Wednesday, October 8, 2008
CNN on Jacques Cousteau
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.
Jacques Cousteau sends a message to young people:
video icon 674K/16 sec. small frame QuickTime movie
video icon 1.3M/16 sec. large frame QuickTime movie
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.
vxtreme The life of Jacques Cousteau
"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'
underwater
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
icon 352 K/26 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
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
"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
icon 480 K/40 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
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'
old picture
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
icon 288 K/22 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
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
books
"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
icon 512 K/43 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
"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.
Source: http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9706/25/cousteau.obit/
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.
Jacques Cousteau sends a message to young people:
video icon 674K/16 sec. small frame QuickTime movie
video icon 1.3M/16 sec. large frame QuickTime movie
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.
vxtreme The life of Jacques Cousteau
"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'
underwater
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
icon 352 K/26 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
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
"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
icon 480 K/40 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
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'
old picture
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
icon 288 K/22 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
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
books
"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
icon 512 K/43 sec. AIFF or WAV sound
"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.
Source: http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9706/25/cousteau.obit/
Sipadan Island
The arrival of Jacques Cousteau changes the life of people in Semporna. He recommended Sipadan Island to the world as one of the best five diving spots. The rest is history.
I am going to write about my meeting with him in 90s. I was hired by him as a interpreter when he was doing his film here.
Wikipedia of Jacques-Yves Cousteau
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques-Yves_Cousteau
Jacques-Yves Cousteau in 1976.
Jacques-Yves Cousteau (11 June 1910 – 25 June 1997)[1] was a French naval officer, explorer, ecologist, filmmaker, scientist, photographer, author and researcher who studied the sea and all forms of life in water. He co-developed the aqua-lung, pioneered marine conservation and was a member of the Académie française. He was commonly known as Jacques Cousteau or Captain Cousteau.
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Personal life
* 2 Career Highlights
o 2.1 Early 1940s: Innovation of modern underwater diving
o 2.2 Late 1940s: GERS and Élie Monnier
o 2.3 1950-1970s
o 2.4 1980-1990s
* 3 Defense of the environment
* 4 Legacy
* 5 Pop culture tributes and references
* 6 See also
o 6.1 Jacques-Yves Cousteau's ships
* 7 Bibliography
* 8 References
* 9 External links
[edit] Personal life
Cousteau was born on 11 June 1910, in Saint-André-de-Cubzac, Gironde, to Daniel and Élisabeth Cousteau. He discovered the sea in the creeks close to Marseilles where his family settled. He completed his preparatory studies at the prestigious Collège Stanislas in Paris. In 1930 he entered the Ecole Navale and became an officer gunner. In Toulon, where he was serving on the "Condorcet", Cousteau carried out his first underwater experiments, thanks to his friend Philippe Tailliez. [2]
In 1936, Tailliez lent him some Fernez underwater goggles, predecessors of modern diving masks. Cousteau also belonged to the information service of the French Navy, and was sent on missions to Shanghai and Japan (1938) and in the USSR (1939).
In 1930 he entered the French Navy as the head of the underwater research group. He later worked his way up the ranks as he became more famous and more useful to the navy. On 12 July 1937 he married Simone Melchior, with whom he had two sons, Jean-Michel (1938) and Philippe (1940). His sons took part in the adventure of the Calypso. In 1991, one year after his wife Simone's death of cancer, he married Francine Triplet. They already had a daughter Diane Cousteau (1980) and a son Pierre-Yves Cousteau (1982), born before their marriage. He was the brother of right-wing fascist journalist and WWII Germany collaborator Pierre-Antoine Cousteau (1906-1958).
Cousteau died at the age of 87 of a heart attack while recovering from a respiratory illness. He is buried in the Cousteau family plot at Saint-André-de-Cubzac Cemetery, Saint-André-de-Cubzac, France.
[edit] Career Highlights
[edit] Early 1940s: Innovation of modern underwater diving
The years of the Second World War were decisive for the history of diving. After the armistice of 1940, the family of Simone and Jacques-Yves Cousteau took refuge in Megève, where he became a friend of the Ichac family who also lived there. Jacques-Yves Cousteau and Marcel Ichac shared the same will to reveal to general public unknown and inaccessible places: for Cousteau the underwater world and for Ichac the high mountains. The two neighbors took the first ex-aequo prize of the Congress of Documentary Film in 1943, for the first French underwater film: Par dix-huit mètres de fond' (= 18 meters deep"), made without breathing apparatus the previous year in Embiez (Var) with Philippe Tailliez and Frederic Dumas, without forgetting the paramount part played, as originator of the depth-pressure-proof camera case, by the mechanical engineer Leon Vèche (engineer of Arts and Métiers and the Naval College).
