
Wyoming, 1970. (Copyright Bill Eppridge.)
Last week I received an email out of the blue from a woman named Tatiana. She said that she was one of the two children bouncing on a trampoline in a photograph that I made in Cheyenne, Wyoming in 1970 for a Life magazine issue on The New Shape of America. The other child was her brother. Tatiana still lives in Wyoming.
The story behind the photograph:
Three Life photographers were assigned a major essay on Highway 80 that ran in a January 1971 special issue. George Silk did the east coast; John Dominis did the Central portion; and I shot the West. Highway 80 had not been officially completed at the time, but would be replacing Route 40 as the main east-west route across the country.
The photograph is indeed in Cheyenne, Wyoming. The way I covered my part of the story was simple. I had an assistant, Martha Faye, and we picked up the highway in Chicago. Martha drove, and I looked. We headed west on Highway 80, exiting when I thought there might be something interesting to look at on local roads along the way.
Every once in a while when I saw something I liked, we’d stop the car. I’d grab the cameras, and get out to see if there was really a picture. And if it were a town, we wandered around until I saw something that interested me.
Driving through Cheyenne I just happened to see a fence and a couple of little heads bouncing up and down on the other side. I told Martha to stop the car, then got out and went over to the fence. Through a crack, I saw two kids jumping on a trampoline in a back yard. I knocked on the door of the home, and the mother answered. I introduced myself, told her what I was doing, and she invited me in. The kids were still bouncing on the trampoline, and I told the mother, “don’t stop them.” She just said to them something like, “this is a friend of mine, keep jumping.” I photographed the kids for two or three minutes, thanked her, gave her my card, and left. It was just a grabbed situation that ended up so nice.