LiQUiFY Magazine October 2014 | Page 86

A pioneer and innovator, his time here was tragically cut short in a single moment of insanity, but his legacy and surfing influence would measure a lifetime and beyond - such was the surfing life of Cronulla’s Bobby Brown. For one local surfer, Bobby Brown’s quiet but heavily influential surfing career helped inspire his own surfing life, and now, nearly half a century on, Gold Coast surfing identity and former longboarding world champion Andrew McKinnon is embarking on a journey of rediscovery and imagining as he begins production of a documentary film and book celebrating Bobby’s surfing legacy and life. Bobby Brown was an incredible surfer, who surged from the early Cronulla underground scene, earning a coveted spot in the final at the first ever world surfing Producer and local surf icon Andrew McKinnon with his Bobby Brown Memorial Open trophy - won by the Gold Coaster in 1970 | Photo: Courier Mail LiQUiFY | 86 titles, held at Manly Beach in 1964. Bobby was just 17 years old at the time, but held his own well in front of 50,000 spectators who crammed onto the Manly shoreline - surfing against the li kes of Joey Cabell, Midget Farrelly (who would go on to win it), Mike Doyle and Mick Dooley. This was just the beginning for the humble young man from the Shire, and over the next few years his surfing performances would light up surfing cinema across the country with his incredible surfing showcased in Bob Evans’ 1963 film Young Wave Hunters and Paul Witzigs’ 1967 groundbreaking movie, Hot Generation. The aftermath of the Bobby Brown tragedy, as reported in The Canberra Times, Tuesday 22 August 1967