'Soul Surfer' Highlights One-Armed Athlete's Inspirational Story


 April 11, 2011
'Soul Surfer' Highlights One-Armed Athlete's Inspirational Story
Photo: Noah Hamilton
AnnaSophia Robb as Bethany Hamilton in "Soul Surfer"

In 2003, Bethany Hamilton, 13, lost her left arm to a shark attack while surfing off Kauai, Hawaii. A new film dramatizes the story of how she overcame that to achieve her dream of becoming a professional athlete. Here's a look at Soul Surfer.

"Big snap off the top! Bethany Hamilton is holding nothing back with potentially one of the highest scoring rides of the day as this final comes to a close here at Turtle Bay."

Growing up on the "garden isle" of Kauai, Bethany Hamilton spent every minute she could riding the waves. She was on the verge of becoming a top competitor in pro surfing. But while she was practicing at an isolated cove, a four-meter long tiger shark ripped off her left arm. A frantic ride to the hospital and quick work by doctors saved her life, but nobody, not even Bethany, could imagine she would ever get back on a surfboard again.

"I don't understand. What happened to 'I can do all things?' Why did this happen? Why did I have to lose everything?"

"You didn't lose everything, Bethany not even close."


In a true test of her faith and by sheer will power, Bethany did get back up on a surfboard only a month after the attack. Six months later, she was competing again. It's a story told in her autobiography, which is the basis for the film that stars teenager AnnaSophia Robb.

AnnaSophia Robb and Lorraine Nicholson as Bethany Hamilton and Alana Blanchard in
Noah Hamilton
AnnaSophia Robb and Lorraine Nicholson as Bethany Hamilton and Alana Blanchard in "Soul Surfer"

"I knew Bethany's story, of course, but I thought 'what an incredible role', explains Robb. " I was so fascinated by all of the challenges. What would it be like to have your arm taken and what would go through your head and how would your faith be challenged? "

To play the role, Robb had to learn how to surf well enough to play a champion. The young actress admits she never got to that level, but, tutored by Hamilton, she did pick up the basics.

"Bethany taught me a ton and really helped me figuring out where the 'channel' is and how to look for waves and what to do and just about knowledge of the sea and being comfortable in it for sure," Robb says.

The filmmakers use special effects to digitally 'remove' Robb's arm. However no tricks were necessary for the surfing scenes because Hamilton herself does the breathtaking wave riding.

Now 21, she says she hopes audiences find inspiration in the depiction of the sport she loves.

Dennis Quaid, Helen Hunt and AnnaSophia Robb in
Mario Perez
Dennis Quaid, Helen Hunt and AnnaSophia Robb in "Soul Surfer"

"Not a lot of people know that much about surfing, so I hope they're educated on it," Hamilton says. "And most of all if people are going through a hard time, they could be encouraged and find inspiration to push through those hard times and see that, in my family's case, so much good has come out of it."

Hamilton credits her Christian faith with helping her find that positive message. Director and co-writer Sean McNamara says he felt that had to be part of the film.

"Soul Surfer is about a girl who is a surfer, but that is not what the real story is about," McNamara notes. "The story is about what happens with her family and, with the tragedy that she has, how she can get back on the board. Part of her character is that she is a Christian. That is just part of who she is, so we didn't want to hide from that. It was just part of who she was so it came out in the script."


"How can this be God's plan for me? I don't understand."

"I don't know why terrible things happen to us sometimes, but I have to believe that something good is going to come out of this."


AnnaSophia Robb and Carrie Underwood in
Mario Perez
AnnaSophia Robb and Carrie Underwood in "Soul Surfer"

Soul Surfer marks the acting debut of country music star Carrie Underwood, who plays the church youth leader who is Bethany's spiritual guide.

"This story is about having faith when the chips are down and when something terrible has happened that you don't know how to deal with," explains Underwood. "I feel like we can all learn something from Bethany's story and when the little things in our lives don't go so well we can take a lesson from her and realize how small that really is."

Bethany Hamilton won her first amateur surfing championship just two years after she lost her arm. In 2007 she realized her dream of becoming a professional surfer. She also established the "Friends of Bethany," a non-profit foundation dedicated to supporting shark attack victims and amputees around the world.