“A Slight Case of Murder,” trailer, 1938
Introducing One Of America’s Ace Columnists: Mark Hellinger
Introducing One Of America’s Ace Columnists: Mark Hellinger
“Today’s headlines tell a harrowing story of a world gone mad…”
Mark Hellinger
“…the story of a live city…”
“…the story of a live city…”

Unidentified Photographer, AP, May 14, 1941
Victors’ Chorus
Winners and runners-up in the Brooklyn Methodist hospital’s “most perfect baby” contest doesn’t seem happy about it…

Brooklyn Eagle, May 13, 1941

Unidentified Photographer, Brooklyn Eagle, May 14, 1941
Boilermaker’s Baby Tops
Howling successes are these babies, all prize winners in Methodist Hospital’s annual perfect baby contest…

Unidentified Photographer, Buffalo, May 16, 1941
What? Sextuplets?
No, it’s just the six winners and runners-up in the Brooklyn Methodist Hospital’s “most perfect baby” contest…

Unidentified Photographer, New York Sun, May 14, 1941

Weegee, PM, May 14, 1941, p. 17

Weegee, PM, May 14, 1941, p 17
Meet Methodist Hospital’s Most Perfect Baby
One of these six babies, all of them born last year in the maternity ward of the Methodist Hospital, Sixth Street and Seventh Avenue, Brooklyn, will soon be named the most perfect baby of the year. The nurses are lining them up to be judged by the pediatricians as part of the hospital’s fourth annual Perfect Baby Contest yesterday. The fist baby on the left is making a grab for the first prize, perhaps it’s an omen. The others don’t seem to be very much interested. Which of the six do you think should win?

Weegee, PM, May 14, 1941, p. 17

Weegee, PM, May 14, 1941, p. 17

“V-E Day”

“The Big Celebration in Times Square”

“All Around the Town… Our Unofficial Victory Celebration”
PM, Nay 8, 1945

PM, May 7, 1944, p.32
Weegee meets a great man.
Weegee brought in a photograph of an old man sitting on a cot, his hands in his lap. Weegee is the cigar-smoking, crime, fire, and seamy-side-of-life photographer who lives across the street from police headquarters and does his best work from midnight on.
“This is Stieglitz, Alfred Stieglitz,” said Weegee. “He’s a great photographer…”
Stieglitz invited Weegee to his gallery. But first they stopped at a druggist’s, where the aged photographer left a prescription. Then they walked up to 509 Madison Ave. and took an elevator to the 17th floor…
Stieglitz pointed to a phone near his cot. It never rings, he said. I have been deserted…
He was a failure, he told me…
…and he never used the products of Eastman Kodak because of their slogan You push a button. We’ll do the rest.
…And I left quietly and shut the the glass door with the words painted on it, AN AMERICAN PLACE.
“It doesn’t seem right that such a great artist should have such a little reward,” said Weegee.
PM, May 7, 1944

Weegee, Naked City, 1945






Screenshots from eBay
Weegee was not the photographer and did not make this photograph.
Presumably Phil Burchman was the photographer…


Screenshots from eBay, 04/2022
Recent auction… obviously not a photo made by Weegee.