In 1943, they made the film Epaves (= Shipwrecks): for this occasion, they used the aqualung, which continued the line of some inventions of the 19th century (Rouquayrol and Denayrouze's Aerophore) and of the early 20th century (Le Prieur). When making Epaves, Cousteau could not find the necessary blank reels of movie film, but had to buy hundreds of small still camera film reels the same width, intended for a make of child's camera, and these had to be cemented together to make long reels. [3]
Having kept bonds with the English-speakers (he spent part of his childhood in the United States and usually spoke English) and with French soldiers in North Africa (under admiral Lemonnier), Jacques-Yves Cousteau (whose villa "Baobab" at Sanary (Var) was opposite the villa "Reine" of Admiral Darlan), helped the French Navy to join again with the Allies; he assembled a commando operation against the Italian services of espionage in France, and received several military decorations for his deeds. At that time, he kept his distance from his brother Pierre-Antoine, a "pen anti-semite", who wrote the collaborationist newspaper Je suis partout (= I am everywhere), and was condemned to die in 1946. However this was later commuted to a life sentence, and Pierre-Antoine was released in 1954.
During the 1940s Cousteau is credited with improving the aqualung design which gave birth to the open-circuit scuba technology that we have today. According to his first book, The Silent World: A Story of Undersea Discovery and Adventure (1953), Cousteau started snorkel diving with a mask, snorkel, and fins with Frédéric Dumas and Philippe Tailliez. In 1943, he tried out the first prototype aqua-lung — designed by Cousteau and Émile Gagnan — which made lengthy underwater exploration possible for the first time.
[edit] Late 1940s: GERS and Élie Monnier
In 1946, Cousteau and Tailliez showed the film "Epaves" to admiral Lemonnier , and the admiral gave them the responsibility of setting up the Groupement de Recherches Sous-marines (GRS) (Underwater Research Group) of the French Navy in Toulon. A little later it became the GERS (Groupe d'Etudes et de Recherches Sous-Marines, = Underwater Studies and Research Group), then the COMISMER ("COMmandement des Interventions Sous la MER", = "Undersea Interventions Command"), and finally more recently the CEPHISMER.
In 1948, between missions of mine clearance, underwater exploration and technological and physiological tests, Cousteau undertook a first campaign in the Mediterranean on board the sloop Elie Monnier of Group of Study and Underwater Research (GERS) of the National Navy, with Philippe Tailliez, Frederic Dumas, Jean Alinat and the scenario writer Marcel Ichac. The small team also undertook the exploration of the Roman wreck of Mahdia (Tunisia). It was the first underwater archaeology operation using autonomous diving, opening the way for scientific underwater archaeology. Cousteau and Marcel Ichac brought back from there the Carnets diving film (presented and preceded with the Cannes Film Festival 1951).
Cousteau and Elie Monnier then took part in the rescue of the bathyscaphe of Professor Jacques Piccard, the FNRS-2, during the 1949 expedition to Dakar. Thanks to this rescue, the French Navy was able to re-use the sphere of the bathyscaphe to construct the FNRS-3.
The adventures of this period are told in the 2 books The Silent World (1953) by Cousteau and Plongées Sans Câble by Philippe Tailliez.
[edit] 1950-1970s
In 1949, Cousteau left the French Navy.
In 1950: he founded the French Oceanographic Campaigns (FOC), and he leased a ship called Calypso from Thomas Loel Guinness for a symbolic one franc a year and equipped her as a mobile laboratory for field research and as a support base for diving and filming. In it Cousteau traversed the most interesting seas of the planet as well as big and small rivers. He carried out also underwater archaeological excavations in the Mediterranean, in particular at Grand-Congloué (1952).
With the publication of his first book in 1953, The Silent World He correctly predicted the existence of the echolocation abilities of porpoises (pp. 206-207), before they were discovered. He reported that his research vessel, the Élie Monier, was heading to the Straits of Gibraltar and noticed a group of porpoises following them. Cousteau changed course a few degrees off the optimal course to the center of the strait, and the porpoises followed for a few minutes, then diverged toward mid-channel again. It was evident that they knew where the optimal course lay, even if the humans did not. Cousteau concluded that the cetaceans had something like sonar, which was a relatively new feature on submarines. He was correct.
