Anyone seen my Gidget?
Suzie Harrison
To surf or not to surf has never been a question in the mind of
Kathy Zuckerman. She dove into the lifestyle as a teenage girl back
in the 1950s. She defined the surf lifestyle for millions of people.
If she sounds like a real-life Gidget, she should. She is.
The surfing icon paid a visit to Laguna as part of the Laguna Art
Museum’s Surf Culture Lecture Series. “All About Gidget” took place
Sunday at the museum.
Zuckerman had a lei around her head and the appropriate California
glow -- it was easy to picture her back in her teenage surf days.
Told when she was a young girl that she was a girl midget because
of her stature compared to others on the beach, she came to be known
as Gidget among the Malibu surfers.
Zuckerman, along with author Deanne Stillman, recalled the world
of Gidget and her influence in popularizing the surf culture.
Her life story as Gidget and the happenings at Malibu Beach in the
‘50s were first published in a book written by her father, Frederick
Kohner.
“It was loosely based on diaries as a teenager I wrote about the
giant combers, my big crush,” Zuckerman said. “It’s a wonderful story
that captured my life at Malibu.”
The connection between Zuckerman and Stillman is that, as a
writer, Stillman studied subculture and became interested in the West
Coast’s subculture when doing research for her book “29 Palms.”
She had been so charmed by Kohner’s Gidget that she had to track
her down.
“It struck me as ‘The Catcher in the Rye’ for girls,” Stillman
said.
Once she realized that Gidget was based on a real person and the
book was about real surf life in the ‘50s -- she knew she had to find
the real Gidget.
“She tracked me down and I read her some of the diary passages,”
Zuckerman said.
“It was the Holy Grail of surfing, with all the language, slang,
idioms, characters -- all have found their way into American pop
culture,” Stillman said.
“It was like going into King Tut’s Tomb when she unveiled them,”
she added.
Zuckerman was comfortable with her father writing the book. Though
she said most of her characters were real, some of the material was
embellished for dramatic purpose.
“Our bond was so incredible and trusting,” Zuckerman said.
During the lecture, Stillman prodded Zuckerman to read some
passages of the summer she turned 16.
“The board felt like feathers, I slide on the board and shoot over
the foam like a steamboat, as high as houses,” Zuckerman read.
She said that bit was somewhat embellished, but her feelings were
real.
“Thinking back, the innocence of the time, I really had respect
for the time I was a kid, a real sense of priority,” Zuckerman said.
“Guys hanging at Malibu -- I really wanted to be a part of this
group.”
Zuckerman said that she is thrilled that there seems to be a
Gidget revival and new surfers exploring Gidget now are what keep it
alive.
The book can be bought online and in most bookstores around the
country.
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