“Look What I Found”: The Joys of Low Tide

Anyone who has spent much time at the beach knows of the special appeal of low tide. That is when the water pulls back its cover and beachcombers walk along the shore to see what has been revealed—be it a clam or a special seashell, a cool-looking rock, or anything else that might inspire the finder to say, “Hey, look what I found.”

LIFE wrote about this rite of summer in a story titled “Low Tide: Odd Creatures Fill Pools.” The particular setting of this story was Kennebunkport, Maine, but the phenomenon it described is familiar to beachlovers everywhere.

High tide along the coast of Maine is magnificent. The sea surges in, roaring over the rocks and beating fierce spray into the air. Low tide along the coast is not nearly so grand but it is much more interesting. After the water gurgles out of the rocky coastal pools, the tiny creatures of the shore and sand can be seen in shallow puddles—the scurrying crabs, the dawdling snails, the immovable barnacles, the curious starfish and see urchins.

The LIFE story featured images from staff photographer Bernard Hoffman which focussed primarily on the children enjoying the tidal pools, and also close-up images of the sea creatues taken by nature writer Rutherford Platt. His pictures of starfish, crabs and more can be seen in the original magazine story.

Hoffman’s images are in this online gallery. Both have their appeal. But for anyone who spent their childhood summers exploring at low tide, Hoffman’s images capture the spirit of what it was like to be at the beach, feet in the wet sand, eyes focussed on the ground, in search of the next amazing discovery.

Children searched for creatures in a tidal pool during ebb tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Children searched for creatures in a tidal pool during ebb tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Children searched for creatures in a tidal pool during ebb tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Children searched for creatures in a tidal pool during ebb tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Children searched for creatures in a tidal pool during ebb tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Children searched for creatures in a tidal pool during ebb tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A child held up sea algae while searching a tidal pool during ebb tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Creatures found at low tide on a Maine beach, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A child dug for clams during a low tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Children dug for clams during a low tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A beach scene during a low tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A beach scene during a low tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A beach scene during a low tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A beach scene during a low tide in Maine, 1943.

Bernard Hoffman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Canada’s Stunning Icefields Parkway

In 1946, in that moment after World War II when people were looking to get back on the road, LIFE photographer Andreas Feininger documented one of the most beautiful highways in North America. He headed to Canada and travelled the Icefields Parkway, which hugs the Continental Divide as it goes through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park. That 145-mile stretch of road, which is part of Alberta Highway 93, takes its name from the Columbia Icefield, which is the largest such field in North America’s Rocky Mountains. Traveling the road today requires a park permit.

LIFE magazine never actually published Feininger’s story, so we don’t have any observations on the trip from back in the day. But contemporary travel blogger Alec Sills-Trausch says of the Icefields Parkway, “It’s 145 miles of pure brilliance with never-ending lakes and stunning peaks that will make your jaw drop and cause a constant “oh my god” to come out of your mouth.” Feininger’s pictures quietly affirm that assessment.

The Columbia Icefield is featured in a few of the photos, but Feininger also captures the many of the other outdoor activities that draw people to Banff and Jasper, which include horseback riding, fishing, wildlife viewing, and simply taking in the awesomeness of the landscape. Feininger also photographed the civilization that exists amid the wildness, including stopping in Chateau Lake Louise, which has as spectacular a location as any hotel on the planet, and which still welcomes guests today.

Canada’s Icefields Parkway runs through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Canada’s Icefields Parkway runs through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Canada’s Icefields Parkway runs through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The massive Columbia Icefield is a main attraction on Canada’s Icefields Highway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The massive Columbia Icefield is a main attraction on Canada’s Icefields Highway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Horseback riding along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A site along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, which runs through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A man climbed along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Fishing along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Fishing along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Recreation along Canada’s scenic Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Horseback riding along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Canoeing along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Sightseeing along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Sightseeing along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Sightseeing along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The wildlife along Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Canada’s Icefields Parkway runs through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A town on Canada’s Icefields Parkway, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Canada’s Icefields Parkway runs through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life PIcture Collection/Shutterstock

The Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise resort, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The Chateau Lake Louise, 1946.

