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DUKAS_191157470_EYE
James Dyson
Originally shot for The Guardian. James Dyson, vacuum cleaner designer.
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DUKAS_190747440_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747451_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747450_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747445_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747453_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747447_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747448_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747446_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747449_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747444_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747442_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747452_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747441_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747454_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_190747443_EYE
Tony Harrison (Poet)
Originally shot for The Guardian, February 2015. Pictured here is English poet, translator and playwright Tony Harrison. These photographs were published in an interview where Harrison talked about winning the 2015 David Cohen Prize, and why he's still open for business. Tony Harrison (Poet). James Drew Turner/The Guardian. 23/02/2015.
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DUKAS_159260813_EYE
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London.
Date: 6/5/09.
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DUKAS_159260812_EYE
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London.
Date: 6/5/09.
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DUKAS_159260811_EYE
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London.
Date: 6/5/09.
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DUKAS_159257880_EYE
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London.
Date: 6/5/09.
© Suki Dhanda / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_159257879_EYE
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London.
Date: 6/5/09.
© Suki Dhanda / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_159257878_EYE
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London
Michael Parkinson photographed at The Ivy in London.
Date: 6/5/09.
© Suki Dhanda / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_141702876_EYE
David Warner
David Warner, actor.
David Hattersley Warner (29 July 1941 Ð 24 July 2022) was an English actor, who worked in film, television, and theatre. He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and worked in the theatre before attaining prominence on screen in 1966 through his lead performance in the Karel Reisz film Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment, for which he was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role.
© Frank Baron / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_141702875_EYE
David Warner
David Warner, actor.
David Hattersley Warner (29 July 1941 Ð 24 July 2022) was an English actor, who worked in film, television, and theatre. He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and worked in the theatre before attaining prominence on screen in 1966 through his lead performance in the Karel Reisz film Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment, for which he was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role.
© Frank Baron / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_141702874_EYE
David Warner
David Warner, actor.
David Hattersley Warner (29 July 1941 Ð 24 July 2022) was an English actor, who worked in film, television, and theatre. He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and worked in the theatre before attaining prominence on screen in 1966 through his lead performance in the Karel Reisz film Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment, for which he was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role.
© Frank Baron / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_141702873_EYE
David Warner
David Warner, actor.
David Hattersley Warner (29 July 1941 Ð 24 July 2022) was an English actor, who worked in film, television, and theatre. He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and worked in the theatre before attaining prominence on screen in 1966 through his lead performance in the Karel Reisz film Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment, for which he was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role.
© Frank Baron / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_123749786_EYE
Shirley Williams
Originally shot for The Guardian. Shirley Williams last speech as LibDem leader in the Lords at LibDem conference pic;martin argles
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DUKAS_115684912_EYE
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
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http://www.eyevine.comMichel Piccoli, French film actor.
© Martin Argles / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_115684782_EYE
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
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http://www.eyevine.comMichel Piccoli, French film actor.
© Martin Argles / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_115684910_EYE
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
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http://www.eyevine.comMichel Piccoli, French film actor.
© Martin Argles / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_115684911_EYE
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
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http://www.eyevine.comMichel Piccoli, French film actor.
© Martin Argles / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_115684783_EYE
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
Michel Piccoli, French film actor.
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http://www.eyevine.comMichel Piccoli, French film actor.
© Martin Argles / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_114755401_EYE
Derek Jarman's house and garden, Dungeness, Kent
Originally shot for The Guardian. Derek Jarman 's house and garden, Dungeness, Kent, the country's largest and oldest shingle beach dating back over 800 years. landscape weather summer holidays nature reserve travel tourism outdoors sea coast line geology nature water sand beach tides recreation wild flowers poppies bird watching RSPB site of special scientific interest SSI wild flowers shingle pebbles fishing boats coastal fishing fishermen old wooden fishing boats Photograph by David Mansell mobile 07831 559901 20 June 2004
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DUKAS_114755400_EYE
Derek Jarman's house and garden, Dungeness, Kent
Originally shot for The Guardian. Derek Jarman 's house and garden, Dungeness, Kent, the country's largest and oldest shingle beach dating back over 800 years. landscape weather summer holidays nature reserve travel tourism outdoors sea coast line geology nature water sand beach tides recreation wild flowers poppies bird watching RSPB site of special scientific interest SSI wild flowers shingle pebbles fishing boats coastal fishing fishermen old wooden fishing boats Photograph by David Mansell mobile 07831 559901 20 June 2004
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DUKAS_102853560_EYE
Lawyer Thomas Olsson
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Lawyer Thomas Olsson. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853559_EYE
Journalist and researcher Jenny Kuttim
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Journalist and researcher Jenny Kuttim. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853558_EYE
Journalist and researcher Jenny Kuttim
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Journalist and researcher Jenny Kuttim. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853557_EYE
Bjorn Asplund
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Bjorn Asplund, father of Johan Asplund on his houseboat. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853556_EYE
Journalist and researcher Jenny Kuttim
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Journalist and researcher Jenny Kuttim. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853555_EYE
Lawyer Thomas Olsson
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Lawyer Thomas Olsson. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853554_EYE
Bjorn Asplund
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Bjorn Asplund, father of Johan Asplund on his houseboat. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853553_EYE
Lawyer Thomas Olsson
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Lawyer Thomas Olsson. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS_102853550_EYE
Lawyer Thomas Olsson
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Lawyer Thomas Olsson. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853549_EYE
Lawyer Thomas Olsson
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Lawyer Thomas Olsson. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853548_EYE
Bjorn Asplund
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Bjorn Asplund, father of Johan Asplund on his houseboat. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853547_EYE
Leyla Bella Drake
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Publishing agent Leyla Bella Drake. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853546_EYE
Leyla Bella Drake
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Publishing agent Leyla Bella Drake. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853545_EYE
Leyla Bella Drake
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Publishing agent Leyla Bella Drake. Stockholm, Sweden. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853544_EYE
Sture Bergwall (Thomas Quick)
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Sture Bergwall. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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DUKAS_102853543_EYE
Sture Bergwall (Thomas Quick)
Originally shot for The Guardian. Pictured here is Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick. Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital where jhe has been for twenty years. Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at S‰ter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found. During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another but then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes RÂstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at S‰ter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. Confronted with RÂstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story. Pictured: Sture Bergwall. Andy Hall/The Guardian. 09/10/2012.
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