
Elizabeth “Lee” Miller was much more than a beautiful face in front of the camera. Born in New York in 1907, she began her career as a model in the 1920s, becoming immortalized by some of the most renowned photographers of the time. Her image graced the covers of magazines like Vogue, where she became a symbol of elegance and glamour. But behind that public figure was a woman with a deep perspective on the world and an insatiable drive to tell stories from the inside.
In an unexpected turn, Miller traded photo studios for battlefields. During World War II, she left behind the bright lights of the fashion world and reinvented herself as a war correspondent for Vogue magazine. Armed with her camera and fierce determination, she documented some of the most harrowing moments of the conflict. Her work not only showed devastation, but also the resilience of the human spirit in the face of tragedy.
Traveling with Allied troops from London to the liberation of Paris and beyond, Miller was one of the first journalists to enter the concentration camps at Dachau and Buchenwald, capturing haunting images that shook the world. Her photography was not merely distant observation—it was an act of denunciation, a visual testimony to the horrors of Nazism and the human cost of war.