Jacques Cousteau remembered for his 'common touch'
The world shared his underwater adventures
June 25, 1997
Web posted at: 11:22 p.m. EDT (0322 GMT)
PARIS (CNN) -- For millions of people who see the ocean only
through the porthole of television, the voice of the sea had
a soft French accent.
Jacques-Yves Cousteau, who opened up the mysterious world
beneath the sea to millions of landlocked viewers, died
Wednesday at age 87.
His widow Francine said he died of a heart attack at 2:30
a.m. at their Paris home while recovering from a respiratory
ailment, which had kept him hospitalized for months.
A memorial service will be held in Notre Dame Cathedral
Monday, but the Cousteau Foundation did not say where the
explorer would be buried.
Cousteau's 60-year odyssey with the sea -- much of it on his
famous boat the Calypso -- was more than a great adventure.
He co-invented the aqualung, developed a one-person,
jet-propelled submarine and helped start the
first manned undersea colonies.
"When you dive, you begin to feel that you're an angel," the
environmentalist and scuba pioneer once said.
But the bespectacled, wiry Cousteau, often wearing his
trademark red wool cap, became a household name primarily
through his hugely popular television series, "The Undersea
World of Jacques Cousteau," and his many documentaries.
'Rare insight and extraordinary spirit'
French President Jacques Chirac mourned Cousteau as an
"enchanter," a legend who "represented the defense of nature,
modern adventure, invention of the possible."
U.S. President Bill Clinton hailed the explorer as a man of
"rare insight and extraordinary spirit."
"While we mourn his death, it is far more appropriate that we
celebrate his remarkable life and the gifts he gave to all of
us," a written statement from Clinton said.
U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt praised Cousteau for
his common touch.
| Jean Michael Cousteau speaks about: his father's message |
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Added Ted Turner, vice chairman of Time Warner, which owns
CNN: "I think Captain Cousteau might be the father of the
environmental movement."
"I think what he will be remembered for most in history is
the way he connected with regular people and brought the
mystery and beauty of oceans into our personal lives,"
Babbitt said.
"Capt. Jacques-Yves Cousteau has gone to the Silent World
this Wednesday, June 25, 1997"
The Cousteau Foundation
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"The Silent World" was the name of a documentary that won
Cousteau the top award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1956.
The film was made using skin-diving gear he invented with
engineer Emile Gagnan in 1943, freeing divers from heavy
helmets and allowing them to float as if in space.
After he led a 1972 voyage to Antarctica, a worldwide
television audience saw for the first time the extraordinary
beauty of sculptured ice formations under the sea.
Cousteau liked to call himself an "oceanographic technician."
But he was also a romantic who once said that for him, water
was the ultimate symbol of love.
"The reason why I love the sea, I cannot explain," a
chuckling Cousteau once said.
Inauspicious beginnings
| Jean Michael Cousteau: his father's legacy |
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Cousteau was born June 11, 1910, in Saint-Andre-de-Cubzac, a
small town near Bordeaux. His father was a lawyer who
traveled constantly, and the boy was often on the move.
He was a sickly child. Nonetheless, he learned to swim and
spent hours at the beach. Formal schooling bored Cousteau; he
was expelled from high school for breaking 17 of the school's
windows.
His first dive was in Lake Harvey, Vermont, in the summer of
1920. He was spending the season away from New York City,
where he and his parents lived briefly.
In 1930, Cousteau passed the highly competitive entrance
examinations to enter France's Naval Academy. He served in
the navy and entered naval aviation school.
A near-fatal car crash at age 26 denied him his wings, and he
was transferred to sea duty, where he swam rigorously to
strengthen badly weakened arms.
"Sometimes we are lucky enough to know that our lives have
been changed, to discard the old, embrace the new, and run
headlong down an immutable course," he wrote. "It happened to
me ... on that summer's day, when my eyes were opened to the
sea," he wrote later.
'Manfish'
During World War II, Cousteau was involved in espionage
activities for the French Resistance. After the war, he was
decorated with the Legion of Honor, France's highest honor.
He also made his first underwater films during the war
period, and, with engineer Emile Gagnan, perfected the piece
of equipment that he said enabled him to be a "manfish" --
the aqualung, an underwater breathing apparatus that supplies
oxygen to divers.
In 1950, a millionaire gave Cousteau money to buy the 400-ton
former mine-sweeper Calypso. He converted it into a floating
laboratory outfitted with the most modern equipment,
including underwater television gear.
| Jean Michael Cousteau: problems he had with his father |
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In 1952-53 Cousteau took the Calypso to the Red Sea and shot
the first color footage ever taken at a depth of 150 feet.
One of his most renowned exploits was the unearthing of the
hull of an ancient Greek wine freighter, buried deep in
fossil mud 130 feet below the surface off the French coast
near Marseilles.
The Calypso also conducted the first offshore oil survey by
divers.
He authored countless books, including "The Living Sea"
(1963) and "World Without Sun" (1965). A 20-volume
encyclopedia, "The Ocean World of Jacques Cousteau," was
published in the United States and England.
In 1977, the "Cousteau Odyssey" series premiered on PBS.
Seven years later, the "Cousteau Amazon" series premiered on
the Turner Broadcasting System. In all, his documentaries
have won 40 Emmy nominations.
Explorer, educator
"He will be remembered not only as a pioneer in his time, but
as a dominant figure in world history," said President Ronald
Reagan in 1985.
Cousteau's films and philosophy influenced people of all
ages. He kept working well into his 80s, giving up diving in
cold water but not giving up educating young people about the
past.
He was regularly voted France's most-loved public figure in
opinion polls. So popular was the explorer that students at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology made up a song
about him.
"He don't have to come up for air. He's Jacques, Jacques,
Jacques Cousteau. How long can you go," the singing tribute
went. "From sea to shining sea, he checks them out for you
and me."
It was in his later years that Cousteau tried to teach the
world to save itself.
| Jean Michael Cousteau: his father's final days |
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"Future generations would not forgive us for having
deliberately spoiled their last opportunity and the last
opportunity is today," he said at a 1992 environmental
gathering.
Age did not dim his enthusiasm.
Even as the Cousteau Society and Turner Original Productions
honored him with an 85th birthday special, he still
approached his life's work with a sense of adventure.
"There is not bad diver. Never. Always something new to learn
and see," he said.
And after a lifetime of invention, exploration and
storytelling, Cousteau said not long before he died that he
was proudest of helping to save Alaska, the Antarctic, the
Amazon and of helping awaken the awareness of people all over
the world.
"All these things have been hard won," he said. "And we did
it and I'm proud of it."
Correspondent Mark Leff and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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