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[[File:Kathy troutt.jpg|thumb|Kathy Troutt in 1970 working in a marine documentary film.]]
==Diving career==
==Diving career==
At age 16 Kathy Troutt made the "Guinness Book of Records" for the longest female deep sea scuba dive, breathing ordinary air for 320 feet{{clarify|date=June 2016}} off Sydney Harbour with former Royal Australian Navy diver, Wally Reynolds.<ref>"Deep Dive" People Magazine (Australia) by Alan Kershaw 17 November 1965</ref> Kathy dived on Sydney Harbour shipwrecks in 1965<ref>Australian Skindivers Magazine, December 1965 'Wreck of Catherine Adamston'.</ref>
At age 16 Kathy Troutt made the "Guinness Book of Records" for the longest female deep sea scuba dive, breathing ordinary air for 320 feet{{clarify|date=June 2016}} off Sydney Harbour with former Royal Australian Navy diver, Wally Reynolds.<ref>"Deep Dive" People Magazine (Australia) by Alan Kershaw 17 November 1965</ref> Kathy dived on Sydney Harbour shipwrecks in 1965<ref>Australian Skindivers Magazine, December 1965 'Wreck of Catherine Adamston'.</ref>

Revision as of 04:34, 23 July 2017

Kathy Troutt
Born (1947-09-14) 14 September 1947 (age 77)
OccupationActress

Kathy Troutt (born 14 September 1947) in Bath, England, is a model, actor, deep sea diver[clarification needed] and dolphin trainer, who moved to Australia in 1948.[citation needed]


Diving career

At age 16 Kathy Troutt made the "Guinness Book of Records" for the longest female deep sea scuba dive, breathing ordinary air for 320 feet[clarification needed] off Sydney Harbour with former Royal Australian Navy diver, Wally Reynolds.[1] Kathy dived on Sydney Harbour shipwrecks in 1965[2]

Modeling and acting career

Sports clothes and glamour model throughout the 1960s, she appeared on Skippy the Bush Kangaroo (as herself) as a visiting marine biologist. [clarification needed] Troutt appeared in the documentary Mermaids in Paradise released to television and cinemas in 1965 by Ben Cropp[3]

Dolphin training

Worked in pantomime London, England where she trained dolphins for movies. She was spotted by a representative of director, Mike Nichols, where she was to train a dolphin for the feature film The Day of the Dolphin.[citation needed]

Later hired for similar work for the feature film The Blue Lagoon where Troutt played body-double for Brook Shields.[citation needed]

Followed by work as a crew member with Return to the Blue Lagoon and later several other feature films produced in Australia and Asia.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Deep Dive" People Magazine (Australia) by Alan Kershaw 17 November 1965
  2. ^ Australian Skindivers Magazine, December 1965 'Wreck of Catherine Adamston'.
  3. ^ Harding, John, ed. (1971). "Interview with Kathy Troutt". Fathom magazine. 1 (1). Sydney, NSW: Gareth Powell Associates: 30. Retrieved 23 May 2017 – via Blogger.com Fathom#1, Thursday May 5 2016.
  4. ^ Kathy Troutt with dolphin. Cover, Australian Women's Weekly, 19 September 1973