- Born
- Regularfoot surfer Kemp Aaberg was in 1940 in Peoria, Illinois. Aaberg spent his early childhood in Boston, Massachusetts before moving with his family to the Pacific Palisades in West Los Angeles, California in 1948. He attended University High School in Los Angeles, California. Kemp began surfing in his mid-teens in 1956 in Malibu, California: He started out initially as a goofyfooter before eventually switching to the regularfoot stance in order to face the long right-breaking Malibu waves.
Well known for his exceptional back-arch stance, a photo of Aaberg's perfect back-arch was run in the second issue of Surfer magazine in 1961; a duotone of this iconic image became the magazine's first logo later that year and was reprinted on the magazine's 25th Anniversary issue cover in 1985. Although not an especially competitive surfer, Kemp nonetheless won the stock division of the grueling 32-mile Catalina-to-Manhattan Pier paddleboard race in 1960 and placed highly in triathlons in the mid-1980's. Moreover, Aaberg not only wrote articles for such surfing publications as H20, Surfer, and Surf Guide, but also penned a monthly column called "Surf Scrolls" for the Santa Barbara Press which ran from 1989 to 1992. Kemp graduated from the University of California in Santa Barbara with a B.A. in social sciences in 1966. In 1991 Aaberg was inducted into the International Surfing Hall of Fame. Outside of surfing, Kemp is also an accomplished flamenco guitarist.- IMDb Mini Biography By: woodyanders - Lean, blond, smooth-surfing regularfooter from Santa Barbara, California; a Gidget-era Malibu icon and costar of filmmaker Bruce Brown's 1958 surf movie, Slippery When Wet. Aaberg was born in Peoria, Illinois, spent his early childhood in Boston, Massachusetts, and moved with his family in 1948 to Pacific Palisades, in west Los Angeles. Eight years later he began surfing, at Malibu, first using a right-foot-forward goofyfoot stance, then switching to a left-foot-leading regularfoot stance so as to be facing the long right-breaking Malibu waves. Although Aaberg had been surfing for less than three years when he was picked to go to Hawaii with Brown to film Slippery When Wet, he was already regarded as one of California's premier surf stylists. A black-and-white photo of him back-arching in perfect trim at Rincon appeared in the second issue of Surfer in 1961; a duotone version of the shot became the magazine's first logo later that year, and was reprinted on the magazine's 25th anniversary issue cover in 1985. The Surfer's Journal later described the Aaberg back-arch shot as "one of the most instantly identifiable surf images of all time, and an enduring statement about the joy of surfing." Australian Peter Townend, the 1976 world champion, reintroduced Aaberg's move in the mid-'70s as the soul arch. Congenial and easygoing, Aaberg could nonetheless be obsessive: he avoided surf competition, but won the grueling 32-mile Catalina-to-Manhattan Pier paddleboard race in 1961; he studied flamenco guitar in Spain for six months in 1972; he placed highly in triathlons in the mid-'80s.
Aaberg wrote articles for Surfer, Surf Guide, and H2O magazines, and his monthly "Surf Scrolls" column appeared in the Santa Barbara News Press from 1989 to 1992. He appeared in a number of '60s surf movies, including Surfing Hollow Days (1962) and A Cool Wave of Color (1964). The Jack Barlow character in Warner Brothers' 1978 surf movie Big Wednesday was loosely based on Aaberg; the Big Wednesday screenplay was cowritten by Denny Aaberg, Kemp's younger brother. Aaberg received a B.A. in social sciences from University of California, Santa Barbara, in 1966; in 1991 he was nominated to the International Surfing Hall of Fame. Aaberg is married and has no children.- IMDb Mini Biography By: The encyclopedia of surfing / Matt Warshaw
- RelativesDennis Aaberg(Sibling)
- Older brother of Dennis Aaberg.
- Inspiration for the character of Jack Barlow in the surf drama Big Wednesday (1978).
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