Bruce Brown, early surfing film pioneer, dies
Los Angeles (AP) — Bruce Brown, whose 1966 surfing documentary “The Endless Summer” molded the image of the surfer as a seeker of adventure and fulfillment and transformed the sport, has died. He was 80.
Brown died of natural causes Dec. 10 in Santa Barbara, said Alex Mecl, general manager of Bruce Brown Films.
Along with the music of the Beach Boys, Brown took surfing from a quirky hobby to a fundamental part of American culture.
Surfers had largely been portrayed as beach blanket buffoons in the mindless party movies of the early 1960s.
Then came Brown and “The Endless Summer” with his beautiful, soulful story of surfers on a quest for fulfillment — an image that became emblazoned on the cultural psyche.
“His timing, everything, was perfect,” said legendary bigwave surfer Greg Noll, a friend of Brown’s since they were young and a fellow filmmaker.
People were interested in surfing and Brown took it to a new level, Noll told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
“Thank you for showing us the world as you saw it, Bruce Brown,” Kelly Slater, 11-time world champion surfer, said in an Instagram post Monday. “There are never enough words to say goodbye properly.”
Brown, who took up surfing in the early 1950s, had made five other documentaries about the sport before “The Endless Summer,” including 1958’s “Slippery When Wet” and 1960’s “Barefoot Adventure.”
Brown was born in San Francisco and raised in Long Beach. He retired to a ranch near Santa Barbara, putting down the camera to ride motorcycles and surf.
“All the good guys are going ... we were on the cusp of the giant wave of surfing that hit California and spread out to the rest of the world,” Noll said.
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