One shot, no frills and coat still on - famous faces and their passport pics

Adriana ElguetaLondon
News imagePhilip Sharkey Dave Sharkey, with customer, 1962. Black‑and‑white photograph of Dave Sharkey, with customer. Dave leans against a counter with a camera placed on top, while the other sits beside the desk. Posters of sample portrait photographs hang on the wall behind them.Philip Sharkey
Dave Sharkey with a customer in 1962

For nearly six decades, anyone and everyone who needed a passport photo shuffled through Dave Sharkey's modest Oxford Street studio.

Located opposite Selfridges, it quietly became one of London's most influential photographic institutions.

Muhammad Ali, Madonna, Sean Connery, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Marvin Gaye and many more actors, musicians, writers and athletes were photographed under the same rules as everyone else.

One shot, large-format negative, no frills - and often minutes before an embassy deadline - with coats still on.

Now an archive of more than 300 celebrity portraits from London's Passport Photo Service is going on display for the first time.

News imagePhaidon Press Two black‑and‑white studio portraits of Sean Connery displayed side by side on a book spread. Each image shows a head‑and‑shoulders composition, with captions and page numbers printed belowPhaidon Press
Sean Connery photographed in 1977 and 1989

Not many people can claim to have met the richest man in the world aged just eight.

But one of those few is Philip Sharkey.

As the passport photographer's son, school holidays saw him roped into helping out at the studio.

He told BBC London: "When I was eight or nine years old, I took Paul Getty's passport photos to him.

"My father said to me, 'that's the richest man in the world'.

"And I thought, God - if I was the richest man in the world, I'd be smiling. He looked miserable."

News imagePhilip Sharkey Black‑and‑white street photograph showing two people standing on a pavement holding advertising boards. The boards promote passport photos ready in ten minutes and display an Oxford Street address. Buses and buildings line the street in the background.Philip Sharkey
Sandwich board men, 1950s

Dave Sharkey was born in the East End and left school at 14 to become a professional boxer.

Philip explained that when he stopped boxing, his dad worked on Trafalgar Square taking photos of tourists, because back then nobody had a camera.

"When the council shut him down, my dad was at a loose end and overheard an American say he couldn't wait days for a passport photo.

"My father knew how to do it in 10 minutes, with chemicals, and the whole family mucked in for tuppence."

News imagePhaidon Press Picture of Kate Winslet: Black-and-white, passport-style studio portrait of a person facing the camera against a plain light background, with long dark hair parted at the center, neutral expression, and wearing a dark high‑neck top, cropped tightly to the head and shoulders.Phaidon Press
Ms Winslet came in for a passport photo that wasn't actually for her own passport, but for her character's in the movie Hideous Kinky, which came out in 1998. Her stylist from the film set was on hand to dress her up and style her hair as the 1960s hippie chick she played in the film

He chose a strategic location, minutes from the American, Canadian and other Mayfair embassies, meaning a steady stream of travellers walked through the door, hundreds of whom happened to be famous.

Along with his wife Ann, their son Philip, and their extended family the studio's reputation was built on speed, consistency and word of mouth.

James Coburn paid extra for two versions, smiling and not.

Ava Gardner once sat quietly in the waiting room while a customer loudly insisted the celebrity photos on the wall couldn't possibly be real.

Sean Connery turned up without his hairpiece. Eric Clapton asked Sharkey to photograph his entire entourage from make up to caterers, as they embarked on a tour to Japan.

News imagePhilip Sharkey Vintage printed card advertising passport photos, featuring a simplified street map of Oxford Street. Bold text reads ‘Passport Photos Ready in Ten Minutes,’ with the address ‘449 Oxford Street, London, W1.Philip Sharkey
Map card from the 1960s.

While there were many celebrities passing through the doors, not all were as easily recognisable as Sean Connery, and many were lost to history because they were not famous yet.

"When celebrities came in, we kept their photos, but we just didn't have room to store everyone's negatives forever," explained Philip.

"A lady once came in, we had all the photos on boards and she said that she couldn't see Marvin Gaye.

News imagePhilip Sharkey Large framed display containing a grid of many small black‑and‑white portrait photographs arranged in rows and columns. Each portrait shows a single individual, with printed names or labels above or below the images.Philip Sharkey
Famous faces on display

"I told her that I hadn't photographed him. She said that she worked for his record company and when in Belgium, [Marvin Gaye was] completely out of it, and lost everything all, his passport.

"She said that she brought him for his photo for the embassy and because he didn't have anything to prove his identity, he sang for them instead.

"This is the story she told, so Marvin Gaye slipped away and I'm sure there are more."

News imagePhaidon Press Open book spread featuring a black‑and‑white studio portrait of Muhammad Ali on the left page and a full page of printed text on the right. The portrait includes a handwritten signature across the lower portion.Phaidon Press
Muhammad Ali in 1994

Many A-listers such as Muhammad Ali marched into the studio without any security or entourage, others became regular customers.

Ringo Starr was photographed at the studio "from a teddy boy up".

Sharkey's remarkable archive of fame, fashion and post-war Britain features anecdotes from behind the camera, from when fame briefly intersected with the bureaucracy of official photography.

News imagePhilip Sharkey Philip Sharkey (centre) with photographers Ivo Carmo (left) and Piotr Gorka (right), outside 39 North Row.Philip Sharkey
Philip Sharkey (centre) with photographers Ivo Carmo (left) and Piotr Gorka (right), outside 39 North Row.

Passport Photo Service: An Unexpected Archive of Celebrity Portraits by Philip Sharkey, is published by Phaidon and is now on sale.

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