Bud Browne Family, Real Name, Spouse, Profession, Eye Color, body stats, Feet Size, Wiki

Bud Browne Family, Real Name, Spouse, Profession, Eye Color, body stats, Feet Size, Wiki

Bud Browne (July 12, 1912 â€" July 25, 2008) was an American early

pioneer surf film maker. He was the first filmmaker to show surf

movies commercially.Browne was captain of the swim team at the

University of Southern California in 1933. He learned to surf during

his time in Venice, California. He began filming surfing in the 1940s

while visiting Hawaii.Bud Browne was born in Newtonville,

Massachusetts on July 14, 1912 and died in San Luis Obispo, California

on July 25, 2008. He moved to Los Angeles in 1931 and attended the

University of Southern California, competing in collegiate swimming

and became the captain of the team. In 1938, after graduating from the

University, Browne obtained a job as a life guard. His time in this

new occupation however, was short lived because he was soon enlisted

into the Navy during World War II. While at war, he taught many

Marines how to swim. After the war, he again received a job as a

lifeguard and was given the nickname "Barracuda" because of his

reputation as being one of the best body surfers of his time. While

serving as a lifeguard in the late 1940s, Browne began filming body

surfers. Realizing his potential, Browne went back to the University

of South Carolina in the early 1950s to attend film school. While on a

surfing expedition with Duke Kahanamoku in Waikiki, Hawaii in 1953, he

made his inaugural film, Hawaiian Surfing Movies. The debut of his

first film took place at John Adams Junior High School in Santa

Monica, California to an audience of about 500 people. Because it was

a silent film, Bud narrated the entirety of the film using the

school's PA system.Over the next 11 years, Bud Browne would produce a

movie each year, which all abided by the same basic structure: a

montage of surfing action in either California or Hawaii followed by a

few on the road moments between excursions. The entire process of

Browne's film making protocol was relatively cheap, costing around

five thousand dollars to film, edit, and produce. Bud Browne, along

with filming all of the footage, also functioned as a one-man

production and editing crew. After piecing many shots together to

create a fluid film he would promote his films by driving to the coast

of California and setting up tents where he would show his films for

little cost. As Browne started to gain publicity and profit in the

early 1960s, he was able to hire DJs to ship his films to the east

coast of the United States and even further out, to parts of Europe

and Australia. Browne's strong swimming skills provided useful in

being able to steadily shoot while in the water. As much as his shots

were taken in the water, Browne developed his own waterproof camera

and waterproof wetsuit. These innovations allowed Browne to stay in

the water and film for hours at a time. Among Browne's accomplishments

is the pipeline shot that views a wave as it is crashing over top of

the surfer, creating a water tunnel. Browne was the first of many film

makers that followed in similar fashions such as Jon Severson and Greg

Noll. Although Bud Browne never made much money off of the films that

he created, it caused no hindrance on his projects: "It was always

worthwhile for me because I got such a big hoot out of everyone

enjoying the films†.
Bud Browne Family, Real Name, Spouse, Profession, Eye Color, body stats, Feet Size, Wiki


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