Andreas Feininger/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Sharks: Fear and Fascination

The following is adapted from the introduction to LIFE’s new special issue Sharks: Predators of the Sea, which is available here online and at newsstands:

Few words in the American vocabulary inspire fear and fascination the way shark does. If shouted too loudly on a sunny Cape Cod beach, it could prompt scores of swimmers to rush to shore. When attached to a movie poster—think Jaws and Sharknado—the association has reliably led to big box office. More than half of Americans say they are scared of sharks, and a third have said they are so terrified they suffer from galeophobia (the scientific designation for a shark phobia) and won’t even go in the water. 

There are plenty of reasons we are afraid of sharks. From a psychological perspective, being attacked by a shark looms as a particularly gruesome way to die. “We’re not just afraid of things because of the likelihood that they’ll happen, but [also] because of the nature of them if they do happen,” David Ropeik, who has studied the gap between human fears and reality, told Live Science in 2015. “It may be unlikely that you’ll be attacked by a shark, but it would suck if you did.” On top of that, there have been vastly more unprovoked shark-related incidents in the United States over time—28 in 2024 alone, triple that of Australia, which is next in line. 

The odds of dying in a shark attack during your lifetime are incredibly remote—1 in 4.3 million. Each year, there are typically around six unprovoked shark-related fatalities worldwide. A beachgoer is far more likely to die of sun exposure (.00007 percent chance) or in a car accident (.011 percent chance) than from a shark attack. According to data compiled by the International Shark Attack File, you’re far more likely to be bitten by a New Yorker than a shark.

Perhaps because so much of the United States is landlocked, sharks historically were not on the American radar. In fact, for many years, sharks didn’t bite people in the U.S. Or, at least, that’s what the general population and some academics thought. Consider Maryland-born athlete Hermann Oelrichs, who in 1891 felt so sure
that sharks were harmless, he jumped into the sharky waters outside his home in Newport, Rhode Island, to prove his point to some guests. Oelrichs was fine; the fish and sharks scattered—likely frightened by the splash, according to the Pittsburgh Dispatch. The upshot: Scientists at the American Museum of Natural History in New York later cited Oelrichs’s stunt as scientific evidence that man-eating sharks did not exist. 

The conviction that sharks posed no threat would not last long. Fast-forward to 1916 on the Jersey Shore, when in the course of just 12 days, five people were attacked by sharks. In an attempt to contain public anxiety, authorities blamed all of the attacks on a single young great white that was found with human remains in its stomach. 

The single-shark messaging led to the “mythos of a rogue killer . . . intentionally moving around and finding victims,” says Janet M. Davis, a professor of American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, who has studied the history of human-shark interactions. “The fact that these fatal bites [in New Jersey] occurred in such rapid succession really scared people.” Locals fought back, with some tossing sticks of dynamite into a creek where one of the victims was found. President Woodrow Wilson promised federal aid to “drive away all the ferocious man-eating sharks which have been making prey of bathers,” reported the Philadelphia Inquirer

During World War II, anxiety about shark attacks was so pronounced, the Navy began work on a shark repellent, with the help of the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the Central Intelligence Agency. Among others who devoted themselves to the repellent was OSS executive assistant and future chef Julia Child, who experimented with combinations of nicotine, clove oil, horse urine, rotting shark muscle, and asparagus in the hopes of preventing shark attacks. Before the end of the war, the Navy introduced Shark Chaser, a pink pill of copper acetate that produced an inky black dye when released in the water, obscuring a serviceman from lurking sharks. 

With the war’s end, it would be another 30 years before fear of sharks again gripped the public. The precipitating events: the publication of the book Jaws by Peter Benchley and the release of the Hollywood version, also called Jaws.  

“During the summer of 1975 when Jaws was in hundreds of theaters across the [U.S.] . . . we could see the fear that it was stirring up,” Wendy Benchley, an ocean conservationist and the novelist’s widow, told National Geographic in 2022. For some, that meant avoiding swimming in deep waters. Others were inspired to emulate the film’s heroes and sail out to sea to hunt down these creatures. Across the U.S. East Coast in the mid-1980s, sporting events, such as Monster Shark Tournaments, took place to kill sharks as conquests. “It horrified Peter and me that some people’s first reaction was to kill sharks,” she said. 

But there were also members of the public who found the story thrilling. Thousands of people around the world sent letters to Benchley to describe how the book and film had inspired them to learn more, become marine biologists, or photograph sharks. (One example: Eight years after the release of Jaws, a group of scientists founded the American Elasmobranch Society, to promote the study of sharks.) “There is no question that Jaws made a lot of people scared of sharks, and some responded by killing these animals,” shark scientist Yannis Papastamatiou told National Geographic in 2022. “Jaws had the opposite effect on me. I wanted to work with sharks.”  

