Johnny Weissmuller

From New World Encyclopedia

Johnny Weissmuller (June 2, 1904 – January 20, 1984) was one of the world's best swimmers in the 1920s, winning five Olympic gold medals and one bronze medal. He won fifty-two US National Championships and set sixty-seven world records. After his swimming career, he became the sixth actor to portray Tarzan in films, a role he played in twelve motion pictures. Other actors also played Tarzan, but Weissmuller was the best-known. His distinctive, ululating Tarzan yell is still often used in films.

Early life

He was registered as János Weissmüller when he was born in Freidorf near Temeschburg, Banat, at the time part of Austria-Hungary (today a suburb of Timişoara, Romania), the son of German-speaking parents of jewish and roman catholic backround, Petrus Weißmüller and Elisabeth Kersch, according to his Hungarian birth and (Roman Catholic) baptismal records. In fact, he was named Johann by his parents, but all legal records at the time used the Hungarian forms of personal names.

When Johnny was seven months old, the family emigrated to the United States aboard the S.S. Rotterdam. They left Rotterdam on January 14, 1905, and arrived in New York twelve days later, with their names recorded in English as Peter, Elizabeth and Johann Weissmuller. Peter had been born 1876-12-31.

After a brief stay in Chicago, Illinois, visiting relatives, they moved to the coal mining town of Windber, Pennsylvania in the Pittsburgh region. Peter Weissmuller worked as a miner, and his youngest son, Peter Weissmuller, Jr., was born in Windber on September 3, 1905. Peter Jr is listed on one census as born in Illinois.

After several years in Western Pennsylvania, they moved to Chicago. Johnny's father owned a bar for a time and his mother became head cook at a famed restaurant. His father worked as a brewer for the United States brewery in Chicago. His parents were later divorced, as is shown by the divorce document filed in Chicago by Elizabeth Weissmuller, although a lot of sources state incorrectly that Weismuller's father died of tuberculosis contracted from working in coal mines and left her a widow. Peter actually lived to old age and had sired another large family. By 1930 he had married his second wife, Anna, with whom he had a son named Edward and a daughter Ruth, and a grandson named Peter. Elizabeth Weissmuller appears with her sons on the Cook County census claiming to be a widow.

From an early age, Johnny and his brother were aggressive swimmers. The beaches of Lake Michigan became their favorite summer recreation place. He then joined the Stanton Park pool, where he won all the junior swim meets. At the age of twelve he earned a spot on the YMCA swim team.

Swimming career

Olympic medal record
Competitor for Flag of United States United States
Men’s swimming
Gold 1924 Paris 100 m freestyle
Gold 1924 Paris 400 m freestyle
Gold 1924 Paris 4x200 m freestyle relay
Gold 1928 Amsterdam 100 m freestyle
Gold 1928 Amsterdam 4x200 m freestyle relay
Men’s water polo
Bronze 1924 Paris Team

When Weissmuller left school, he worked as a bellhop and elevator operator at the Plaza Hotel in Chicago and trained for the Olympics with swim coach William Bachrach at the Illinois Athletic Club, where he developed his revolutionary high-riding front crawl. He made his amateur debut on August 6, 1921, winning his first AAU race in the 50-yard freestyle.

Though he was foreign-born, Weissmuller gave his birthplace as Windber, Pennsylvania, and his birth date as that of his younger brother, Peter Weissmuller. This was to ensure his eligibility to compete as part of the United States Olympic team, and was a critical issue in being issued an American passport.

On July 9, 1922, Weissmuller broke Duke Kahanamoku's world record on the 100-meters freestyle, swimming it in 58.6 seconds. He won the title in that distance at the 1924 Summer Olympics, beating Kahanamoku on February 24, 1924. He also won the 400-meters freestyle and the 4 x 200 meters relay. As a member of the American water polo team, he also won a bronze medal. Four years later, at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, he won another two Olympic titles.

In all, he won five Olympic gold medals, one bronze medal, won fifty-two U.S. National Championships and set sixty-seven world records. Johnny Weissmuller never lost a race and retired from his amateur swimming career undefeated.

Motion picture career

In 1929, Weissmuller signed a contract with BVD to be a model and representative. He traveled throughout the country doing swim shows, handing out leaflets promoting that brand of swimwear, giving his autograph and going on talk shows. In that same year, he made his first motion picture appearance as an Adonis wearing only a figleaf in a movie titled Glorifying the American Girl and he appeared as himself in the first of several Crystal Champions, a movie short featuring Weissmuller and other Olympic champions at Silver Springs, Florida.

His career really began when he signed a seven year contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and played the role of Tarzan in Tarzan the Ape Man (1932). The movie was a huge success and the 6'3" Weissmuller became an overnight international sensation. Even the author, Edgar Rice Burroughs, who created the character of Tarzan in his books, was pleased.

