moment in history when he captured President John F. Kennedy‘s assassination in full color on Nov. 22, 1963. Fifty-three years later, granddaughter Alexandra ...
Everyman actor Paul Giamatti has played historical figures both real and fictional — everyone from U.S. co-founder John Adams to Santa Claus — but nothing compares to Abraham Zapruder. Dallas ...
The idea of citizen journalism is fairly familiar these days. We’re used to seeing video footage on the news shot by someone with a smartphone. But one of the first, prominent such instances is the ...
It's a scene etched into our collective unconscious. The smiling couple waving to crowds from a black open-top limousine. Bright green grass. Her bright-pink suit and hat. Then something seems to ...