18 december 2020

Hi Ho Trigger

When he opened the door to greet Mary Ellen Mark in 1992, Clayton Moore was wearing a mask and never took it off during a shoot for Mark’s photo essay on old cowboys. Moore was, after all, the Lone Ranger, and stayed the Lone Ranger in personal appearances for 40 years after the hit television series ended in 1957. 

“I photographed him at his home. It was a modern house, but he still lived the part of the Lone Ranger. He insisted on wearing his famous mask for all the pictures. I had to do everything I could to make him feel at ease with my camera and me, because he was extremely paranoid. When I was finished photographing him, he insisted that I sign all kinds of papers. As I left, I told him how much I enjoyed meeting him and that I was a big fan. He said to me, ‘if you're such a big fan ... what was the name of my horse?’ I said, ‘Trigger.’ He looked at me in a very scornful way. I quickly realized that I had made a serious blunder. Trigger was Roy Rogers’s horse; Silver was the Lone Ranger’s horse. I'm sure he never forgave me.“
Tekst en foto uit het artikel: PHOTOS: The Essence Of Mary Ellen Mark, The Invisible Made Visible (NPR)

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