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Also a new category with two photos by Chris Buch:
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When Jim Carrey arrived at Annie Leibovitz’s studio, the photographer says, “he was depressed and depleted. He said he had almost called to cancel because there was nothing in him.” Perfect, Leibovitz told him, “because I want you to be nothing on the cover.” The photographer’s original idea was to paint Carrey white against a white background so everything but his eyes would disappear. It didn’t work out exactly as she had envisioned. “It would have been more interesting,” Leibovitz says, “if Vanity Fair had let it go more white, but conceptual covers don’t sell magazines.” Leibovitz says she had a special feeling working with Carrey, as she does with most comedians: “Many of them are geniuses, and they feel more real to me than most other entertainers.”