During his voyages, he produces many films (he got the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1956 for the The Silent World co-realized with Louis Malle, and of the books which contributed to diffuse, with a popularity without precedent, the knowledge of underwater biology.
With the assistance of Jean Mollard, he made a "diving saucer" SP-350, an extraordinary underwater vehicle which can reach a depth of 350 meters. The successful experiment was quickly repeated in 1965 with two vehicles which reached 500 meters.
In 1957, he was elected as director of the Oceanographical Museum of Monaco. He directed Précontinent, of the experiments of diving in saturation (long-duration immersion, houses under the sea), and was one of the rare few from abroad admitted to the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. The popularity of Jacques-Yves Cousteau grew.
In October 1960, a large amount of radioactive waste was going to be discarded in the Mediterranean Sea by the Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique (CEA). The CEA argued that the dumps were experimental in nature, and that French oceanographers such as Vsevelod Romanovsky had recommended it. Romanovsky and other French scientists, including Louis Fage and Jacques Cousteau, repudiated the claim, saying that Romanovsky had in mind a much smaller amount. The CEA claimed that there was little circulation (and hence little need for concern) at the dump site between Nice and Corsica, but French public opinion sided with the oceanographers rather than with the CEA atomic energy scientists. The CEA chief, Francis Perrin, decided to postpone the dump.[4] Cousteau organized a publicity campaign which in less than two weeks gained wide popular support. The train carrying the waste was stopped by women and children sitting on the railway tracks, and it was sent back to its origin. The alleged risk was avoided. During this, a French government man had said falsely to a newspaper that Cousteau had approved the dump; Cousteau managed to get the newspaper to issue a correction.
In Monaco in November 1960, the official visit of French president Charles de Gaulle became famous because of their exchange in connection with the incidents of October and more largely in connection with the nuclear experiments. The ambassador of France had suggested to Prince Rainier any meeting be avoided; but Prince Rainier did nothing to prevent the presence of Cousteau at the time of de Gaulle's visit to the oceanographical Museum. The President asked the Commander in a friendly way to be nice with his atomic scientists; Cousteau answered "No sir, it is your researchers that ought to be kind toward us." In the discussion which followed, Jacques-Yves Cousteau deplored the American decision not to share nuclear secrets with France (for fear that certain French scientists, rejoined with Communism, might communicate them to the USSR), which led France to undertake its own research and nuclear experiments.
The meeting with American television (ABC, Métromédia, NBC) created the series ' "The Underwater Odyssey of Commander Cousteau", with the character of the commander in the red bonnet inherited from standard divers) intended to give to films more of a "personalized adventures" documentary style than a "didactic" one. On their subject, Cousteau explained: "people protect and respect what they like, and to make them like the sea, they should be filled with wonder as much as informing them."
In 1973, along with his two sons and Frederick Hyman, he created the Cousteau Society for the Protection of Ocean Life, Frederick Hyman being its first President; it now has more than 300,000 members.
In 1976 Cousteau uncovered the wreck of the HMHS Britannic. In 1977, together with Peter Scott, he received the UN International Environment prize.
In 1985, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Ronald Reagan, then president of the United States.
On 28 June 1979, while the Calypso was on an expedition to Portugal, his second son, Philippe, his preferred and designated successor and with whom he co-produced all his films since 1969, was killed, cut by his Catalina seaplane's propeller. Cousteau was deeply affected. He called his then eldest son, the architect Jean-Michel Cousteau, to his side. This collaboration lasted 14 years.
[edit] 1980-1990s
On 24 November 1988 he was elected to the French Academy, chair 17, succeeding Jean Delay. His official reception under the Cupola took place on 22 June 1989, the response to his speech of reception being pronounced by Bertrand Poirot-Delpech. After his death, he was replaced under the Cupola by Érik Orsenna on 28 May 1998.
In June 1990, the composer Jean Michel Jarre paid homage to the commander by entitling his new album "While waiting for Cousteau".
On 2 December 1990, his wife Simone Cousteau died of cancer. This woman of great character who had spent more time than her husband on board Calypso was the égérie' of the Cousteau team.
In June 1991, in Paris, Jacques-Yves Cousteau remarried, to Francine Triplet, with whom he had (before this marriage) 2 children, Diane and Pierre-Yves. Francine Cousteau currently continues her husband's work as the head of the Cousteau Foundation and Cousteau Society. From that point, the relations between Jacques-Yves and his elder son worsened. Jacques-Yves put an end to their collaboration.
