See Newly Discovered Photos Of Jazz Legends Playing In Portland

By John Rosman (OPB) and Ann Suckow (OPB)
April 11, 2016 7 a.m.

Ray Nance performs with Duke Ellington's band in Portland, Ore., circa 1954. Nance was not only a singer but also a violinist and trumpeter.

The Oscar Peterson Trio, Herb Ellis on guitar and Ray Brown on bass, in Portland, Ore., circa 1954.

Dizzy Gillespie at the piano in Portland, Ore., circa 1954.

Charlie Ventura brings out the bass sax for a concert in Portland, Ore., circa 1954.

Saxophone great Charlie Parker being interviewed backstage at the Civic Auditorium, circa 1954.

Errol Garner, jazz pianist and composer, known for the jazz standard, "Misty" in Portland, Ore., circa 1954.

Blind British pianist George Shearling, composer of the jazz standard "Lullaby of Birdland," in Portland, Oregon, circa 1954.

Tucked inside a drawer, in a garage in Southeast Portland, is a collection of photo negatives. Cataloged with an image of a young boy triumphantly lifting two trout is likely a previously unknown photo of Duke Ellington. Then there's Ella Fitzgerald. There's Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker and Louis Armstrong. They're all in playing Portland.

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The boy with the trout, Michael Henniger, grew up and is now scanning his father's old photos into a laptop.

"I learned how to take photos from my dad. He had a great eye," Henniger said. "These photos came about because he was stringer for Downbeat from 1954–1956."

His father, Carl Henniger, was a young advertising salesman for The Oregonian newspaper, but in 1954 Carl Henniger was also moonlighting as a freelance photographer. Michael thinks the side gigs helped pay for the family's move from St. John's to Beaverton.

"Dad and Mom were very into jazz, I think it was left over from the big band era. They ran in arty circles in Portland," Henniger said. His parents met working on the yearbook at Oregon State University — he was the chief photographer, she was the editor.

Henniger says he's thinking of printing a good number of his father's photos in hopes of exhibiting them somewhere in town.

"If you want to take good pictures — have a camera with you," Henniger said. "That was sort of my dad's mantra."

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