Michele McNally, who elevated Times photography, dies at 66
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Michele McNally, who elevated Times photography, dies at 66
Michele McNally, center, and New York Times staffers listening to their colleague Damon Winter speak after he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for feature photography, in New York, April 20, 2009. McNally, who became the first director of photography at The New York Times and who oversaw a knotty marriage of text and pictures that was validated when The Times won six Pulitzer Prizes for photography, died on Feb. 18, 2022, at a hospital in Yonkers, N.Y. She was 66. Todd Heisler/The New York Times.

by Sam Roberts



NEW YORK, NY.- Michele McNally, who elevated photojournalism at The New York Times as its director of photography and later as a top newsroom manager in a 14-year tenure that brought the paper six Pulitzer Prizes for news and feature photography, died on Feb. 18 in a hospital in Yonkers, New York. She was 66.

The cause was complications of pneumonia, her daughter Caitlin McNally said.

Michele McNally was named The Times’ director of photography in 2004 by Bill Keller, the executive editor at the time. The next year, she was promoted to assistant managing editor, becoming the first photo editor to join the top echelon of newsroom management known as the masthead.

“She was a transformational figure in photojournalism,” said Dean Baquet, The Times’ current executive editor. “She walked into newsrooms where photography had taken a back seat for too long, and forced it into the fore.”

When McNally retired in 2018, Baquet and Joseph Kahn, the managing editor, said in a memo that during her tenure The Times had won more Pulitzer Prizes, George M. Polk Awards, Overseas Press Club honors, Emmys and other citations for photography “than most news organizations have won for their entire reports.”

Among the Pulitzer Prize winners on her watch were Damon Winter in 2009 for his coverage of Barack Obama’s presidential campaign; Josh Haner in 2014 for his photo essay on a Boston Marathon bombing victim who had lost most of both legs; and Mauricio Lima, Sergey Ponomarev, Tyler Hicks and Daniel Etter in 2016 for capturing the struggles of international refugees.

In 2008, McNally herself won the Jim Gordon Editor of the Year Award for photojournalism from the National Press Photographers Association, and in both 2015 and 2017 she received the Angus McDougall Visual Editing Award from the organization Pictures of the Year International at the Missouri School of Journalism.

Talented photographers and photo editors had preceded McNally at The Times, but the newspaper was better known for showcasing its writers and reporters. From the start, McNally made her position clear. “Michele was blunt in saying the paper’s photography was not living up to its words,” as Baquet put it.

She demonstrated how articles in the newspaper could be enhanced visually to attract more readers and even how stories could be told through photographs alone. The advent of nytimes.com online also vastly expanded opportunities to complement articles with images and to present stories visually.

“She has pushed a reluctant newsroom, hired an all-star staff and made The Times the finest visual report in the country,” Baquet and Kahn said in 2018. “Along the way she displayed tremendous humanity when Times photographers found themselves in harm’s way.”




Michele Angela Fiordelisi was born on June 25, 1955, in Brooklyn to Rose Francis (Martire) Fiordelisi, an administrative assistant and seamstress, and Michael Leo Fiordelisi, who worked for the Post Office.

After graduating from South Shore High School in the Canarsie section, she studied mass communications at Queens College from 1973 to 1975 and then took film courses at Brooklyn College. She worked briefly in the audio and video division of the Brooklyn Public Library and was hired as a sales representative by the agency Sygma Photo News in 1977.

Eliane Laffont, her first boss at Sygma, remembered McNally as “a giant in a tiny body — very blunt, very fast, very street smart, a bundle of energy.”

At about 5 feet tall, McNally was said to have been self-conscious about her height but never deterred by it. As she explained to colleagues during a retirement toast, “Once, during a disagreement, my old boss told me, ‘You are small, but you just don’t know it.’”

Other former colleagues recalled her immutable support for photographers in the field and her forthrightness in assessing their work.

“You never had to wonder where you or your work stood in her eyes,” said Pancho Bernasconi, vice president for global news at Getty Images. “She loved great photography along with the brave and dedicated photographers who made those images.”

Her marriage to Joe McNally ended in divorce. In addition to her daughter Caitlin, she is survived by another daughter, Claire McNally, three grandchildren and a sister, Jody Porrazzo. Michele McNally lived in Dobbs Ferry, New York.

She was picture editor of Time Life’s Magazine Development Group in the early 1980s, then picture editor of Fortune magazine from 1986 until she joined The Times in 2004.

Meaghan Looram, whom McNally hired at Fortune and who succeeded her as director of photography at The Times, said: “She proceeded to teach me everything I know about visual editing, about the art of making an inspired match between photographer and story, about coaching photographers and editors into discovering their own excellence, and about managing people with empathy and compassion.”

McNally had never been a photographer herself — “I knew I couldn’t capture what I felt on film, or pixels,” she told readers in an online Q. and A. feature. But, she added: “I am a visual person. I can’t just tell you stuff, I have to show you.”

Asked what advice she would give to fledgling photojournalists, she replied: “Be certain of your mission, but be prepared to constantly grow. Work hard, very hard. Be forever curious, persistent and gracious. When people let you into their lives, realize that it is a gift.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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