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-THE ISLAND LIFE-
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A TRIBUTE TO PHYLLIS OâDONNELL (1937- 2024)
Australiaâs first, female surfing champion and a wonderful character
Phyllis OâDonnell was Australiaâs first female world champion, claiming victory in the 1964 world titles, alongside Midget Farrelly, at Manly. Phyllis was also one of surfingâs most endearing characters.
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She travelled the world in pursuit of waves, visited Hawaii 18 times and loved to surf Sunset. Known for her sense of humour, mischievous smile and classic surfing style, Phyllis will be remembered as one of the greats of Australian surfing. The short profile below by Emily Brugman ran in Tracks issue #569.
Itâs 11am when I pull up outside the Bupa Aged Care Homes in Pottsville, on the Tweed Coast. Iâm going to visit Phyllis OâDonnell, Australiaâs first female World Surfing Champion. I make my way upstairs, and see Phyllis sitting in the courtyard, eyes closed and face to the sky, drenched in Spring sunshine. We take a seat in the courtyard together, and I see that Phyllis has brought her Hall of Fame trophy with her. Phyllis was born in Drummoyne, Sydney, in 1937. She was a late bloomer, she tells me, and didnât get on a board until the ripe old age of 23.
âI didnât know a thing about surfing,â she says. âI bought my first surfboard from a place called Knott & Kirbyâs. Itâs like buying a surfboard from Woolies. I didnât have a clue. I used to go down to Manly and I met a man named Snowy McAlister, who I would call my motivator or mentor. Snowy was many years older. He used to be able to get on a board and stand on his head.â
Young Phyllis with a gleam in her eye and a board on her shoulder.
With Snowyâs coaxing, Phyllis became a regular down at Manly beach, and by the time she was 27, she won the 1964 World Surfing Championships, alongside Midget Farrelly.
What was it like, to be a woman, surfing in those days? I ask Phyll.
âIt was very hard, surfing with all those blokes. You had to be aggressive.â
Phyllis is a natural storyteller, and she launches into one of her signature yarns. âI was surfing at Rainbow Bay one day and I had a pink rinse put through me hair. These guys were laughing. I said âWhat are you laughing at?â They said âyouâ. They said âwe havenât seen anyone as old as you surfing.â Well I was only 29. Anyhow, one guy dropped in on me, I got him by his wetsuit and pushed him into the rocks. You know, donât mess with the old girl.â
Phyll was no pushover, but she also says she wasnât overly competitive. âWhen Midget and I won our World Titles at Manly there were about 60 000 people on the beach. No one thought that we would win. There was a girl, Lynda Benson, she used to play in the Gidget films, and she was a very fierce competitor. Lynda was favoured to win, but what happened is, they started to play some really nice music, and I totally relaxed. I just swayed along to the music, jazzed along the waves â I didnât even know I was in a contest anymore.â
And so Phyllis OâDonnell, for whom surfing was a kind of dance, became Australiaâs first female world champ, and her prize, as she loves to tell, was a carton of Craven A cigarettes. âAnd I smoked âem all!ââshe declares with a chuckle.
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Phyllisâ story is demonstrative of the immense shifts seen in surfing over the past 50 years. She has heard about the WSLâs recent announcement of equal pay for women. A momentous step in surfing history, especially when compared with Phyllâs prize-winning experience. âI think itâs great,â she says. âThe girls that surf now, theyâve got a good fortune ahead of them. As I said, I was happy with my Craven A cigarettes.â
In those days, being a world champ didnât translate to a career in surfing, and itâs only in recent years that the top 17 have been able to rely on surfing as a sole source of income. But our Phyllis had a penchant for the road, and so she did bar work to fund her travels around the world.
Halcyon era with Nat Young (middle) and the gang. Phyllis on Natâs left in the frame.
âI canât believe I used to carry a whole tray of middies, of spirits and beer, holding it above my head!â
Phyll travelled to Hawaii, California and the South Pacific, but it was Puerto Rico, she tells, me, that stole her heart.
âNow thatâs a beautiful place! I used to work at Twin Towns on the Gold Coast. I had a 3-week leave of absence to attend a surfing competition. Well, I stayed in Puerto Rico 12-months. I was eight stone when I left, when I came back I was ten. Hamburgers, French fries, pancakes! But mostly rum, Emily, that was The Rum Trip.â Phyllis tells me this last part with a little twinkle in her eye.
But Hawaii is Phyllieâs first love. Sheâs been 18 times, loves to surf Sunset, and if ever, throughout her life, she has found herself floundering, her mantra goes like this: If in doubt, go to Hawaii. Phyllis is of tough stock, a woman of wry humour who doesnât seem to take life too seriously. She shunned the idea of the nuclear family for a life of surfing and travel, in a time when to be a surfer meant to go against the grain.
Age has forced Phyllis to reign it in a little. Nowadays, she tells me, she leads a clean and pure life of ice cream, crunchy bars and coke zero. âI get them on the trolley.â Phyllie will always have her vices, just like the surf culture sheâs a part of. While surfing grows cleaner and more respectable as it matures, it will always have its loose cannons. We breed them by our very nature â and arenât we glad we do?
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