- Chelsea visit next stop in Heidenheim's 'unthinkable' rise
- Former England prop Marler announces retirement from rugby
- Kumara gives Sri Lanka edge on rain-hit day against South Africa
- Namibia votes with ruling party facing toughest race yet
- Spurs goalkeeper Vicario out for 'months' with broken ankle
- Moscow expels German journalists, Berlin denies closing Russia TV bureau
- Spain govt defends flood response and offers new aid
- France says Netanyahu has 'immunity' from ICC warrants
- Nigerian state visit signals shift in France's Africa strategy
- Stock markets waver as traders weigh Trump tariffs, inflation
- Tens of thousands in Lebanon head home as Israel-Hezbollah truce takes hold
- Opposition candidates killed in Tanzania local election
- Amorim eyes victory in first Man Utd home game to kickstart new era
- Fresh fury as Mozambique police mow down protester
- Defeat at Liverpool could end Man City title hopes, says Gundogan
- Indonesians vote in regional election seen as test for Prabowo
- Guardiola says no intent to 'make light' of self harm in post-match comments
- New EU commission gets green light to launch defence, economy push
- Opposition figures killed as Tanzania holds local election
- Taiwan Olympic boxing champion quits event after gender questions
- European stocks drop on Trump trade war worries
- Volkswagen to sell operations in China's Xinjiang
- FA probes referee David Coote over betting claim
- Serbia gripped by TV series about murder of prime minister
- Putin seeks to shore up ties on visit to 'friendly' Kazakhstan
- New EU commission pushes for defence and economy spending
- Plastic pollution talks must speed up, chair warns
- Pakistan web controls quash dissent and potential
- 1,000 Pakistan protesters arrested in pro-Khan capital march
- ICC prosecutor seeks arrest warrant for Myanmar junta chief
- Philippine VP's bodyguards swapped out amid investigation
- EasyJet annual profit rises 40% on package holidays
- Ukraine sees influx of Western war tourists
- Greeks finally get Thessaloniki metro after two-decade wait
- New EU commission to get all clear with big push on defence and economy
- Thousands of Lebanese head home as Israel-Hezbollah truce takes hold
- Australia takes step to ban under 16s from social media
- Volkswagen says to sell operations in China's Xinjiang
- Japan prosecutor bows in apology to former death row inmate
- Thailand to return nearly 1,000 trafficked lemurs, tortoises to Madagascar
- Namibia votes with ruling party facing its toughest race yet
- Indian protest wrestler given four-year ban for avoiding dope test
- UK parliament to debate assisted dying law
- Ireland has a cultural moment, from rock and books to cinema
- South Korean capital hit by record November snowfall: weather agency
- Sinn Fein hope election will propel it to power in Ireland
- Ceasefire takes hold in Israel-Hezbollah war
- Chinese island plastic pollution turned into artistic omens
- Anti-mine treaty signatories slam US decision to send landmines to Ukraine
- Vietnamese EV maker Vinfast reports $550 million Q3 loss
Elliott Erwitt: capturing the moment
A pillar of the venerated Magnum agency, US photographer Elliott Erwitt who has died aged 95 became world renowned for catching the humorous details of daily life, in black and white.
Two lovers embracing in a rearview mirror in "California Kiss", and Marilyn Monroe's white dress blowing up over a New York subway grate, are among his most famous images.
Politicians, film stars, couples, children and hundreds of dogs -- Erwitt immortalised them all over a seven-decade career.
"The kind of photography I like to do, capturing the moment, is very much like that break in the clouds. In a flash, a wonderful picture seems to come out of nowhere," he wrote in 1996 in his book, "Between the Sexes".
- Pillar of Magnum agency -
Born on July 26, 1928, in Paris to Russian parents, Erwitt grew up in Milan before emigrating in 1939 to the US with his family just before World War II broke out.
After 10 years in New York he moved to Los Angeles, where he started to learn photography. He was taken on as a printer in a laboratory specialising in portraits of stars.
Erwitt was conscripted to the army in 1951 as an assistant photographer and continued working for several publications while stationed in New Jersey, Germany and France.
After his military service in 1953 one of his mentors, renowned photojournalist Robert Capa, recruited him to Magnum.
Erwitt would combine the abilities of its two founders -- French humanist photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson and his "decisive moment", and Capa's sense of history.
"Erwitt became known for benevolent irony, and for a humanistic sensibility traditional to the spirit of Magnum," the agency said on its website.
He toured the world several times. It was the golden age of illustrated magazines and he contributed to Collier's, Look, LIFE and Holiday.
Some of his many legendary snapshots also include Cuba's Fidel Castro and Che Guevara in 1964, a GI sticking out his tongue at the height of the Korean War and US Vice President Richard Nixon pointing an angry finger at Russian First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev in 1959.
- 'California Kiss' -
Erwitt will also be remembered for a snapshot of a veiled Jackie Kennedy at her husband's JFK's funeral, a tender private conversation between Erwitt's wife and baby girl and an old Russian woman in curlers.
But arguably his best known is "California Kiss" in which in one click in 1955 he sums up the optimism offered by the US West Coast.
In the 1970s, he turned to video, making documentaries on subjects ranging widely from Japan and country music to Afghan glassmakers.
In the 1980s he made 18 comedy and satirical television programmes for the US channel HBO.
Aged 90 in 2018 he published a book on Scotland.
Married four times and father to six children, Erwitt also owned eight dogs.
"Taking pictures of celebrities is exactly like taking pictures of non-celebrities", he said in "Elliott Erwitt's Personal Best" in 2006.
"Above all do not be intimidated. Remember that even the most exalted celebrities brush their teeth at night before going to bed."
D.Schneider--BTB