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HONEYMAN, Donald William

HONEYMAN, SERENY

Posted By: Wagner (email)
Date: 6/28/2013 at 11:58:13

Source: The Morning Sun News-Herald, November 3, 2011 accompanied by a photo.
Donald William Honeyman

Donald William Honeyman, formerly of Morning Sun, Iowa, died recently in London, England. He grew up in Morning Sun graduating from Morning Sun High School in 1936. That year he won the Brain Drain at Iowa City and won a scholarship to the University of Iowa where he received a BA degree in 1940.

The following obituary was printed in papers across the globe at the time of his death.

Don Honeyman, much loved husband of Gitta, died at his home in London on June 1, 2011, at the age of 91. Don is survived by his son Christopher (wife Elaine Andrews), his daughter Mandy (partner Rick Quillen), grandchildren Ian (wife Joanna Paola Honeyman) and Catherine (Husband Neil Sikubwabo), and great-grandson Naim Honeyman Mushimiyimana.

While studying at the University of Iowa for a degree in photography, don entered a national competition and won the grand prize – a job with Vogue, for which he worked for close to a quarter-century in New York, Paris, and London. On graduation in 1940, he was initially employed as an assistant to senior photographers, including Horst and Steichen. By 1941 he was photographing celebrities and some fashion. After Pearl Harbor, Don worked as an Army combat cameraman in the South Pacitic until the end of the war. He was awarded a Bronze Star for bravery. His best-known front-line footage was at the liberation of Manila in February, 1945 which was used in various documentaries including “The World at War”. A two-hour documentary, “Shooting War”, with an interview and featuring Don among ten selected cameraman in all theatres of the war was shown on ABC on December 7, 2000. (For the interview he moved his famous poster of Che Guevara into the background, to provide a little color; but the producer made him take it out – ‘It looks too political’.)

Post-war, Don was assigned to reopen the Paris Vogue studios. In Paris he met and in Vienna married the writer Gitta Sereny. Later after Vogue stints in London and New York, Don returned to the London edition and remained in London since. Opening his own studio in 1963, Don focused on advertising, specializing in fashion, hair, cigarettes and cars. While in recent years many of his photos have been reissued in posters and note cards, his most famous image must be the solarized poster of Che Guevara, created in 1968 in a process of his own invention. He later worked with his wife Gitta on stories for the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Times magazines and on all of her subsequent books including “Albert Speer: His Battle with Truth” and “The German Trauma”. IN a dedication to one of her books, Gitta wrote “Writes, whether men or women, need strong and selfless partners. My Don is the rock upon which my life rests.”

I am not related and I have no further information.


 

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