Edward George William Omar Coventry, Viscount Deerhurst, known as Lord Ted Deerhurst (born 24 September 1957; died 4 October 1997 in North Shore, Oahu, Hawaii), was a British surfer.
Life and career
Deerhurst was the son of George Coventry, 11th Earl of Coventry and Marie Medart, who divorced in 1963.[1]
Moving to California with his American mother, he attended Lincoln Junior High School in Santa Monica. He learned to surf under the wing of Tony Alva, the skateboarder. Aged 15, he was taken back to England by his father (while his mother was thrown in jail). He represented Great Britain as an amateur at the world championships in South Africa in 1978. His best result was semi-finalist in the José Cuervo classic at big Sunset, Hawaii, in the same year. While he never made the top 100 in the professional rankings, he gained a reputation as "the most persistent and committed performer on the world circuit...a hero of never-say-die optimism."[2]
Deerhurst designed surfboards under the name Excalibur and set up the Excalibur Foundation to enable disabled and underprivileged children to go surfing.[2] He was briefly married to Susan Knight. He died in October 1997, in Hawaii, at the age of 40 years, predeceasing his father. His death may have come about in the wake of his relationship with a dancer at the Femme Nu club in Honolulu, by the name of Lola. This theory is advanced by (Dr) Andy Martin in his book, Surf, Sweat and Tears: the Epic Life and Mysterious Death of Edward George William Omar Deerhurst.[3]
Deerhurst appeared in the films Storm Riders (1982) and Asian Paradise (1984).
References
- ↑ George William Reginald Victor Coventry, 10th Earl of Coventry Article on thepeerage, downloaded on 7 March 2020
- 1 2 Obituaries: Viscount Deerhurst Website The Independent, downloaded on 7 March 2020
- ↑ Surf, Sweat & Tears, by Andy Martin (OR Books, New York, 2020)
External links
- Edward George William Oscar Coventry, Viscount Deerhurst. Article on thepeerage
- Ted and Lola in Hawaii, The Independent, 11 April 2020
- What really happened to the "Lord on a Board"? Sunday Express, 12 May 2020