A Mayor, a Camera, a Life in Pictures

Presented By
Richard L. Berkley

Richard L. Berkley once said, “I like meeting people.” Before, during, and after his record three-term tenure as Kansas City’s mayor — from 1979 to 1991 — he met hundreds of political leaders, entertainers, sports stars, and other celebrities. Most times, he asked to take their pictures. Berkley’s personal collection ranges from images of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan to shots of Bo Jackson, George Brett, Annie Liebovitz, and Joanne Woodward.

The former mayor and lifelong shutterbug offers an illustrated retrospective coinciding with a new exhibit of his collected images in the Genevieve Guldner Gallery at the Central Library that runs through March 8, 2015. Berkley discusses his start with a camera, the stories behind his photos, and the ones that got away – the rare celebrities who turned him down.

Upcoming in this series:
Watch or Listen to Past Events in this Series:
Sunday, August 26, 2012 2:00pm
Civil War battlefields stubbornly conceal their secrets and their archaeology remains a buried, largely untapped source of historical information. Douglas D. Scott, ...
26
Jan
The Overland Trails and the Founding of Independen...
Central Library |
2:00pm
29
Apr
Kawsmouth: The West Bottoms as Indian Territory
Central Library |
2:00pm
21
Jun
Isaac Katz and Katz Drug Stores
Central Library |
4:00pm
17
Apr
Mobsters In Our Midst: The Civella Crime Family of...
Central Library |
2:00pm

A Mayor, a Camera, a Life in Pictures

Date & Location
In Person