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  • 30 April 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Jazzfest . <br />
The first New Orleans Jazz and Heritage festival following the disaster of Hurricane Katrina. Fans at the Acura stage.<br />
Photo ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights reserved.
    30apr06-jazzfest009.jpg
  • 17 Feb 2015. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Fat Tuesday. Mardi Gras Day. Faces in the crowd. A reveler dressed in costume for the day.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    17feb15-Mardi Gras Day039.JPG
  • 17 Feb 2015. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Fat Tuesday. Mardi Gras Day. Faces in the crowd. A gentleman dressed up in costume for the day.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    17feb15-Mardi Gras Day021.JPG
  • 05 May 2012. New Orleans, Louisiana,  USA. .New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. .Philip Rupp from New Orleans enjoys the music. He has been to every Jazzfest..Photo; Charlie Varley.
    05may12-jazzfest121.JPG
  • 03 May 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana,  USA. .New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. .Ryan Buck enjoys the sights at JazzFest..Photo; Charlie Varley.
    03may13-JazzFest056.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Glass tumbles from the Hyatt hotel as the storm slams the region.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina013.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Glass tumbles from the Hyatt hotel as the storm slams the region.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina011.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Glass tumbles from the Hyatt hotel as the storm slams the region.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina010.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Glass tumbles from the Hyatt hotel as the storm slams the region.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina014.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Glass tumbles from the Hyatt hotel as the storm slams the region.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina012.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Glass tumbles from the Hyatt hotel as the storm slams the region.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina009.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Glass tumbles from the Hyatt hotel as the storm slams the region.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina008.JPG
  • 09 February 2016. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Mardi Gras Day. Crisis in Jackson Square as a bottle of bourbon is dropped in the French Quarter.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    09feb16-Mardi Gras Day078.jpg
  • 09 February 2016. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Mardi Gras Day. Crisis in Jackson Square as a bottle of bourbon is dropped in the French Quarter.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    09feb16-Mardi Gras Day076.jpg
  • 29th August, 2005. Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans, Louisiana. The tail end of Katrina rages outside the 25th floor of the Hyatt Hotel in downtown New Orleans.
    009-29aug05-009.JPG
  • 08 Feb 2014. Cancun, Mexico.<br />
Wedding Day at the Beach Palace Hotel.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    08feb14-Laurence&Geraldine364.JPG
  • 09 February 2016. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Mardi Gras Day. Crisis in Jackson Square as a bottle of bourbon is dropped in the French Quarter.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    09feb16-Mardi Gras Day077.jpg
  • 07 Feb 2014. Cancun, Mexico.<br />
Evening meal at the Beach Palace Hotel.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07feb14-Laurence&Geraldine009.JPG
  • 19 Oct 2011. New Orleans, Louisiana.  <br />
L/R Seletha Smith Nagin, former Mayor Ray Nagin, Michael Smith (Gen manager Hyatt New Orleans) and Chris Robertson (managing partner Poydras Hotel Members LLC) following the official reopening of the Hyatt Regency Hotel following a $275 million redevelopment. The iconic hotel became a symbol of hurricane Katrina when all the glass was blown from her facade. Nagin's administration temporarily took over the hotel as their headquarters in the immediate aftermath of the storm. Over 6 years later the all new, ultra modern 1,193 room hotel and conference center adjacent the Mercedes Benz Superdome is once again open for business.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    19oct11-hyatt049.JPG
  • May 26th, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. The re-opening of the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas.  Adults and children peer through the glass at sharks and other fish at the aquarium's main exhibits.
    268-26may06-268.JPG
  • 19 Oct 2011. New Orleans, Louisiana.  <br />
Fromer Mayor Ray Nagin attends the official reopening of the Hyatt Regency Hotel following a $275 million redevelopment. The iconic hotel became a symbol of hurricane Katrina when all the glass was blown from her facade. Nagin's administration temporarily took over the hotel as their headquarters in the immediate aftermath of the storm. Over 6 years later the all new, ultra modern 1,193 room hotel and conference center adjacent the Mercedes Benz Superdome is once again open for business.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    19oct11-hyatt047.JPG
  • 06 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
12th Night, New Orleans, Louisiana. Mardi Gras begins. The Mardi Gras krewe of Phunny Phorty Phellows gather on Canal Street to take a street car through the city. Their traditional route along St Charles Ave had to be cancelled because street cars are still unable to travel the route. Let the champagne flow. An unidentified reveller pours herself a glass of bubbly.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06jan06-mardi gras002.JPG
  • 04 Oct, 2005.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina aftermath.<br />
Mardi glass beads and silk flowers lay trampled in the toxic sludge of a home in the Arabi neighbourhood after the devastating floods.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    04oct05-post Katrina015.JPG
  • 01 October, 05.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
The remnants of the lives of ordinary folks, now covered in mud as the flood waters recede.  Graffiti marks a window denoting no bodies recovered from the house with a British Union Jack visible through the glass.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01oct05-post Katrina016.JPG
  • September 15th, 2005. New York, New York. <br />
Daily Mirror, London. Front page. <br />
Days after the 9/11 attack on New York City my good friend Andy Lines, then the USA's Daily Mirror Bureau chief called me at 4am. 'Get up,' he demanded. 'I'll meet you outside your hotel in 20 minutes!' Andy had been able to track down Mike Kehoe. Kehoe had appeared on front pages around the world. He was the firefighter who had been photographed climbing the stairs of the World Trade center as everyone else was fleeing. It was assumed Mr Kehoe had been killed in the attack, even Tony Blair had offered his condolences for Kehoe in the British Houses of Parliament.  Days later Andy discovered that Kehoe had managed to escape the building and survived through the brave actions of his unit and his commander who had pulled them out just as the building started to collapse. Then Mirror editor Piers Morgan phoned to ask if I had any images of Kehoe where he wasn't smiling? 'This is serious shit,' Morgan stated. I had to point out that Mr Kehoe is not so much smiling, more suffering from severe shock and the fact that his chief woke him up at 5am. I was able to get just 6 frames of Mr Kehoe before he had to ask if we could stop. 'Thanks,' he said, 'I'm no hero, many of my friends are dead. I'm just exhausted.' We thanked him and his colleagues for their bravery. His unit offered us a ride back to our hotels in their battered fire truck which was full of dust from the collapsed buildings with most of the glass smashed out. The interview and the photographs were a world exclusive for the Daily Mirror. As Andy and I left the fire station, the world's media descended upon the place. All further interviews and images were denied at that time.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    Front Pages001.JPG