America’s post-Jaws reactions to sharks largely centered around another entertainment medium: Shark Week and the rise of television documentaries. If Jaws—both the book and movie—taught television and film executives anything, it was that sharks sell. The Discovery Channel’s weeklong Shark Week event, inaugurated in 1988 as a way to spark ratings, soon became an annual mainstay–akin to a secular national holiday. 

Originally, Shark Week programming was educationally oriented, including the 1988 film Caged in Fear, about the development of technology to stave off shark attacks. But as ratings for Shark Week grew, Discovery amped up the drama, conflict, and sensationalism. Today, Shark Week tends to feature content like Great White Serial Killer: Sea of Blood, which capitalized on a string of fatal shark attacks off the coast of Mexico. In the film, investigators attempted to identify the perpetrator, a massive great white shark, and capture it on film. 

Although sharks continue to be sensationalized in the media, researchers like Papastamatiou work to promote a more accurate understanding of the animals and support conservation efforts. In particular, Papastamatiou, who runs the Predator Ecology & Conservation Lab at Florida International University, is known for his work around sharks’ social and hunting habits. 

Instead of demonizing sharks, the public should follow the example of seafaring communities in the South Pacific, Davis suggests. In Hawaii and Fiji, sharks are not viewed as blood-frenzied serial killers but instead revered as ancestral spirits. Of course, that doesn’t mean these indigenous communities would call sharks cute and cuddly. “This is an animal that is very powerful and strong,” says Davis. “So even in a culture that really looks to these animals as central to their cosmologies and spiritual worlds, there’s still respect for the potential power of these animals.” These centuries-old stories and traditions align with what scientists have been discovering–the ocean is better with sharks in it.  ——By Courtney Mifsud Intreglia ▼ ▼ 

The following is a selection of photos from LIFE’s new special issue Sharks: Predators of the Sea, which is available here online and at newsstands.

Cover photo by Chris & Monique Fallows/Nature Picture Library

Cover photo by Brad Leue/Alamy

Cultures on seafaring islands in the South Pacific consider the whale shark to be a harbinger of good luck and fortune.

Alamy Stock Photo

Marine biologists observed a Port Jackson shark about 20 meters below in the surface in the waters off Sydney, Australia.

Fairfax Media via Getty Images

Bull sharks, seen above in Western Australia, are found in both saltwater and freshwater. They have been spotted in rivers hundreds of miles from the ocean.

Getty Images

The 1975 summer blockbuster Jaws, starring Roy Scheider, had plenty of people afraid to go in the water.

Corbis via Getty Images

In the 2003 movie Finding Nemo, a shark named Bruce looked intimidating but turned out to be kind and gentle.

©Walt Disney Co./Courtesy Everett Collection

Tourists paddled a kayak, unaware of the great white shark lurking behind them.

Shutterstock/karelnoppe

Sharks circled in the waters off Cocos Island, Costa Rica.

Getty Images

A great white shark leapt against the sunset.

Getty Images/iStockphoto

David Bowie: Speaking of Heroes…

The supermodel Iman, the widow of the late David Bowie, commemorated what would have been the couple’s 33rd wedding anniversary on June 6, 2025 with a touching Instagram post that included the comment, “My memory loves you; it asks about you all the time.”

Millions of fans could relate, even if they only knew the man through his music. Bowie, who died from liver cancer in 2016 at the age of 69, remains as inspirational and beloved as ever. It all begins, of course, with his songs—which include Heroes, Rebel Rebel and Space Oddity, to begin a list so long that it could reach all the way to Mars. But it’s about more than that. David Bowie was stylish and enlightened, daring and kind. His public presence, along with his music, helps make him so warmly remembered. It’s no surprise that the images of David Bowie in the LIFE print store are among the site’s most popular.

This photo gallery includes some of those classic images, along with many others of Bowie on and off the stage. We see him in the company of fellow music icons such as Bob Dylan, Pete Townshend and Lenny Kravitz. In another shot Bowie stands with Michael Caine, years before the two men would act in Christopher Nolan’s 2006 film The Prestige, with Bowie taking on the role of inventor Nikola Tesla.

This gallery also has several shots of Bowie with his beloved Iman, including one in which they are seated together at a formal event, and the sense of connection between the two is palpable as they lean in close and smile.

