Celebrities and busy people

  John Mellencamp 1

 

The advantage of being in the backstage area at an event like yesterday's campaign rally of President Obama in Dubuque, Iowa is the fact that the chance for a photo of one of the celebrities that supported the campaign increases exponentially.

 

Kate Walsh

 

I made a few clicks of TV actress Kate Walsh, who spoke at the rally. To be honest, I didn't know much about her until yesterday but for someone like me, who doesn't watch much TV, this comes at no surprise. However, she was well received by many people in the audience.

 

John Mellencamp 2

 

Better known to me is musician John Mellencamp, who played a few songs with his band before the President arrived. Great music, well played!

 

Jay Carney, David Axelrod, Dubuque, August 2012

 

Probably some of the busiest men on the planet at the moment are Barack Obama's Campaign Manager David Axelrod and Press Secretary Jay Carney. I made a few clicks of Axelrod but didn't like the  results this time. The photo here is from August 2012. It shows both men during Barack Obama's speech at the old Star Brewery in Dubuque. I have no idea who the gentleman on the right hand side is that grinned into my camera. OK, if I don't know a person it doesn't mean it isn't a celebrity, who knows... ;-)

 

 

A touching moment

Arrival in Dubuque  

Yesterday Dubuque had some very special guests in town. President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle visited during their bus tour through several cities in Iowa and campaigned for his reelection. The event took place in the amphitheater at the old Star Brewery building right at the Mississippi River. I always admit that I'm not a "people photographer" but of course, for an event like this I couldn't leave the camera at home. Because of security you couldn't bring a bag with a whole bunch of equipment and so I just chose the Nikkor 24-120, f/4 lens attached to the D300s.

I knew ahead of time that it would be difficult to make a shot of the Obamas without any other person in the frame but this was what I hoped to accomplish. Joan and I went relatively early to the location and this gave me enough time to study the light, and even more important to figure out where the action of their arrival would take place. With the president it is a guessing game, because of security reasons nobody would really tell you the details. I put all my eggs in one basket and took position at the fence closest to the driveway on the south side of the brewery. I was hoping they would walk from the bus straight to the center of the arena and would walk right by us. The other option was that the bus would stop at the back side of the building and they would enter the arena through the house. In this case my position would have been ridiculously far away from any action. When a guy from the secret service started to clean off some dust with a broom from the driveway right in front of us, just a couple minutes before the Obamas arrived, I was sure that we were in the right place.

And then they came and were enthusiastically greeted by the crowd in the arena. I'm sorry but I needed my hands to hold the camera steady and couldn't really participate... ;-)

Being greeted

The first image is cropped on the right hand side to keep a secret service guy out of the frame who came to close the bus door. The second picture shows how difficult it was to accomplish my goal  to make a photo without other people and no distracting background. However, I like that the president points his finger at me (or maybe at  the people standing around me ;-)  ).

 

Michelle and Barack Obama

 

And a couple heart beats later I had the shot I really wanted yesterday. No bodyguards, no press photographers, just the smiling couple in front of the stone wall of the old Star Brewery.

 

During his speech

 

The last photo was made during his speech, over the heads of the surrounding crowd, and was heavily cropped in post. I tried many different angles and ran around between the people, made a lot of clicks, but this was the photo with the least distracting background.

It was the first time in my life that I took pictures of a celebrity. Beside all my photography interest at this event, it was a touching moment for me to be so close to the current President of the United States and his wife, even if it was just for a brief moment.