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Tunbridge Wells born war photographer Tim Page who inspired Apocalypse Now photographer dies of cancer

A war photographer from Kent has died after a battle with cancer.

Born in Tunbridge Wells, Tim Page went on to capture conflicts in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia during the 60s and 70s.

Sean Flynn (left) and Tim Page at Hovercraft Base, Dong Tam, east of the Perfume River, 1968. Photo: Mike Herr/creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/
Sean Flynn (left) and Tim Page at Hovercraft Base, Dong Tam, east of the Perfume River, 1968. Photo: Mike Herr/creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/

The 78-year-old has died at his Australian home after a battle with liver cancer.

Fellow photojournalist Ben Bohane was among those paying respects to Mr Page, describing him as "one of the world's greatest photographers" and a "real humanist".

Mr Bohane told local media: "He always said that it was more important to be a decent human being than a great photographer. So his humanism, through his photojournalism, really shone through.

“One of his famous lines was, 'the only good war photograph is an anti-war photograph'."

Mr Page was hurt four times while covering conflicts across the globe and was known for his flamboyant personality.

He inspired the photojournalist in the Francis Coppola-directed, Oscar-winning 1979 Vietnam War movie Apocalypse Now.

He worked as a freelance photographer for music magazines including Rolling Stone and Crawdaddy.

Mr Page wrote a dozen books about his war experiences and music.

He was born in Tunbridge Wells on May 25, 1944, and was raised by a foster family after his navy sailor father died in a submarine attack in the North Atlantic.

He created iconic images of the Vietnam War while working for news organisations including the AP, UPI, Time-Life and Paris Match.

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