Posted on 05/14/2005 8:41:36 AM PDT by lowbridge
Out of Malibu, Calif., came one of the most influential literary works of modern times. And this spring,48 years after it was published, the whole town is reading it. I refer to the novella "Gidget," which Malibu recently picked for its "One City One Book" program.
Laugh if you must, then ask yourself the following questions: Did "The Great Gatsby" change the world? How many people decided to move or quit their jobs after reading "Moby-Dick"?
"Gidget," on the other hand, altered the course of American history, drawing legions to California beaches, spawning a lineage of movie and TV spinoffs that reads like a surfing "Book of Numbers" and giving rise to the billion-dollar surf empire that along with the aerospace and computer industries has transmogrified California into the world's greatestnation-state.
Based on the stories of the real Gidget and written by her screenwriter father, the novella is set in Malibu during the summer of 1956 when Gidget was 15. "Gidget" goes right to the heart of surfing: It's about freedom, the pursuit of happiness and, like all good books, life and death.
Which makes perfect sense, considering that basically, it started with a guy fleeing the Nazis. Gidget's father, Frederick Kohner, grew up in Czechoslovakia, the son of the proprietor of the town's movie house. He embarked on a career as a screenwriter in Germany but left in 1933 after attending the Berlin opening of one of his movies, only to discover that Joseph Goebbels had ordered all Jewish credits removed from the film. He settled in Los Angeles at the beach, got a deal at Columbia, raised two daughters with his wife, Franzie, and shared story credits for such movies as "Never Wave at a WAC," starring Rosalind Russell, and "Mad About Music,"....
(Excerpt) Read more at duluthsuperior.com ...
Very interesting. I sure didn't know anything about this!
I just remember Sally Field as Gidget on TV.
In the 1959 movie it was Sandra Dee who played the Gidge!
Kathy Kohner, the real Gidget, makes for a much more beautiful Gidget than Sally Field :-)
The Real Gidget from Surf Culture: The Art History of Surfing
By Deanne Stillman
This is Gidget
The Taco Bell Chihuahua is named Gidget. So is the ladies' room at the Tres Hombres Restaurant in Hawaii. A cook on the Internet calls herself Gidget. Malibu Chicken features a sandwich called Gidget, and Barney's sells a line of Gidget lipstick. A stripper on cable television goes by the name of Gidget, and a Southern California band called The Suburban Lawns invoked Gidget in its song, Gidget Goes to Hell.
There is a person who has a certain visceral reaction whenever she comes across another person or product carrying this name, whenever she hears or reads about its use. Sometimes she finds it funny and laughs out loud. Sometimes it breaks her heart but she doesnt show it. Sometimes shed like to file a lawsuit, but decides not to, because who wants to deal with lawyers? And sometimes she just gets tired, and doesnt talk to anyone for a while. This person is Gidget not any of the seven actresses who have played the perky beach bunny who occasionally surfed but more often ran after boys, but the real Gidget, from whose life all things Gidget have sprung.
I met Gidget in 1986 when I was writing for a television series, The New Gidget, joining the legions who had warmed themselves at the Gidget fire through four Presidential administrations. Although taking this job was a violation of my lifelong rule never to buy or associate with anything that has the phrase, the new, in its title, I found myself with little choice. I was broke, jilted, and living on macaroni and cheese.
As I soon found out, writing for this television series came with a full set of luggage and even a storage locker or two. The New Gidget was the product of a lineage with more begats than the Old Testament. It was a sequel to a TV series (Gidget) that was a sequel to a movie (Gidget Goes to Rome) that was a sequel to two or three other movies, all the way back to the first Gidget, a wacky movie starring Sandra Dee and her Cadillac-fin bazooms. This was itself an adaptation of the novel, Gidget, The Little Girl With the Big Ideas. Written by Gidgets father, it was based on the real Gidgets contemporaneous accounts of adventures on the beach in Malibu during the 1950s.
One day, one of the shows producers entered the writers' office, followed by a diminutive and stunning brunette in her mid-forties, wearing clam-diggers and what women everywhere would refer to as a cute top. This is Gidget, he said. She really surfed. I forced a little wave. As a member of the machinery that churned beach life into an endless round of Frankie-Annette-cowabunga-hey-dude bad surf jokes, I was already mortified. Now came the news that I would be repackaging a real persons life, a life that already had been re-packaged countless times. I was not looking forward to meeting the subject of what surf writer Craig Stecyk calls, the most successful and longest-running episode of teenage exploitation since Joan of Arc."
