Mike Hynson, who epitomized the picture of the bronzed surf god as a star of the hit 1966 browsing documentary “The Endless Summer” and, together with his outlaw instincts, embodied the insurgent ethos of the game on his strategy to being hailed a colossus of the curl, died on Jan. 10 in Encinitas, Calif. He was 82.
His dying, in a hospital, was confirmed by Donna Klaasen Jost, who collaborated with Hynson on his 2009 autobiography, “Transcendental Memories of a Surf Rebel.” She stated the trigger was not but recognized.
Hynson arose in an period when browsing was typically marginalized as a curious ritual of West Coast teenage tradition, because of frothy matinee fare like “Beach Blanket Bingo” (1965) and a swell of Beach Boys hits. He was hailed not just for his abilities on the waves, but additionally as a famous builder of boards, significantly the favored Red Fin longboard, which he designed for the producer Gordon & Smith in 1965.
His was “one of many best surf lives ever lived,” Jake Howard wrote in Surfer journal after Hynson’s dying, describing him as “a hot-dog performer, a shaping genius, a cosmic adventurer” who “altered the game and tradition of browsing in an untold variety of methods.”
Hynson’s life grew to become the stuff of lore beginning in 1963, when he was invited by the filmmaker Bruce Brown to hitch him and Robert August, one other younger Southern California surfer, on a trek that may lead them by means of Senegal, Ghana, South Africa, Australia, Tahiti, New Zealand and Hawaii, hopping the Equator to keep away from the slightest chill of winter whereas looking for the right wave.
Hynson was solely 21 however had already constructed a popularity as a maverick energy surfer on the seashores round San Diego. He could possibly be cocky and aloof, associates recalled — however not with out purpose: He already proved his mettle as one of many first non-native Hawaiians to trip Pipeline, on the North Shore of the Hawaiian island of Oahu, typically referred to as essentially the most harmful wave on the earth, in 1961.
He definitely regarded digicam prepared, together with his caramel tan and sun-whitened hair pomaded again in Dracula vogue, a coiffure quickly to be imitated by surfers around the globe.
Mr. Brown had solely $50,000 for his mission, leaving his stars to pay for their very own tickets around the globe. To finance his journey, Hynson turned to the famend board maker Hobie Alter, whom he had labored for, to supply him $1,400 for airfare, “though I’d stolen 9 surfboards off him just a few years earlier,” he stated in a 2017 interview with the British newspaper The Guardian.
Unbeknown to his strait-laced companions, Hynson introduced together with him a stash of amphetamines and a three-month provide of Tijuana marijuana. “I used to be younger, silly and loaded,” he stated in a 2009 interview with OC Weekly, an alternate newspaper in Orange County, Calif.
The first cease was Senegal, the place the locals “have been utilizing wood planks to stomach board round within the waves,” Hynson instructed The Guardian, “so after they noticed Robert and me browsing upright, they have been overwhelmed.”
Bigger sport awaited them. Hynson lastly noticed their quarry at Cape St. Francis, on South Africa’s south coast — a “good reeling right-hander, and not using a surfer in sight,” as Surfer journal as soon as described it.
“On Mike’s first trip,” Mr. Brown stated in his narration of “The Endless Summer,” “the primary 5 seconds, he knew he’d lastly discovered that good wave.” The waves, he added, “regarded like that they had been made by some form of a machine. The rides have been so lengthy I couldn’t get them on one piece of movie.”
In his autobiography, Hynson recalled the expertise: “I haven’t had too many adrenaline rushes like that in my life, a pure and pure phenomenon. It was electrical. The hair on my neck stood straight up.”
Michael Lear Hynson was born on June 28, 1942, in Crescent City, Calif., close to the Oregon border, the elder of two sons of Robert Hynson, an engineer who labored for the Navy, and Grace (Wheaton) Hynson. In his early years, the household divided its time between Hawaii and San Diego, lastly settling in Southern California when he was 10. As a young person, he took up browsing with a crew referred to as the Sultans.
After graduating from La Jolla High School in San Diego, Hynson discovered himself dodging letters from the draft board within the early years of the Vietnam battle. “I’d been sidestepping them for 3 years,” he wrote in his ebook. The around-the-world journey for the movie, he added, “was the miracle I wanted.”
The journey introduced no scarcity of challenges. On a layover in Mumbai on the best way from South Africa to Australia, Hynson needed to tape 5 16-millimeter movie canisters containing the treasured Cape St. Francis footage underneath a saggy Hawaiian shirt, to sneak it previous Indian customs brokers who had been confiscating cameras and movie in a crackdown on unauthorized images.
Distributors initially confirmed little curiosity. Warner Bros., Hynson wrote, “predicted it could by no means transcend 10 miles from the seashore.” Mr. Brown ultimately proved them fallacious, attracting strains across the block for a screening in Wichita, Kan., throughout a driving snowstorm. “The Endless Summer” went on to gross greater than $30 million.
By the late Sixties, Hynson was off on one other quest, this time to search out enlightenment with the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, a band of psychonauts and drug smugglers within the Laguna Beach space. The Brotherhood blended parts of Eastern faith with a religion within the transformative powers of psychedelic medicine, which they dealt in such prodigious portions that the authorities branded them the “hippie mafia.”
Hynson was quickly taking LSD recurrently, however he evaded arrest lengthy sufficient to make one other cinematic foray: He masterminded “Rainbow Bridge” (1972), which he initially conceived as a browsing movie. The movie, directed by Chuck Wein, a protégé of Andy Warhol, advanced right into a quasi documentary about mysticism, browsing and medicines, climaxing with a Jimi Hendrix live performance on the base of the Haleakala volcano in Maui.
In one scene, Hynson eagerly breaks open a surfboard and produces a hidden bag of cannabis (really Ovaltine), reflecting a smuggling tactic he had employed with the Brotherhood.
Despite the movie’s giddy portrayal of drug use, Hynson’s dependence on medicine, significantly cocaine and methamphetamine, ultimately led to a precipitous slide, together with time behind bars for drug possession. “I hit all-time low,” he instructed OC Weekly, “after which stayed there for some time.”
He ultimately pulled out of his spiral and commenced crafting surfboards once more. He credited his ex-wife, Melinda Merryweather, a former mannequin for the Ford Agency, and his longtime companion, Carol Hannigan, as his “angels.”
Ms. Hannigan survives him, as does Michael Hynson Jr., his son from his first marriage.
In a 1986 video interview, Hynson regarded again on his good trip in South Africa and questioned whether or not he and his companions had invented a browsing fantasy with it or just mirrored one already embedded within the surfer consciousness. “If we wouldn’t have had ‘Endless Summer,’” he requested, “you suppose there would nonetheless be this quest of an ideal wave? Think anyone would even care?”
“I didn’t significantly care,” he stated. “But once I noticed it, I knew precisely then that we had popped a bubble and made a dream.”