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"Browne
is surfing's first great filmmaker, his body of work, includes 1953's
Hawaiian Surfing Movies and 1959's Cat on a Hot Foam Board, helped
inspire second generation producers and directors"
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Poster/Handbill,
Illustration Jim Evans
a gifted swimmer, dubbed "barracuda" by his navy comrades.
browne served as the 1938 captain of the u.sc. swim team and spent
time as a venice beach lifeguard
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Bud
Browne pioneered the surfing movie art form in 1953. He influenced
generations as an independent filmmaker, shooting, directing, editing,
and producing well over a dozen feature-length surfing movies. All
of the top surfers in the sport were featured in Browne’s films:
Phil Edwards, Dewey Weber, Corky Carroll, Buzzy Trent, Peter Cole,
Mike Doyle, Micky Munoz, David Nuuhiwa, and Gerry Lopez to name a
few.
While early
surf movies had been made by people like Doc Ball, Jon Larronde, and
Don James, Bud Browne was the first person to show these films commercially.
His work as a filmmaker began as a hobby in the 1940s, shooting surfers
and underwater subjects in 8mm. In the 1950s, he released the first
commercial surf movie and since then has devoted most of his time
documenting the development of surfing in California, Hawaii, and
other parts of the world.
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In
1947, Browne bought a 16mm Bell & Howell movie camera and began
a more serious attempt at making films of surfers. He trekked to Hawaii,
joined the Waikiki Surf Club, and began taking 16mm color movies.
In the early 1950s, Browne attended the USC Cinema School to learn
more about photography and film editing.
Browne developed some interesting “tricks” and techniques
for capturing some of the most amazing and unusual water shots ever
seen in surfing movies. Besides using a stationary camera on the beach,
and telephoto lenses to capture the action on the waves up close,
he made waterproof bags for his cameras and took them into the water
with him. |
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PHOTO:
Bud Browne/Surfer Dewey Weber
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PHOTO:
Bud Browne/Surfer Linda Bensen
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Between
1953 and 1964, Browne filmed and released a movie each year. As
surfing became more popular, the number of places his films were
shown increased; from La Jolla to San Francisco, all up and down
the California coast at school auditoriums and recreation halls.
Surf shop owners like Jack O’Neill in the Bay area would also
find places to rent where Browne’s films could be shown.
When the sport
of surfing gained international attention in the mid-1960s, there
was more interest in surf films in countries like Australia, New
Zealand, South Africa, France, and England. The general public became
more aware of surfing although it was mainly surfers who came to
see these films, and each time one was shown, the event became an
esoteric, tribal celebration.
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In
the late 1960s and early 1970s, Browne began to work with filmmakers
Greg MacGillivray and Jim Freeman. They took some of the film
Browne had produced and added it to their own films such as
Waves of Change, Five Summer Stories, and The Surf Movie. |
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He
also contributed footage to 1978’s Big Wednesday, one of the
best surfing-themed, non-documentary movies ever made. In 1996, Browne
was inducted into the Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Fame during
the U.S. Open of Surfing. A most appropriate honor for a man considered
by many to be the “father of surf movies.” |
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"after
traveling to hawaii in the lat 1940's he began filming 16mm
movies of surfing off waikki beach, eventually becoming a member
of the elite waikiki surf club" |
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"a
prolific creator, at one point browne produced a dozen films in a
dozen years, and later became a contributor and consultant on touchstone
1970's surf film "five summer stories" and "big wednesday" |
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