Bowie and Iman met on a blind date in 1990, and within two years he proposed to her by the River Seine in Paris, giving her a ring that she had once admired in a Florence jewelry shop when they were first starting to date; Bowie went to great lengths to acquire that ring after he returned to the jewelry store more than a year later and found that someone else had bought the one Iman had admired. It was the kind of romantic gesture that only adds to Bowie’s legend.

Model Iman and husband, musician David Bowie, circa 1992.

DMI

David Bowie with Iman, circa 1993.

DMI

David Bowie in concert, circa 1983.

DMI

Musician David Bowie, circa 1983.

DMI

David Bowie, on stage in 1983.

DMI

David Bowie in concert, circa 1983.

DMI

David Bowie in concert

DMI

David Bowie in concert, circa 1987.

DMI

David Bowie in concert, circa 1987.

DMI

David Bowie performed with a dancer during a concert, circa 1987.

DMI

David Bowie with Bob Dylan

DMI

David Bowie with Michael Caine, years before the two would each appear in the 2006 Christopher Nolan film The Prestige

DMI

David Bowie and his wife Iman with Melanie Griffith and Don Johnson

DMI

David Bowie with Lenny Kravitz, circa 1995.

DMI

David Bowie and Iman with rock star Ric Ocasek and his wife, model Paulina Porizkova, attending the 7th On Sale AIDS benefit sponsored by the Council of Fashion Designers of America, 1990.

DMI

David Bowie with Pete Townshend of The Who, circa 1985.

DMI

David Bowie in concert, circa 1983, when his album “Let’s Dance” was topping the charts.

DMI

Cool in the Heat: LIFE’s Best Sunglasses Photos

Sunglasses, as a concept, have been around for centuries—the early Inuit wore eye masks with slits cut through them to protect their eyes from the rays of the sun. But it wasn’t until the 20th century that sunglasses made the transition from protective wear to fashion accessory, even for those who were nowhere near the beach. LIFE first reported on the burgeoning trend in a 1938 story titled “Dark Glasses are New Fad for Wear on City Streets.”

Here’s how LIFE introduced the topic back then:

For years Hollywood stars have worn dark glasses to protect their eyes from the harmful glare of the kleig lights, and to conceal their identity from curious fans. Now dark glasses have become a favorite affectation of thousands of women all over the U.S.

LIFE reported that the sunglasses trend was already widespread, with an estimated 20 million pairs of shades sold in the U.S. the previous year. The story suggested this was somewhat frivolous because people with darker eyes had a natural protection against excessive light, and thus, “Of the millions who wear [sunglasses] about 25% really need them.” The photos for the story were shot by Alfred Eisenstaedt.

In 1948 LIFE was back to report on the latest innovation in the field: mirrored sunglasses. The story reported that “the new glasses can be used as handy make-up mirrors, and they can hide black or bloodshot eyes completely.” A fun photo shoot by Martha Holmes celebrated the novelty.

This gallery includes images from those two early stories, as well as some other pictures from favorite LIFE shoots over the years. While the magazine’s early coverage talked more about eye protection, over time it became clear that that having fun—see especially Stan Wayman‘s shoot on “super specs”—and looking good were at the heart of sunglasses’ appeal.

A 1938 LIFE story touted the “new fad” of wearing sunglasses in the city.

Alfred Eisenstadt/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A 1938 LIFE story touted the “new fad” of wearing sunglasses in the city.

Alfred Eisenstadt/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A 1938 LIFE story touted the “new fad” of wearing sunglasses in the city.

Alfred Eisenstadt/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A 1938 LIFE story touted the “new fad” of wearing sunglasses in the city. This novelty style, known as “blinkers,’ was made of pressed celluloid and LIFE noted that they would be dangerous for drivers to wear because of poor side vision

Alfred Eisenstadt/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Sunglasses, United States, 1938.

From a 1938 LIFE story touting the “new fad” of sunglasses.

Photo by Alfred Eisenstaedt / LIFE Picture Collection via Shutterstock

A teenage girl in Tulsa, Oklahoma used nail polish to decorate her sunglass frames, 1947.

Nina Leen/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A 1948 story highlighted the new trend of mirrored sunglasses.

Martha Holmes/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A 1948 story highlighted the new trend of mirrored sunglasses.

Martha Holmes/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A 1948 story highlighted the new trend of mirrored sunglasses.

