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DALLAS--Alexandra Zapruder was not born when her grandfather trained his home-movie camera on President John F. Kennedy's motorcade rolling through downtown Dallas 53 years ago on Tuesday, but ...
Abraham Zapruder recorded the most famous home movie in history. Nov. 18, 2013 — -- The 26-second film often regarded as the most famous home movie in history was shot by a Texas dressmaker ...
How Zapruder JFK assassination film changed the media landscape 01:22. Alexandra Zapruder says her family always said the movie was an “accident of fate,” and that her grandfather was in ...
Nearly 35 years ago, a dressmaker with vertigo climbed a wall so he could get a clear vantage point to film President John F. Kennedy’s motorcade through downtown Dallas.When Abraham Zapruder ...
ZAPRUDER FILM 1967 (Renewed 1995) The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza A still from the famous Zapruder film, which showed the part of JFK's assassination that Dale Carpenter Sr. missed. The ...
Abraham Zapruder, the Dallas businessman who filmed the Nov. 22, 1963, assassination of President John F. Kennedy, was private and reluctant to talk about what he had experienced.
Alexandra Zapruder talked about her book, [Twenty-Six Seconds: A Personal History of the Zapruder Film]. Abraham Zapruder filmed President Kennedy's Dallas motorcade and assassination in 1963 with ...
This is a frame from the film of the assassination of John F. Kennedy shot by Abraham Zapruder on Nov. 22, 1963, in Dallas, that was released by LIFE Magazine. (Time-Life, Inc.) This story ...
That film, the only one of the actual assassination, is “an object that burns everyone who gets close to it,” said Alexandra Zapruder, his granddaughter, who showed the TV clip Tuesday night ...
Zapruder was there with two Secret Service agents, and together they watched the chilling film. His New York editors had authorized Stolley to spend up to $50,000 to get the film. "We would pay ...