Esther Williams

From New World Encyclopedia

Esther Jane Williams (born August 8, 1922) is a United States competitive [[swimming|swimmer] and 1940s and 1950s movie star. Known as "America's Mermaid," she was famous for her musical films that featured elaborate performances with swimming, diving and "water ballet," which is now known as synchronized swimming.

A teenager when she did her first film she was a three-time national swim champion who qualified for three events in the 1940 Olympics that would end op being canceled because of World War II.

For more than a decade during Hollywood's Golden Age Williams was one of MGM's most bankable leading ladies. Bathing Beauty was Hollywood's first swimming movie, and it created a new genre that would be called aqua musical. It was perfectly suited to William's beauty and athletic skills. The film was second only to Gone with the Wind as the most successful film of 1944.

In 1967 she embarked on a new career with the establishment of Esther Williams In-Ground Pools and later, a line of swimsuits based on her movie costume suits. She was the first American female to make a career as a fitness and beauty expert.

She was honored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1997.

Early years

The youngest of five children, Williams was born in Los Angeles, California and was raised by her sister Maurine during the Great Depression.[1] Her brother Stanton, a child actor, was expected to be the family's chance to get out of poverty, but he died when she was eight years old (he was 16).[1] Next, Williams began swimming at the Los Angeles Athletic Club (LAAC) and quickly became a distinguished competitor and set new swimming records.[2][3]

By the time she was 15, she was well on her way to achieving that goal; within a few years, she had won such events as the Women's Outdoor Nationals and the Pacific Coast Championships, and had set records for the 100- and 220-meter swims. Sorely disappointed when the advent of World War II forced the cancellation of the 1940 Olympics in Finland, Williams cut her losses by going to work for Billy Rose's San Francisco Aquacade. It was here that she was spotted by an MGM talent scout, who cast Williams in a supporting role in Andy Hardy's Double Life (1942). Hoping that their new discovery would surpass the popularity of 20th Century-Fox's skating queen Sonja Henie, MGM began grooming Williams for stardom, completely refashioning her third film, the modest 1944 Red Skelton comedy Mister Bride, into the Technicolor super spectacular Bathing Beauty.[4]

Swimming

By the time Williams was 16, she had won three national championships and was headed for the 1940 Olympics, which were canceled due to World War II.[5] Thus, she left competitive swimming to appear in movies that later lead to her recognition as the “'Godmother’ of synchronized swimming." [6] In 1966, she was inducted into the International Swimming and Diving Hall of Fame for her outstanding swimming.[5]

Acting career

Williams began her acting career when she starred in Aquacade at the San Francisco World Fair,Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag This resulted in her initial rejection of show business, but she was eventually persuaded to sign a major contract with MGM.[1] MGM served as a “finishing school” for Williams, where she studied acting, singing and dancing, as well as how to be more lady-like.[1]

Her film Bathing Beauty, was Hollywood’s first film with swimming as the main selling point and was a huge financial success.[7]

Williams immediately clicked with the public, and for the next decade she starred in one musical comedy after another, warbling the Oscar-winning tune "Baby It's Cold Outside" in Neptune's Daughter (1949) and trading steps with Gene Kelly in Take Me Out to the Ballgame (1949). As her popularity soared—she was among the top ten box office stars in 1949 and 1950—MGM went out of its way to make her swimming sequences more complex and elaborate with each new picture, freshening up the act with trapezes, hang-gliders and fiery hoops.

As her films became more popular, her stunts became more dangerous. Williams did her own stunts and suffered serious injuries, including a near drowning, broken eardrums and, worst of all, a broken back. A majority of her injuries were a result of the innovative stunts she was performing and the inexperience the film crew and directors had in making an aquatic musical. During the filming of her most famous film Million Dollar Mermaid, she broke three vertebrae and was left in a full body cast for six months. Despite the excitement about her films, they became predictable as she continually played the same happy, beautiful, innocent woman.[8] Though she won a Golden Globe in 1953 for Million Dollar Mermaid, Williams’ acting skills were limited[9] and she was unsuccessful outside of synchronized swimming. She eventually left MGM and gave up almost three million dollars in deferred income (because she did not fulfill her contract).[1]

Her string of successes came to a halt with her last MGM release, the unsuccessful Jupiter's Darling (1955). Now a free-lancer, Williams tried to gain acceptance as a dramatic actress, turning in worthwhile performances in such films as The Unguarded Moment (1956) and Raw Wind in Eden (1958), but the public wasn't buying.

