The Fred Stein Story |
By Maureen Gallagher Fred Stein was born on July 3, 1909 in
Dresden, Germany. His father (who died when Stein was only six years
old) was a rabbi, and his mother was a religion teacher. An independent
thinker, Stein became active in socialist and anti-Nazi movements as
a teenager. He joined the Socialist Workers’ Party, a non-Communist
splinter group of the Social Democrats. He lectured and rode around
on his bike distributing anti-Nazi literature. Stein was a brilliant
student full of humanist ideals, attending Leipzig University to study
law. He obtained his law degree in an impressively short time, but
was denied admission to the German bar by the Nazi government for “racial
and political reasons.”
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Paris in the 1930s Paris in the 1930s was a vivid time for
these expatriates. The Steins were at the center of a group of young
socialists, thinkers and artists. They sheltered refugees in their
house and cooked huge meals to help feed their friends. Even Robert
Capa’s girlfriend, Gerda Taro, lived as a boarder with the Steins.
Disenfranchised from a career of law in Germany, Stein took up photography
and began documenting the street life of Paris. At the time, Leica
had just introduced a small, hand-held camera – greatly altering the
mobility and ease of such work. The new Leica suited Stein’s interests
perfectly, and he worked as a professional photographer pioneering
this format with the Leica that he and Lilo had purchased as a joint
wedding present. Lilo, who came from an aristocratic background, worked
as his darkroom assistant and held odd jobs to make ends meet. He set
up a studio and made portraits, photographing many of his acquaintances
and friends, including Bertolt Brecht, Arthur Koestler, Andre Malraux,
and Willy Brandt.
Carrying only a suitcase with some negatives and prints, she posed
as a French national, bluffed her way through German red tape, obtained
a safe conduct pass, and was reunited with Stein in Toulouse, where they
hid in a chicken house. They made their way to Marseilles by hiding in
the bathrooms of trains; in Marseilles they obtained danger visas through
the International Rescue Committee and the President’s Advisory Committee. |
New York in the 1940s In the freedom of New York, Stein continued
his photography while Lilo arranged their life so that he was able
to pursue his art. She believed in his genius, and worked at various
jobs to ensure a steady income for the family, ran the household, and
went to school at night. Their son Peter was born in New York.
From the first, Stein worked with a 35mm
Leica (in fact, the first model ever produced) while most other portrait
photographers worked with large studio cameras. Later he added the
small-format Rolleiflex. He enjoyed working without assignment, prizing
the freedom of answering only to his aesthetic standards. He would
then offer his work to publishers and photo editors of magazines and
newspapers. He was a member of the Photo League for a few years, until
he became disenchanted with their pro-Communist sympathies.
And just as his parents shared the creative
photographic life, Peter and his wife, Dawn Freer (a film editor) share
the film-making life. More than 60 years after Fred and Lilo made the
perilous journey to New York City with a suitcase full of negatives
and prints, Peter continues to pursue the life of creative vision.
While he quit making feature films so he could have more time with
his family, he teaches at New York University’s Graduate Film School,
along with shooting commercials and documentaries. |