Gidget seemed uncomfortable, too. I wondered how she had felt about this entire goofy enterprise. What could it have possibly been like to meet the people who made a living by spinning stories for a Hollywood character to whom she had permanently lent her name? She mustered a clipped greeting.
"Off the beach shes known as Kathy Kohner Zuckerman, the producer continued. No, call me Gidget, she said quickly, emphasizing the name, and promptly left the room. Someone attempted small talk. The producer apologized and backed out the door. Maybe some other time, he said. Suddenly my job had taken on new dimensions, had even become interesting. Was Gidget of the Hebraic persuasion? I wondered, pondering the nature of both her maiden and married names. I soon learned that Americas most famous surfer girl was indeed Jewish. Not only that, but the queen of the California beach long regarded by outsiders as the domain of beautiful blond boys and girls had a family history that was shaped by a lunatics dream of Aryan perfection and then nurtured by the hallowed American right to pursue happiness.
A firm believer in going to the source, I decided it was time to read the obscure novel written by Gidgets father, Frederick Kohner. Strangely, there was not a single copy of it on the Columbia lot, the very studio that was in the never-ending process of building the Gidget pyramid. I spent weeks searching for the book. It seemed that the little-known surf saga was long out of print, a gold mine that had been stripped and boarded up a million years ago. The Los Angeles County Public Library did not have it. The Beverly Hills Public Library did not have it. Used bookstores in town did not have it, although they did stock other, lesser-known works by Kohner, such as Kiki of Montparnasse and Cher Papa (both, tales of precocious teenage girls). As the search became more arduous, my anticipation increased. Finally, I uncovered the long-lost message in a bottle a tiny novel with yellowing pages that hadnt been checked out in six years. It was hidden behind some other books by authors whose last names begin with K on the shelves of the Santa Monica Library, just five blocks from the beach. I grabbed it from the receding surf of time. On its cover, a sea waif caught my gaze, inviting me to join her and two lanky surfers under the palm trees in the background.
Im writing it down, the book began, because I once heard that when youre getting older youre liable to forget things and Id sure be the most miserable woman in this world if I ever forgot what happened this summer.
In the impassioned voice of a young girl falling in love with life, invoking a surf lexicon still used on the beach today, Kohner wrote of the summer that Gidget turned sixteen and learned to surf. This often-told event has lured countless wanderers to the shores of Southern California, even as it continues to anger surfers who blame Gidget for telling the world about what they once regarded as a private wave.
I waited until The New Gidget was cancelled a few months later to make contact with its progenitor. During the course of conversations over several years, Gidget revealed bits and pieces of her surfer past. Yes, she was Jewish, but so what? No, she didnt surf any more; why would she want to? Yes, she was married and had two sons. They surfed, but not very often. She said she liked the Gidget movies. She thought the television series-all three of them-were fine. She was proud of the success that her father had had with the novel based on her life. And then she interviewed me. Why are you asking all these questions? What does everybody want from me? I dont understand this Gidget thing, do you? Im just a girl who went surfing. And there the conversation always stopped.
Then one day she called me at home. Can you come over right now? she asked, sounding girlish and impatient. Im turning sixty soon. Im ready to talk about Malibu.
Malibu was shorthand for life at Malibu Point from 1956 to 1959. In this hallowed surf warp, legendary figures such as Mickey Da Cat Dora danced on the waves and into the mists. Mysto George, The Fencer, Moondoggie, Golden Boy, Scooter, and what could now be called the Beef Council (Meatball, Meat Loaf, and Tubesteak) adopted a precocious teenager and named her, as they did the others, for her most notable characteristics. Because she was a girl one of the few who surfed at the time and, at five feet and ninety-five pounds, a midget; unto us, the sea nymph, Gidget, was born.
This is Me
I visited Gidget in her modest ranch home in a quiet Pacific Palisades glen minutes from the beach. She and her husband, Marvin Zuckerman, a scholar of Yiddish and dean of a local college who is ten years her senior, have lived in the house since they were married in 1964. When they met, Zuckerman had not heard of Gidget, the movie, and knew nothing of beach life. I grew up in New York, he said. Im an academic. I only went to foreign films. To this day, he has not surfed, but Gidget taught him to ski, and they often visit Sun Valley, Idaho on family ski vacations. Their two sons are now grown, although Gidget still refers to their bedrooms as Phils and Davids (and Phil jokingly refers to himself as ben-Gidget, invoking the Hebrew prefix meaning son of").
