Stab Magazine | Three Untold Tales From Ozzie Wright's Best Mate, Vaughan "Deadly" Blakey

Now Live: Best Surfing I've Ever Seen With Nate Lawrence

1 Views

Three Untold Tales From Ozzie Wright’s Best Mate, Vaughan “Deadly” Blakey

“I really do believe Oz has this little magic part of him… He’s got something going on that the rest of us don’t have, in terms of seeing beauty in life.”

style // Mar 14, 2019
Words by Stab
Reading Time: 4 minutes

(Ed. Note: Vaughan ‘Deadly’ Blakey and Ozzie Wright have been best mates since their first day of kindergarten. 

Since then, the Sydney-based duo has made surf movies together, started a band together, and built two wonderfully divergent careers in the world of surfing. Their symbiotic relationship (Oz the in-water talent, Vaughan the surf media don) has allowed Oz and Vaughan to create iconic pieces of Australian surfing history, which will be passed on for generations. 

Vaughan has been around for many of the pivotal moments in Ozzie’s career, but also for some childhood struggles, which makes him the ideal candidate to share a few remarkable stories that Oz would never tell about himself. (Oscar is quite the modest gent!)

Below, Deadly highlights some important and entertaining moments from Ozzie’s past.)

190221OZZIE02 320 1

Coming in hot!

Photography

Kane Skennar

I remember in the early days of Ozzie’s career, when he was filming 156 Tricks, he went to Europe with his mate Cowboy to get clips. Not many crew at that time were consistently bringing that punk-skate aspect into surfing, but Oz was right on top of it. 

Oz had this session at a French beachie where he just went absolutely fucking psycho. He landed every single trick he tried and then would run up the beach giggling after every ride. I heard a crowd started to gather, and by the end of it, there were people clapping and cheering with every air he did.

This is was probably one of the best surfs of Ozzie’s whole life. Unfortunately, Cowboy, who he’d employed to film 156 Tricks, had hooked up with some chick the night before and went to Spain on a romantic getaway with her, so he missed the whole thing. Not one wave was captured.

I know that that session would grind Ozzie a little bit even to this day, but it would never be something he’d say out in public [about Cowboy], because he’s the most loyal friend of all time. So I’m just basically dropping Cowboy straight in shit with this one.

190221OZZIE02 463

Cowboy, did you get it mate?!

Photography

Kane Skennar

In the early days of us partying and experimenting with psychedelics, Oz would go running into the bush because he thought he could talk to the trees.

He’d come back and say, “Man, I was running through the bushes as fast as I could and trees were telling me, ‘Go left! Go right!’,” and he reckons he could sprint through thick scrub and not hit a single branch because the trees were saying, “Duck! Go left! Go right! Up! Down! Barrel-roll!”

That said, I really do believe Oz has this little magic part of him – like a sixth sense or something about him that sees the world differently. I think colours are more vibrant and nature sort of talks to him. He’s got something going on that the rest of us don’t have in terms of seeing beauty in life.

When Oz was younger, it was just really high highs and incredibly low lows. Maybe coming through that in your formative years helps you appreciate just how magical the world can be, if you can get through it.

190221OZZIE02 257 1

“Lean back,” howled the moon.

Photography

Kane Skennar

Ozzie’s dad, Rick, was super talented.

He had a mega gift for wordplay and was an awesome illustrator. But Rick was also stuck in the real world of having to be a landscaper and worked really hard in his life. The frustration of wanting to spend all his time doing his art, up against the realities of having to work hard to support a family, really got to him.

There’s a famous story where Oz came home from school bummed one day, and Rick asked him what was wrong.

Ozzie was like, “I’m over school. I hate it.”

Then Rick said, “If all you want to do is draw and surf for the rest of your life, that’s all you have to do.”

When Oz was between 12 and 15, his dad actually said that to him. That was unheard of at the time, and it played a major role in dictating the course of Ozzie’s life. He dropped out at 15 and started pursuing surfing and art full-time.  

190221OZZIE01 198

And still to this day, Ozzie can’t stop making.