In November 1991, Cousteau gave an interview to the UNESCO courier, in which he stated that he was pro human population control and population decrease. The full article text can be found online[5].
In 1996, he prosecuted his son who wished to open a holiday center named "Cousteau" in the Fiji Islands.
On 11 January 1996 Calypso was rammed and sunk in Singapore harbor by a barge. The Calypso was refloated and towed home to France.
In 1992, he was invited to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for the United Nations' International Conference on Environment and Development, and then he became a regular consultant for the UN and the World Bank.
Jacques-Yves Cousteau died on 25 June 1997 in Paris, aged 87. His death was strongly felt in the United States, where he was one of the most popular Frenchmen. He was buried in the family vault at Saint-André-de-Cubzac in France. An homage was paid to him by the city by the inauguration of a "rue du Commandant Cousteau", a street which runs out to his native house, where a commemorative plaque was affixed.
During his lifetime, Jacques-Yves Cousteau received these distinctions:
* Commandeur de la Légion d'Honneur
* Grand-Croix de l'Ordre national du Mérite
* Croix de guerre 1939-1945
* Officier de l'Ordre du Mérite Maritime
* Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
* Honorary Companion of the Order of Australia.
[edit] Defense of the environment
The intellectual heritage that Jacques Grob and especially Philippe Tailliez transmitted to him in the years 1936, namely an environmental and geonomic vision of the sea and Earth, was superimposed in Jacques-Yves Cousteau with a mentality of conqueror, nourished cultivated explorer of the spirit of Jules Verne, and liking like this one to fill the public with wonder. "One protects what one likes.", Cousteau repeated, "and one likes what enchanted us." The oceanographic and cinematographic campaigns of Cousteau having taken place for more than 50 years (1945-1997), it could measure the degradation of the in-situ mediums: the conqueror-explorer, sure of the power of the technique and finding normal to drive out the marine animals, gradually changed to a burning conservationist who made profitable his world notoriety to promote the idea of the Earth, a limited and fragile spaceship, needing to be preserved. He was the only one not a politician who took part in the Summit of Rio in 1992.
After 1975, he considered for one moment to found worldwide Cousteau Clubs of young people, but finally this idea (which would have meant for its Team much work and few financial rewards) resulted only in publishing fanzines (Calypso Log, Le Dauphin) and in a voyage filmed in the Antarctic with children. It also refused to engage in policy at the side of the ecologists, not to give prizes to the personal attacks of the adversaries. Towards the end of his life, he became pessimistic and even misanthropist: An ideal planet, he affirmed to Yves Paccalet, would be a ground where humanity is limited to 100,000 people, but educated and respectful of nature.
The media power of Jacques-Yves Cousteau rested mainly on his image and that of a team linked with the same aim. Unfortunately, of the so publicised family conflicts they, of internal divisions and the consecutive lawsuits chipped this image, and the successors: his/her son Jean-Michel Cousteau and his grandson Fabien Cousteau on a side, the Cousteau Team with his third wife Francine Cousteau and his children of the other, suffer from a fall of notoriety compared to the Cousteau Team of the 20th century.
On the other hand, the kind that Jacques-Yves Cousteau launched, the environmental underwater film and of adventure, goes better than ever: each year appear hundreds of documentaries increasingly beautiful (improvement of photographic techniques not ceasing), and the idea of the fragile Planet Sea and to preserve, diffused not only in the opinion, but up to the political circles who were less the environmentalists in the beginning.
[edit] Legacy
Cousteau's legacy includes more than 120 television documentaries, more than 50 books, and an environmental protection foundation with 300,000 members.[1]
Cousteau liked to call himself an "oceanographic technician." He was, in reality, a sophisticated showman, teacher, and lover of nature. His work permitted many people to explore the resources of the oceans.
His work also created a new kind of scientific communication, criticised at the time by some academics. The so-called "divulgationism", a simple way of sharing scientific concepts, was soon employed in other disciplines and became one of the most important characteristics of modern TV broadcasting.
Cousteau died on 25 June 1997. The Cousteau Society and its French counterpart, l'Équipe Cousteau, both of which Jacques-Yves Cousteau founded, are still active today. The Society is currently attempting to turn the original Calypso into a museum and it is raising funds to build a successor vessel, the Calypso II.