Still slender and curvy in her jumper and T-shirt, Gidget guided me through her house. The interior at first suggested Old World pursuits there were lots of books and a piano (childhood piano lessons had led to a lifelong hobby). But in the hallway, I saw a large black-and-white photo of a striking teenage girl on the beach with her surfboard, wearing the innocent smile and modest swimsuit of the 1950s. This is me, Gidget said proudly. She looked as happy as she did that day on the beach, a far different Gidget than the woman to whom I had been introduced on the Columbia lot. Thats the picture Life magazine used.
I recognized the photo, although I could not remember exactly where and when I had seen it before. It was one of those images that summed up a world so perfectly, there was nothing left to say. The Gidget in the photo is the Gidget that launched a thousand boards, and the one who now guided me into her once-and-future past. We headed out to the patio, and Gidget talked about how it all started.
We were living in Brentwood, she said. My mother used to drive some of the neighborhood guys down to the beach. They would put their boards in her Model-T. I tagged along. I wanted to surf it looked like so much fun. I pestered everybody for lessons. I remember asking a surfer named Scooter if I was bothering him. He said, You're breathing, arent you? There was this guy named Tubesteak living in a shack. A few other surfers were always hanging around. They were always hungry. I think some of them lived there, too.
Just as the Stations of the Cross are key points along the way to a defining religious moment, the shack Gidget referred to although long gone is a sacred site, along with its revered twin, The Pit. Its very mention among surfers, especially those who surfed Malibu in the 50s, conjures a mythology that forever binds the wave-riding tribe. On her pilgrimages to the beach, Gidget would bring a picnic basket filled with homemade sandwiches and trade them for use of Tubesteaks surfboard. Soon, she bought her own board for thirty-five dollars from a well-known shaper named Mike Doyle. I wish I still had it, she said. It was blue and had a totem pole on it. Today it would be worth a small fortune. (According to Stecyk, Gidget is underestimating her worth. If you add up the raw commerce, based on the Gidget movies and television shows alone, he said, not to mention the rest of the surf industry, which, for the most part, erupted in the 1960s, youve got a multi-billion-dollar empire built almost entirely on Gidgets back.)
Yet, apart from Gidget-related revenues (which are not particularly vast, since deals made in the 1950s are minuscule in todays terms), it is not an empire in which Gidget or her family have a financial stake. Over the decades, it has floated hundreds of boats, boards, and kayaks, providing robust incomes for an axis of surfers based primarily in Southern California. Some of them scoff at the Gidget phenomenon even as they ride its endless wave; others have no knowledge of the role Gidget and her father played in bringing surf culture to landlubbers.
It is easy to see how Frederick Kohner became fascinated with the stories his daughter told him about the beach. He and his two brothers grew up in the Czechoslovakian spa town of Teplitz-Schorau (whose tainted waters Ibsen wrote about in his famous play, Enemy of the People.). Their father Julius was the proprietor of the local movie house. In 1921, Paul, the eldest son, joined the early wave of Jewish émigrés and left for Hollywood. Within a few years, he was a powerful agent with a list of clients that included Ernest Hemingway, Ingmar Bergman, Walter Huston, and the reclusive writer, B. Traven. Walter, the youngest, left for Vienna to study acting.
Frederick, the middle son, embarked on a career as a screenwriter in Germany. He left in 1933, after attending the Berlin opening of one of his movies only to discover that Goebbels had ordered all Jewish credits removed from the film. Arriving in Los Angeles with a writing deal at Columbia Pictures, he settled at the beach with his wife Franzie and raised two daughters. A prolific screenwriter, he racked up credits that include Never Wave at a WAC with Rosalind Russell and Mad About Music, which received an Academy Award nomination for best screenplay in 1938.
The sun cast its spell on the children of the Eastern European émigrés in Hollywood, many of whom came of age during the Fabulous Fifties. In 1956 Gidget began spending all of her free time at the beach after school, after work, on weekends, or when her family was visiting friends in the Malibu Colony. My father and I would walk down [to the beach], she said. I would tell him about all of the surfers. I told him I wanted to write a book. He said, Why dont you tell me your stories and I'll write it? I said, OK.