She returned to what she did best, starring in annual TV aquacades and acting as spokeswoman for her own swimming-pool company. She closed out her film career in 1961, shunning the spotlight for the next 15 years and devoting her time to her third husband Fernando Lamas, her children (including stepson Lorenzo Lamas) and her many business activities. She made headlines in 1974 when she sued MGM for unauthorized use of her films in the 1974 anthology That's Entertainment (evidently she came to terms with her old studio; in 1994, she was one of the narrators for That's Entertainment Part III). After Fernando Lamas' death in 1982, Williams returned to the limelight, promoting such money-spinning enterprises as a line of "modest" swimwear.[2]

Personal life

Williams was married four times and had three children with her second husband, Ben Gage – Benjamin, Kimball and Susan. Her first marriage to Leonard Kovner (1940-44) ended in divorce because he did not want her in show business, nor did he want to have any children.[10] Her second marriage to Ben Gage (1945-59) suffered due to his drinking, partying, gambling and bad investments. She was left broke and owed the IRS $750,000 in back taxes that were unknown to her until they divorced.[11] During her marriage to Gage, Williams went through several periods of depression and had affairs with other men. Her third marriage to Fernando Lamas (1969-82) wasn’t much better. He was vain, egotistical, possessive, jealous and controlling. She was forced to give up her life as she knew it, as he became her primary concern. Until Lamas' death, Williams was forced to race back and forth between her and Gage's home to see her children every day. Her children were not welcome in Lamas' home because they were proof of her having been with another man.[12]

Legacy

Williams retired from acting in the early 1960s and now lives with her forth and current husband, Edward Bell (married in 1994) in California. She lends her name to a brand of swimming pools and a line of classic women's swimwear based on the full-cut swimsuit designs from her films.[13] She still swims everyday and focuses most of her time on family life.

Today Williams is putting the finishing touches to Aquaria, a $US30 million ($40 million) "very beautiful, very expensive" water show due to open in Las Vegas next year. It will, says Williams, "knock everyone's eyes out". As co-producer, Williams promises that the costumes she is helping to design will be "nearly nude" and "will change bathing suit styles forever".[14]

Filmography

  • Personalities (1942) (uncredited | short subject)
  • Inflation (1942) (short subject)
  • Andy Hardy's Double Life (1942)
  • A Guy Named Joe (1943)
  • Bathing Beauty (1944)
  • Thrill of a Romance (1945)
  • Ziegfeld Follies (1946)
  • The Hoodlum Saint (1946)
  • Easy to Wed (1946)
  • Till the Clouds Roll By (1946) (cameo | uncredited)
  • Fiesta (1947)
  • This Time for Keeps (1947)
  • On an Island with You (1948)
  • Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949)
  • Neptune's Daughter (1949)
  • Screen Actors (1950) (short subject)
  • Duchess of Idaho (1950)
  • Pagan Love Song (1950)
  • Texas Carnival (1951)
  • Callaway Went Thataway (1951) (cameo)
  • Skirts Ahoy! (1952)
  • Million Dollar Mermaid (1952)
  • Dangerous When Wet (1953)
  • Easy to Love (1953)
  • 1955 Motion Picture Theatre Celebration (1955) (short subject)
  • Jupiter's Darling (1955)
  • Screen Snapshots: Hollywood, City of Stars (1956) (short subject)
  • The Unguarded Moment (1956)
  • The Armed Venus "Lux Video Theatre" (1 television episode, 1957)
  • Raw Wind in Eden (1958)
  • The Black Wagon "Zane Grey Theater" (1 television episode, 1960)
  • The Big Show (1961)
  • The Magic Fountain (1963)
  • "Querida Concha" (1 television episode, 1993)
  • That's Entertainment! III (1994) (narrator)

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Williams, Esther and Digby Diehl, The Million Dollar Mermaid: An Autobiography (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999), 20.
  2. Esther Williams Lovegoddess.info. Retrieved January 20, 2009.
  3. Biography for Esther Williams Imbd.com. Retrieved January 20, 2009.
  4. Biography Allmovie.com. Retrieved January 20, 2009.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Sherrow, Victoria, Encyclopedia of Women and Sports (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 1996), p. 332.
  6. "Esther Williams," Biography 7, No. 11 (2003), 31.
  7. ESTHER WILLIAMS, 3.
  8. Ibid., 4
  9. Esther Williams (I). [1] (Retrieved May 23, 2007),1-2.
  10. Ibid., 64-68.
  11. Ibid., 11
  12. Rompalske, Dorothy. "Hollywood Mermaid Esther Williams," Biography 4, No. 7(2000), 76-77.
  13. The Official Esther Williams Website. "A Short Bio on Esther Williams" http://www.esther-williams.com/bio.htm (Retrieved May 22, 2007), 2.
  14. Beauty who swam in the big pool Smh.com.au. Retrieved November 14, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Sherrow, Victoria. Encyclopedia of Women and Sports. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 1996. ISBN 9780874368260.
  • Young, Nancy K. and William H. Young. The 1950s: American Popular Culture Through History. Westport : Conn Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004. ISBN 9780313323935
  • Williams, Esther, and Digby Diehl. 1999. The Million Dollar Mermaid. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0684852845

External links

All links retrieved January 20, 2009.


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