Photography

Kane Skennar

Then Rick died on Christmas morning when Ozzie was 18. It doesn’t get any more traumatic.

That same year his dad died, Oz also busted his knee. He needed a full reconstruction, six months of recovery, then he did his ankle straight after, which was another three or four months.

So Ozzie spent the year that his dad died lying in bed.

The main outlet that Ozzie had to process emotions and get rid of whatever problems he had was surfing. And he didn’t have that. All he had was his brain and drawing. We were all at work or school so he didn’t have many people around. He just had to deal with all this grief.

But I think that tragedy must have played a role in forging Ozzie’s desire to make the most out of life. He came out of that depression just chomping at the bit to get stuck into life.

But he’s always had it—that creativity and that spark. Even since primary school, he was the kid everybody wanted to be friends with. He still is. 

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

Full Frame: A 15-Minute, One-Wave Pipe Session

"Oh shit, that was kind of nuts, I think I think I'm just gonna go…

Apr 27, 2024

80 Men And 48 Women Enter The CS Gauntlet — Only 15 Will Survive

Your 2024 Challenger Series x Gold Coast Pro preview.

Apr 26, 2024

The Best Surfing I’ve Ever Seen: Nate Lawrence

Kolohe, Cola Bros, Luke Davis, Crane, and "the most magical 3 weeks ever had in…

Apr 25, 2024

Snapper To Return To The CT In 2025(!) + WSL Announces Season Wildcards

Next year is looking up. Here's what we know...

Apr 25, 2024

Kelly Slater Will Surf In Tahiti And Fiji CT Events — And He’s Bringing A Secret Weapon With Him

What's it like to coach an 11x champ? We asked Glenn "Micro" Hall.

Apr 24, 2024

Watch: A Masterclass In Belated Drops At The Teepee Capital Of The World

And the rest of the O’Neill team sticks the landing in Hawaii.

Apr 24, 2024

How Sophie McCulloch Broke Her Back At The Box Three Days After Being Cut From The CT

The untold brutal side story of finals day in WA.

Apr 24, 2024

The Cut Wasn’t The Surf Fans’ Idea — But It Might Be Our Fault

Psychoanalyzing surfing’s highly sadistic audience (us!).

Apr 23, 2024

How Surfers (And Skiers/Snowboarders) Could Be Using Buoys Better

Snow in Japan = waves at Pipe = snow in Utah, @PowderBuoy told us.

Apr 22, 2024

How Did Sydney’s Hottest Landscape Architect Stack So Many Clips Less Than 10Kms From Centrepoint Tower? 

Fraser Dovell is a man of culture, taste and jabbing North Av lefts in the…

Apr 22, 2024

Full Frame: The Other Side Of Nazaré

The death of a wave, and the birth of an entire genre of surf. 

Apr 21, 2024

Jack Robbo Double Beats Double John At Margies, Gabriela Bryan Dodges Dolphins For Maiden Win

The cut is finished - WA finals recap.

Apr 21, 2024

Watch: A Leisurely Day With Fingal’s-Most-Wanted Foamball Wrangler

Lungi Slabb and filmmaker Beren Hall offer insight into the exact specs which bring GoPro…

Apr 20, 2024

The Stab Interview: Chippa Wilson

On childhood bullies, surfing bigger waves, the making of 'Zipper', and what's on the horizon…

Apr 19, 2024

Medina Cooked at WSL Judges’ BBQ, George Pittar Flares En Route To Finals Day

Four heats, a nine point ride, and some brotherly tears.

Apr 19, 2024

Ferrari Boyz: Harry Bryant (Redux)

A Land Cruiser, a shitting collie, a tank of petrol, and a wild Haz in…

Apr 18, 2024

Surprise! Margies Ran At Southside Today

No rest for the wicked - day 5 WA recap.

Apr 18, 2024

A Dispatch From The Best Run Of Swell Northwest Australia May Ever See

Three weeks of pumping surf, two decades ago, that changed this writer's life.

Apr 17, 2024
Advertisement