"It's what happens when boys take to the sea...and the girls take to the boys!" and "Hear 'em Sing These Surfin' Hits!" proclaimed the posters for Surf Party (1964), one of several musical beach and surfing films to come out of Hollywood in the late 1950s - mid 1960s in order to capitalize on both the surf craze and the popularity of surf music by groups like The Ventures and The Beach Boys. Produced by 20th Century-Fox, Surf Party was shot very quickly at both the studio and on location at various locations in Malibu, including the Malibu Pier near Surfrider Beach.

Surf Party was directed by Maury Dexter from a script by Harry Spalding, who had collaborated on several films, including Fox's The Young Swingers (1963). The plot is the usual teenage fare; three girls, Terry (Patricia Morrow), Sylvia (Lory Patrick), and Junior (singer Jackie DeShannon) come to California from their home in Arizona to learn to surf. Once there, they visit Terry's surfer brother, Skeet (Jerry Summers) who had to abandon his football career after a head injury and is living in a Malibu beach house. Predictably, Sylvia falls for Skeet, Terry falls for Len (singer Bobby Vinton, who only worked three days on the film), the owner of a surf shop, and Junior falls for surfer Milo (Ken Miller). Like most teenage films of the time, there are conflicts with the establishment who are against surfers, fights, misunderstandings, and makeups. What makes Surf Party interesting is the footage of real surfers Mickey Dora and Johnny Fain, doubling for the stars, and the cast of musicians. Along with Vinton and DeShannon, who both sing, there were the bands The Routers and The Astronauts (a surf band from Denver who hit the Top 10 with Baja), who make an appearance to perform a few songs. Member of The Routers, who had a hit with Let's Go!, included Scott Walker, who would later score several hits with The Walker Brothers, and Michael Z. Gordon, both of whom later became successful producers and composers.

Surf Party was released in early 1964 and received the type of reviews expected of such blatant teenaged fare. Eugene Archer of The New York Times wrote that he'd seen it all before, comparing it to the "youth" oriented films of the 1920s, with only the bathing suits and the dances changed. "[T]hey bounce into passionless love affairs, take reckless surfboard risks in pointless tests of courage and display an alarming lack of inhibitions and not a trace of social responsibility. It's enough to make you wonder what modern youth is coming to." The critics may not have liked the film, but it went over big with its intended audience - and that was most definitely not the critics.

In his profile of Bobby Vinton in Life magazine the following year, writer Alan Levy related an anecdote about how Surf Party was considered at its home studio. "The pile of clippings I accumulated revealed that Bobby Vinton had made one movie - Surf Party. I launched an effort to see it. [...] There were indications that Surf Party was released through 20th Century-Fox, so I phoned a friend who works there. 'You've got the wrong number,' he told me. 'We don't release that kind of movie. Columbia Pictures does. We make Cleopatra and The Longest Day. Call Columbia about Surf Party.' I did and was told [...] 'I'm sorry to say he made Surf Party for Fox. I wish to hell he'd made it for us because it's earned a fortune in the drive-ins. [...]'"

By Lorraine LoBianco


SOURCES:
http://www.afi.com/members/catalog/DetailView.aspx?s=&Movie=18636
Archer, Eugene "'Surf Party' Opens" The New York Times 12 Mar 64
The Internet Movie Database
Levy, Alan "He's at the top of the charts and his records sell like there's no tomorrow, so who is this Bobby Vinton?" Life 12 Mar 65
Lisanti, Thomas Hollywood Surf and Beach Movies: The First Wave, 1959-1969
Rowan, Terry Bikini, Surfing & Beach Party Movies
http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/91995/Surf-Party/