Mavericks Greatest Surfer: Jay Moriarity
Big-wave rider Jay surfed the Mavericks, the breakers up to 50ft high that crash along the Santa Cruz coast in winter.
He was just 16 and working part-time in a pizza parlour when photographer Bob Barbour took a shot that made him famous.
It made the front page of Surfer magazine and he became a hero to surfers around the world.
Then, the day before his 23rd birthday, the sea he loved claimed his life. Ironically he wasn’t surfing.
Jay drowned off the Maldives while free-diving, staying on the seabed without oxygen to practise his breathing techniques.
Kim brought his body home and scattered his ashes in the waves he worshipped as hundreds of surfers formed a vast circle of boards.
As film-makers recreated the amazing life story, Scots-born star Gerard, 42, who plays Jay’s trainer Rick “Frosty” Hessen, got a chilling reminder of the sea’s lethal power.
Swimming out to film a scene he was battered through rocks by a series of waves and held underwater for almost a minute as rescuers on jetskis raced towards him.
Gerard, barely conscious, was dragged out of the water and had to spend a night in hospital.
He says: “It was a pretty close call. These waves came out of nowhere.
“I was with three of the best surfers in the world and they were shouting, ‘Paddle, Gerry, paddle!’. But this wave spread across the skyline, 30ft high, and just dived on us and it took me. It ripped off my safety leash so there was nothing to pull me back up. I was just tumbling, tumbling, tumbling… going, going. I was thinking, ‘I need to get up!’. Then I felt the next wave hit and it all started again.
“I had a few hairy experiences in training. I got out of my depth and sometimes I was under water for 10 or 15 seconds, but this time, I was under for nearly a minute.”
Of Men and Mavericks follows the relationship between Frosty and hiseager young pupil Jay, played by newcomer Jonny Weston.
After Frosty agreed to train him he made Jay write his life philosophies. The title of one essay was prophetic: “What would I do if I was going to die tomorrow?”
Whatever Jay’s answer, the way he lived touched the lives of hundreds of surfers, many of them inspired by that iconic image of him riding the Mavericks.
Photographer Bob, 61, recalls: “The picture was not just sheer chance. Jay was out to prove himself that day. The waves were big and he was going for it. He wasn’t reckless, he was supremely skilful. He knew what he wanted to do and was determined to achieve it. When you look at him there, at the top of the wave, you see so much grace.
“In fact it wasn’t so much a natural talent with Jay, he really had to work hard at it. He was dedicated, totally.
“If he said he would see you on the beach at 7am, he’d be there at 6.30 and he’d stay until the job was done.”
Bob adds: “I’ve worked with hundreds of surfers. I know what their egos can be like. Jay was different. He was the best but he treated everyone as his equals. There was always a friendly warmth in his eyes.
“I guess it’s difficult for people outside the community to realise how there’s a special bond between surfers.
“It’s built out of a respect for the ocean, and for the way each one takes on the challenges.
“Surfers understand one another and why they do it. So the loss of someone like Jay really touched everyone’s hearts in this neighbourhood. If he had died on a big wave rather than out training, maybe that might have been easier to accept.”
When Jay died, he and Kim’s first wedding anniversary was approaching. But they were childhood sweethearts and had been together as a couple for years.
A decade on from his death, Kim, 34, has moved back to Santa Cruz and is due to remarry this year.
But Jay’s memory is, not surprisingly, still very precious and vivid.
“Sometimes I’m overwhelmed with a feeling that he’s close by. I keep his image near to my heart,” she has said. “I was just numb after he was gone. I was upside down, turned around in the dark.
“I watched him grow into what he became. Being a big-wave rider is really very cool and people idolised him.
“But meeting him on the street you would never know that. He would treat you like you were his brother or sister. He had no ego. He was just incredibly real in a world…”
Big-wave rider Jay surfed the Mavericks, the breakers up to 50ft high that crash along the Santa Cruz coast in winter.
He was just 16 and working part-time in a pizza parlour when photographer Bob Barbour took a shot that made him famous.
It made the front page of Surfer magazine and he became a hero to surfers around the world.
Then, the day before his 23rd birthday, the sea he loved claimed his life. Ironically he wasn’t surfing.
Jay drowned off the Maldives while free-diving, staying on the seabed without oxygen to practise his breathing techniques.
Kim brought his body home and scattered his ashes in the waves he worshipped as hundreds of surfers formed a vast circle of boards.
As film-makers recreated the amazing life story, Scots-born star Gerard, 42, who plays Jay’s trainer Rick “Frosty” Hessen, got a chilling reminder of the sea’s lethal power.
Swimming out to film a scene he was battered through rocks by a series of waves and held underwater for almost a minute as rescuers on jetskis raced towards him.
Gerard, barely conscious, was dragged out of the water and had to spend a night in hospital.
He says: “It was a pretty close call. These waves came out of nowhere.
“I was with three of the best surfers in the world and they were shouting, ‘Paddle, Gerry, paddle!’. But this wave spread across the skyline, 30ft high, and just dived on us and it took me. It ripped off my safety leash so there was nothing to pull me back up. I was just tumbling, tumbling, tumbling… going, going. I was thinking, ‘I need to get up!’. Then I felt the next wave hit and it all started again.
“I had a few hairy experiences in training. I got out of my depth and sometimes I was under water for 10 or 15 seconds, but this time, I was under for nearly a minute.”
Of Men and Mavericks follows the relationship between Frosty and hiseager young pupil Jay, played by newcomer Jonny Weston.
After Frosty agreed to train him he made Jay write his life philosophies. The title of one essay was prophetic: “What would I do if I was going to die tomorrow?”
Whatever Jay’s answer, the way he lived touched the lives of hundreds of surfers, many of them inspired by that iconic image of him riding the Mavericks.
Photographer Bob, 61, recalls: “The picture was not just sheer chance. Jay was out to prove himself that day. The waves were big and he was going for it. He wasn’t reckless, he was supremely skilful. He knew what he wanted to do and was determined to achieve it. When you look at him there, at the top of the wave, you see so much grace.
“In fact it wasn’t so much a natural talent with Jay, he really had to work hard at it. He was dedicated, totally.
“If he said he would see you on the beach at 7am, he’d be there at 6.30 and he’d stay until the job was done.”
Bob adds: “I’ve worked with hundreds of surfers. I know what their egos can be like. Jay was different. He was the best but he treated everyone as his equals. There was always a friendly warmth in his eyes.
“I guess it’s difficult for people outside the community to realise how there’s a special bond between surfers.
“It’s built out of a respect for the ocean, and for the way each one takes on the challenges.
“Surfers understand one another and why they do it. So the loss of someone like Jay really touched everyone’s hearts in this neighbourhood. If he had died on a big wave rather than out training, maybe that might have been easier to accept.”
When Jay died, he and Kim’s first wedding anniversary was approaching. But they were childhood sweethearts and had been together as a couple for years.
A decade on from his death, Kim, 34, has moved back to Santa Cruz and is due to remarry this year.
But Jay’s memory is, not surprisingly, still very precious and vivid.
“Sometimes I’m overwhelmed with a feeling that he’s close by. I keep his image near to my heart,” she has said. “I was just numb after he was gone. I was upside down, turned around in the dark.
“I watched him grow into what he became. Being a big-wave rider is really very cool and people idolised him.
“But meeting him on the street you would never know that. He would treat you like you were his brother or sister. He had no ego. He was just incredibly real in a world…”