Gidget became her fathers muse, recounting tales of bitchin surf, giant combers that rolled in from Japan, and escapes from a boneyard when caught between breaking waves. Frederic, fascinated, paid careful attention to his daughters language. (English was her first language; his was German.) With her permission, he even listened in on her telephone conversations. A man possessed, he wrote the novel in six weeks, weaving Gidgets accounts and conversation into a charming novel, published in 1957. It reflected the preoccupations of the era, from the bomb to Fats Domino. Yet one theme resounds above all others Gidgets passion for wave-riding.
The great Kahoona, the Gidget character says in the novel, showed me the first time how to get on my knees, to push the shoulders up and slide the body back-to spring to your feet quickly, putting them a foot apart and under you in one motion. Thats quite tricky. But then, surf-riding is not playing Monopoly, and the more I got the knack of it, the more I was crazy about it and the more I was crazy about it, the harder I worked at it. This is one of the best descriptions of surfing I have come across and I only wish I had read it as a kid when I was riding collapsed cartons of Pabst Blue Ribbon beer on the filthy waves of Lake Erie.
At the end of this sweet summers tale, as Moondoggie confronts the Kahoona over what appears to be a scene of consummated passion, Gidget takes off on her board. Its a classic day with bitchin surf; in fact, some big waves are rolling in. In an epic moment that has been lost in the countless Gidget remakes and retellings, in a moment that makes this a long lost Catcher in the Rye for girls, Gidget ignores the warnings of her men and continues paddling out to sea. Defying social convention by not heading back to the sanctuary of land and middle-class life, uninterested in whether she can hook up with a beach bum or a fraternity boy, she just wants to surf, confident that she can ride with the best of em. Shoot the curl, the boys call, once shes up and cruising. Shoot it, Gidget. And shoot it she does.
Then, long before the feminist wave of the following decades, comes the radical conclusion, one not conveyed in any of the ensuing GIdget manifestations. Gidget concludes that she was never in love with the Kahoona or Moondoggie so much for boys and their predictable offerings. The objects of her affection all along were her surfboard and the sea.
His little surf saga completed, Frederick showed it to Paul, who hated it and told him to find a new agent. Frederick went to William Morris, a publishing deal was instantly hatched, and the movie rights went to Columbia for $50,000. Frederick gave Gidget five percent (an act that would be described nowadays as buying the rights to a subjects story).
The book hit the racks a few months before Vladimir Nabokovs notorious novel, Lolita another tale of a teenage nymph written by a European émigré and favorable comparisons were made. Critics hailed Kohners work for its authentic evocation of a curious subculture, and some marveled at how a foreign writer became so fluent in American slang. Surfing exploded several years later; who better to spread the word than the father of the water sprite, Gidget, a man fleeing the poisoned springs of central Europe, charmed by waves and those who found freedom by riding them?
Dear Diary
Now, as Gidget beckoned me into her kitchen, she had a secret to reveal. Her scrapbooks and diaries the holy grail of contemporary surf culture were arranged on the breakfast table. She had retrieved them from a secret hiding place before my arrival. I was surprised and a little nervous: what genie would leap out once the seal was broken?
Each of the five pastel leather covers was embossed with the image of a girl in a ponytail, pencil in hand, beneath the title, Dear Diary. For the first time in forty years, Gidget opened the tiny gold locks. She put on her glasses and poured over a few pages in silence, then smiled and started to read aloud. Out tumbled news of a sweeter time, the goofy, gee-whiz voice that had memorialized Malibu forever and propelled the culture on a never-ending ride.
July 22, 1956, Gidget read, I went to the beach again today. . . . I just love it down there. . . . I went out surfing about three times but only caught one wave. We were all sitting in the dump, smoking and drinking. God forbid my parents could have seen me. (The dump was a synonym for The Pit, and Gidget remarked that although she didnt remember doing any drinking, she had lots of photographs of this site.)
She opened a scrapbook and thumbed through pages of black-and-white snapshots until something caught her eye. Oh, my God, she said, look at this.