In his last years, after marrying again, Cousteau became involved in a legal battle with his son Jean-Michel over Jean-Michel licensing the Cousteau name for a Caribbean resort, resulting in Jean-Michel Cousteau being ordered by the court not to encourage confusion between his for-profit business and his father's non-profit endeavours.
In 2007 International Watch Co introduced the IWC Aquatimer Chronograph 'Cousteau Divers' Special Edition. The timepiece incorporated a sliver of wood from the interior of Cousteau's Calypso research vessel. Having developed the diver's watch, IWC offered support to The Cousteau Society. The proceeds from the timepieces' sales were partially donated to the non-profit organization involved into conservation of marine life and preservation of tropical coral reefs.[6]
[edit] Pop culture tributes and references
* Belgian singer Plastic Bertrand made a song on Jacques Cousteau in 1981, under the title Jacques Cousteau.
* John Denver wrote a song called Calypso as a tribute to Cousteau, the ship, and her crew. The song reached the number-one position on the Billboard 100 charts.
* In an episode of Full House, Joey makes a few jokes on Jaques Cousteau in his appearance on Star Search.
* In 1993, rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard refers to Cousteau in the song Da Mystery of Chessboxin' on the Wu-Tang Clan album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers). (Here I go - Deep type flow - Jacques Cousteau could never get this low)
* In Wes Anderson's Rushmore (1998) there is a famous quote by Jacques-Yves Cousteau in a book which the main character, Max Fisher, reads and searches for who wrote it while progressing the story. The quote was "When one man, for whatever reason, has an opportunity to lead an extraordinary life, he has no right to keep it to himself."
* In the Nintendo Gamecube game Animal Crossing, there is a yellow frog with a mustache called Cousteau whose catchphrase is "moui moui".
* Two New Age composers, Vangelis (who was heavily involved with Cousteau in the 1990s) and Jean Michel Jarre, released two albums including original numbers honoring Jacques-Yves Cousteau: Cousteau's Dreams (2000) and Waiting for Cousteau (1990).
* The band Incubus refers to Cousteau in their single Nice To Know You, which is in the album Morning View. ("Deeper than the deepest Cousteau would ever go / Higher than the heights of what we often think we know")
* The 2004 film The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou directed by Wes Anderson, is regarded as both an homage to and a send-up of Cousteau's career. It includes an end credit that reads "In memory of Jacques-Yves Cousteau and with gratitude to the Cousteau Society, which was not involved in the making of this film."
* Musician Matthew Thiessen refers to Jacques Cousteau as being one of his role models in his song Trademark.
* The Swedish band Bob Hund also did a tribute to Jacques Cousteau on their album Ingenting, released in 2002, with songs recorded in 1992-93. They refer to him as being "a brave aquanaut".
* There is a reference to Cousteau in line 9 of Adrienne Rich's poem Diving into the Wreck.
* The Flight of the Conchords references Jacques Cousteau in their song Foux da fa fa.
* In season 6, episode 9 of Friends The One Where Ross Got High, Phoebe has a dream about Jacques Cousteau and declares her love for him. Mrs. Geller tells her that she thinks he's dead.
* In the song "Twist My Arm", singer Gordon Downie of The Tragically Hip references Jacques Cousteau in the opening lyrics.
* In Star Trek, the captain's yacht of the USS Enterprise-E is named Cousteau.
* An internet rumour and disinformation which has been running since 1989 says wrongly that Cousteau became a Muslim upon seeing the Koran. [7]
* Around 1980 a scale model of the Calypso research ship, complete with the marine helicopter was sold to children worldwide, along with leaflets calling for donations to the Cousteau foundation. These models are still being sold as toys. [8]
* In Finding Nemo, the title character shares a tank with a Pacific cleaner shrimp named Jacques.
* The futuristic novel The Deep Range written by Arthur C. Clarke mentions a research submarine named Cousteau.
* Blue Öyster Cult mentions Cousteau in the song "Perfect Water" in the 1986 album "Club Ninja".
* Gwar's first album, Hell-O, included a song named "Je M'Appelle J. Cöusteaü".
* In Bad Boys 2, Will Smith's character Mike Lowery lists terms that his cop parnter Marcus (Martin Lawrence) musn't talk to him about. He uses the metaphor of putting these terms in a box "and we gonna throw this bitch in the ocean. And the only way that you can get to this box is you gotta be motherfuckin' Jacques Cousteau." [9]
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