Martha Holmes/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

These silly sunglasses featuring long blue eyelashes and small lenses were dreamed up by designer Schiaparelli, and brought a lighter note to the generally conservative spring showings in Paris, 1951.

Gordon Parks/The LIFE Picture Collection © Meredith Corporation

This woman’s “I Like Ike” sunglasses honored the star of the 1956 Republican National Convention in San Francisco.

Photo by Leonard McCombe/The LIFE Picture Collection © Meredith Corporation

From a 1960 story on oversized “super specs.”

Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1960 story on oversized “super specs.”

Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1960 story on oversized “super specs.”

Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

From a 1963 LIFE story on sunglass fashions.

Yale Joel/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Meet the Real-Life Gidget

Today the name “Gidget” brings to mind a series of films and a TV show about a plucky teenage surfer girl. But did you know that Gidget was, in fact, a real person? Her name was Kathy Kohner, who as a teenager was given her now-famous nickname by the surfer boys at the beach in Malibu. She was only transformed into a fictional character after Kohner’s father, an author, decided to write a book inspired by his daughter’s adventures.

In Oct.1957, when the character was first surfacing on the pop culture radar, LIFE shared her origin story in a piece titled “Gidget Makes the Grade“:

When 15-year-old Kathy Kohner tried to join the exclusively male band of surfboarding fanatics at Malibu Beach, she got a distinctly chilly reception. She was a girl, and what’s more, a small one—barely five feet tall and only 95 pounds soaking wet. But Kathy was persistent and she finally won her way to the surfer’s circle, winning also the nickname of “Gidget”—a combination of “girl” and “midget.”

Kathy’s father, Frederick Kohner, then wrote the novel Gidget: The Little Girl With Big Ideas, which came out in 1957. The pictures that ran with the LIFE story, taken by staff photographer Allan Grant, not only show Kathy surfing the waves but also at home with her dad. In one photo she talks on the phone while he eavesdrops and takes notes on the latest surf lingo.

The novel was a massive success. In the decades since its publication it has sold more than 30 million copies, and upon its release it quickly drew the attention of Holllywood. The first Gidget movie, starring Sandra Dee in the title role, came out in 1959 and sparked a craze for beach-party movies. In 1965 a Gidget television series premiered, and while it lasted only one season, it helped launch the decades-long career of its star, future Oscar winner Sally Field.

In 2021 Vanity Fair caught up with the real-life Gidget on the occasion of her turning 80 years old. At that point she had been going by her married name, Kathy Zuckerman, for more than half a century. The original LIFE story about her actually played a role in the courtship with her husband Marvin. Kathy was a student at Oregon State and mostly kept quiet about her claim to fame. Marvin only learned about her secret identity when, as he told it, “One night in her living room, Kathy pulled out a LIFE magazine with her story in it and said, ‘I’m Gidget.’” 

After graduation she worked as a substitute teacher and became a mother of two. In more recent years she also served as the “Ambassador of Aloha” a couple days a week at a popular Malibu restaurant called Duke’s, greeting people at Sunday brunch and at Taco Tuesdays. While not playing up her past, she has accepted occasional recognition of her influence. In 2008 she was inducted into the Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, and in 2011 she was honored with a spot on the Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Fame. Her tribute text on Surfing Walk of Fame website says, “No one could have guessed that a small-framed Malibu girl could transform an entire culture.”

But her father, at least, recognized what was special in a surfer girl who wasn’t afraid to paddle out among the boys.

Teenager Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for Gidget, at the beach in Malibu, California, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for Gidget, at the beach in Malibu, California, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Teenager Kathy Kohner’s real-life adventures in Malibu earned her the nickname “Gidget” from her fellow surfers and inspired her father to write a 1957 book which was then adapted into films and a television show.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for Gidget, surfed the waves in Malibu, California, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for Gidget, surfed the waves in Malibu, California, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Teenager Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for the Gidget character, at the beach in Malibu, California, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for Gidget, at the beach in Malibu, California, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for the Gidget character, at the beach in Malibu, California, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner at home in California, with clippings related to the Gidget character she inspired her writer father to create, 1957.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner, the real life inspiration for Gidget, spoke on the phone while her father Frederick, who was an author and wrote the Gidget book, eavesdropped and took notes on her surfer’s lingo.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Kathy Kohner with her dad Frederick, an author who was inspired by his teenage daughter’s surfing adventures to write the book Gidget, which served as the basis for several films and a television show.

Allan Grant/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

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