NEW YORK — Kathy Willens, a pathbreaking photojournalist who helped cement women's place behind the lens everywhere from the Super Bowl to war-torn Somalia during her nearly 45-year career at The Associated Press, died Tuesday. She was 74.
Willens died at her Brooklyn home of ovarian cancer, diagnosed shortly after her 2021 retirement, her nephew Ben Willens said.
A giving colleague but fierce competitor who brooked no interference between her and a picture, Willens was among the AP's first female staff photographers. She went on to shoot more than 90,000 images — of presidents and Pope John Paul II, protests and war, sports triumphs and human tragedy.
''A stroll through her archive is a stroll through history,'' said former AP Director of Photography J. David Ake, who edited many of Willens' pictures over the last two decades of her career. It could be a challenging task, given her penchant for shooting a lot of frames.
''But in those images, there was always a gem. Something she saw, that no one around her did,'' Ake said by email.
Specializing in sports, Willens became a photographer of such stature that the New York Yankees paid tribute to her on the field when she retired. In a pre-game ceremony, manager Aaron Boone gave her a framed print, signed by former pitcher David Cone, of her own photo of him after he threw a perfect game in 1999.
It had been a long path from her introduction to photojournalism in the mid-1970s, when there were few women in the business.
''When covering sports, I was almost always the only female on the field,'' Willens told BuzzFeed News in 2021. ''There were no role models for me.''