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If Hy thought that had been the hard part, she was very much


mistaken. “T at was just the start - then I had to go in the press box. It


was full of men who really didn’t want to make me very welcome. T ey’d make horrible comments, one of them barged past me so hard he knocked me over, but I was in there and I got myself a place on the side of the pitch. “Being there was all I wanted, even though I never felt like I was


accepted. I kept applying to join the NUJ because I wanted a press card and to be in the union, I ticked every single box necessary but when they held a vote, 40 men actually signed a petition against me joining. I ended up having to get a solicitor to fi ght my case and that was how I eventually became the fi rst female photographer in NUJ.” Despite the resistance, by the end of her fi rst season Hy’s


photographs were being used in the Palace match programme and she became the manager’s offi cial photographer. She was doing things others weren’t doing - taking photos of the players at home with their families, or of the people behind the scenes, the ground staff and the women who washed the kit every week. “Sometimes the attitude to women could bring benefi ts. T e


press box had no female toilets, but I was allowed to go up to the next fl oor where the directors’ rooms were, and use the Ladies there. One day, Crystal Palace had played Manchester United and had beaten them 5-0. George Best was playing and after the match I went upstairs, and I saw him going into one of the rooms. I hung around and when he came out, I took a photograph. It turned out he’d been had called in to be sacked. And I had a photograph of him leaving the meeting!” Hy’s work is encapsulated in the book Hy On Palace, a collection


of photographs curated to celebrate the club’s 100th anniversary and known by supporters as the Palace Bible. Her work is also on display around the walls of the club’s Malcolm Allison Lounge. Hy had photographed the charismatic manager many times during his tenure, insisting that his trademark fedora hat and large cigars played a prominent role. When the lounge was opened ten years ago, every wall was


T ere was confusion some years later when Hy’s young son


announced he wanted to go to Palace for his birthday treat. After patiently explaining to his mother that it wasn’t the Queen he wanted to see, but Crystal Palace FC, a trip was arranged and it was to prove a turning point. “I had four children, a daughter and three sons, and in the end I


gave up trying to look after my garden and dug all the fl ower beds up and just put grass down for them to play football on. I had no interest in football, but I was already mad about taking photographs,” said Hy. “I would photograph them from the window, kicking the ball


about and fl ying through the air. I’ve always been fascinated by capturing a moment, the magic of showing movement through a still image. Trying to capture that magic in a thousandth of a second. Standing watching the match, I was mentally clicking away with my camera and realised I wanted to be down there on the pitch with the other photographers.” After trying in vain to contact the club, Hy went to Selhurst Park


to fi nd out how to go about getting a pass. She was sent to see the then manager, Bert Head, who relented, and said he’d give her a pass ‘just to get rid of her’.


33


adorned with large prints of Hy’s images, with her name clearly displayed across each one. “I don’t know why I ever thought I had a right to be in there, but


I did,” said Hy. “It was awful at times, I had to stand up for myself, and that made me unpopular, but I got such a thrill from what I did. And the fans seemed to love me, I’d always get a bit of a cheer when they saw me take my place behind the goal. “Over the years I’ve photographed Muhammed Ali, sat on


Barry Sheene’s motorbike, I’ve photographed the Wimbledon championships – it’s been such a pleasure. But my favourite thing is still to sit and just watch a goalkeeper, waiting to get that moment when they are horizonal, fl ying through the air and just getting their fi ngertips to the ball. Or when the ball goes in and the net bulges and capturing that amazing moment.”


Hy Money will be speaking at the Networking Lunch at Holiday Inn Corby/Kettering A43 on June 17 between 11.30am and 2pm. To book, email salesmgr@hicorby.com


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