Sure enough, there was The Pit, a not-particularly-sunken area of the beach where she used to sit and smoke with Mickey Dora, Tubesteak, and another legendary surfer named Johnny Fain. This was a picture the collectors would never get to bid on, a permanent relic in Gidgets secret cache. Listen to this, she said, becoming more breathless as she reconnected with the memories conjured by her diary pages. June 16, 1957. Boy was it a fabulous day today. Everyone was at the beach. I rode a wave today and everybody saw me. She smiled and thumbed through another volume. August 3, 1957. Boy the surf was so bitchin today I couldnt believe it. . . . I got some real good rides from inside.
A calling card fell from the pages.
The Glen.
Call or Drop by any time
Blackout Harry the Horse The Sloth
937 No. Beverly Glen
GR 9-6945
Oh, my God, Gidget said, studying the card as it transported her back to the scene. I went to a party at The Glen it was this famous party where they all dropped their pants. But dont tell anybody. Bill was there Bill Jensen. Moondoggie. A few undated entries from that year told of similar pranks: Golden Boy buried my surfboard and disconnected the distributor of the car. I threw my pineapple into his face."
And then a note of menace: Someone painted a swastika in our driveway. Asked about her familys reaction, Gidget indicated that this painful subject was off limits. But the sad fact is that the swastika-surfer connection dates back to the 1930s, when a line of surfboards featured the motif, and controversy still exists over whether the symbol was appropriated from Native American or Nazi symbolism. At one time, even the famous Malibu shack displayed a swastika; to this day no one can or will say who painted it, or why.
By 1958, Malibu had changed. In her entry of June 30, l958, Gidget wrote that she went and saw them film my movie. . . . God was it ever stupid to see Sandra Dee play my role. . . . All the actors looked like complete fagits [sic] its really funny. I dont believe that they are actually filming a movie [about me]."
Suddenly weary, Gidget closed the diary and said, Gee, thats not very nice. I guess Id forgotten what I thought about the whole thing.
We called it a night, and as I drove home, I thought about the marvels that had been laid before me, the raw stuff of the narrative of our collective history. This particular journey was now complete, I realized. I had come to write for the odd little television show, The New Gidget, and as I did, I learned of an important cultural secret and came to know the person and the story behind one of the most misunderstood American pyramids the truth behind a name that was once emblazoned on the cover of a movie magazine next to those of John Wayne and Marilyn Monroe.
Some time later, I accompanied Gidget on a return to Malibu. It was a perfect day, not too crowded. Good waves, Gidget said. Then, as we walked past The Pit and toward the now-vacant site of the shack, she said, Jeez, did you see that? She took off her sandals. The site obviously emanated powerful tribal crosscurrents not detectable by outsiders. Oh, my God, Gidget shrieked. Theres Mysto. Mysto George had been surfing Malibu since 1954, never missing a good day, long after many of Gidgets contemporaries had drifted away, long after younger surfers had quit the scene, because the waters now carry raw sewage. In full wetsuit and neoprene cap, with the blazing, sea-blue eyes certain surfers have, George was carrying his dinged-up long board, ready to paddle back out. Looks bitchin, Gidget said. Yeah, he said. You wanna surf? Gidget said she had been thinking about getting back to it. Later that day, she took her board to the shop for repairs.
A few days after that, a special commemorative issue of Surfer magazine hit the stands. Gidget was number seven in a list of the twenty-five most important surfers of the century, a bold move on the part of the premier journal of surf culture, which generally retains a seafaring, ye har mateys cosmology that ranks women with the weather-strange forces to be reckoned with, but not so primary as to be included on the important census lists that are surfings equivalent of who gets tapped for the Rapture. Gidget was one of only two women in the list, ranking not far below Duke Kahanamoku, the universally adored Hawaiian father of modern surfing, and higher than Mickey Dora, revered king of surf style. Gidgets placement near these gods stunned some members of the surf establishment, but the deed had been done: The unassuming surfer girl was finally getting her due from those whose livelihoods she had fueled. As the century turned, and major figures and groups began apologizing to each other for decades of mistreatment and abuse, maybe in preparation for an apocalypse or maybe just because it was time, it was nice to know that Gidget had finally made the cut.
http://www.californiaauthors.com/essay_stillman.shtml
Really interesting, thanks for posting that!
Those were the days, I've never been to California, but, even though I'm too young, I'll always regret I was never there in the 1950s
Being an "old fart" I remember those times quite well..
It's nice to know her life turned out OK, and she wasn't swallowed up by the hollywood industry or pursuit of fame..
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