Weissmuller starred in six Tarzan movies for MGM with actress Maureen O'Sullivan as Jane. The last three also included Johnny Sheffield as Boy. Then, in 1942, Weissmuller went to RKO and starred in six more Tarzan movies. Sheffield appeared as Boy in the first five features for that studio. Another co-star was blonde actress Brenda Joyce, who played Jane in Weissmuller's last four Tarzan movies. In a total of twelve Tarzan movies, Weissmuller earned an estimated $2,000,000 and established himself as the best-known of all the actors who have ever portrayed Tarzan. Although not the first Tarzan in movies (that honour went to Elmo Lincoln), he was the first to be associated with the now traditional ululating, yodeling Tarzan yell. (During an appearance on television's Mike Douglas Show in the 1970's, Weissmuller explained how the famous yell was created. Recordings of three vocalists were spliced together to get the effect—a soprano, an alto, and a hog caller!)

When he finally left that role, he immediately traded his loincloth costume for jungle fatigues and appeared fully clothed in the role of Jungle Jim (1948) for Columbia. He made thirteen Jungle Jim movies between (1948) and (1954). Within the next year, he appeared in three more jungle movies playing himself.

In 1955, he began production of the Jungle Jim television adventure series for Screen Gems, a film subsidiary of Columbia. The show ran for twenty-six episodes, which played over and over on network and syndicated TV for many years.

Weissmuller had five wives: band and club singer Bobbe Arnst (married 1931-divorced 1933); actress Lupe Vélez (married 1933-divorced 1939); Beryl Scott (married 1939-divorced 1948); Allene Gates (married 1948-divorced 1962); and Maria Bauman (married 1963-his death 1984).

According to a movie site on the Internet, he also married and divorced Camilla Louiee, but that claim has been challenged. Weissmuller reportedly said that Louiee ran off and married another man instead of him.[citation needed]

With his third wife, Beryl, he had three children, Johnny Scott Weissmuller (or Johnny Weissmuller, Jr., also an actor) (born September 23, 1940, died July 27, 2006), Wendy Anne Weissmuller (born June 1, 1942) and Heidi Elizabeth Weissmuller (July 31, 1944-November 19, 1962).

Later life

In the late 1950s, Weissmuller moved back to Chicago and started a swimming pool company. He also lent his name to other business ventures, but did not have a great deal of success. He retired in 1965 and moved to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where he was Founding Chairman of the International Swimming Hall of Fame. In 1970, he attended the British Commonwealth Games in Jamaica where he was presented to Queen Elizabeth. He also made a cameo appearance with former co-star Maureen O'Sullivan in The Phynx (1970).

Weissmuller lived in Florida until the end of 1973, then moved to Las Vegas, Nevada, where he was a greeter at the MGM Grand Hotel for a time. In 1974, he broke a hip and leg. While hospitalized he learned that, in spite of his strength and lifelong daily regimen of swimming and exercise, he had a serious heart condition.

In 1976, he appeared for the last time in a motion picture playing a movie crewman who is fired by a movie mogul, played by Art Carney, in Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood, and he also made his final public appearance in that year when he was inducted into the Body Building Guild Hall of Fame.

Weissmuller suffered a series of strokes in 1977. For a time in 1979, he was a patient in the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, California. Later he and his last wife, Maria, moved to Acapulco, Mexico, which was the location of his last Tarzan movie.

Johnny Weissmuller died on January 20, 1984 of a pulmonary edema at his retirement home in Acapulco. He is buried in the Valley of The Light Cemetery there.

His former co-star and movie son, Johnny Sheffield, said of him, "I can only say that working with Big John was one of the highlights of my life. He was a Star (with a capital "S") and he gave off a special light and some of that light got into me. Knowing and being with Johnny Weissmuller during my formative years had a lasting influence on my life."

Johnny Weissmuller has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6541 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood.

Filmography

  • Glorifying the American Girl (1929) (Paramount) ... Adonis
  • Crystal Champions (1929) (Paramount) ... Himself
  • Tarzan the Ape Man (1932) (MGM) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan and His Mate (1934) (MGM) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan Escapes (1936) (MGM) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan Finds a Son! (1939) (MGM) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan's Secret Treasure (1941) (MGM) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan's New York Adventure (1942) (MGM) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan Triumphs (1943) (RKO Pathé) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan's Desert Mystery (1943) (RKO Pathé) ... Tarzan
  • Stage Door Canteen (1943) (United Artists) ... Himself
  • Tarzan and the Amazons (1945) (RKO Pathé) ... Tarzan
  • Swamp Fire (1946) (Paramount) ... Johnny Duval
  • Tarzan and the Leopard Woman (1946) (RKO Pathé) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan and the Huntress (1947) (RKO Pathé) ... Tarzan
  • Tarzan and the Mermaids (1948) (RKO Pathé) ... Tarzan
  • Jungle Jim (1948) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • The Lost Tribe (1949) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Mark of the Gorilla (1950) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Captive Girl (1950) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Pypmy Island (1950) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Fury of the Congo (1951) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Jungle Manhunt (1951) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land (1952) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Voodoo Tiger (1952) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Savage Mutiny (1953) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Valley of Head Hunters (1953) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Killer Ape (1953) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Jungle Man-Eaters (1954) (Columbia) ... Jungle Jim
  • Cannibal Attack (1954) (Columbia) ... Himself
  • Jungle Moon Men (1955) (Columbia) ... Himself
  • Devil Goddess (1955) (Columbia) ... Himself
  • The Phynx (1970) (Warner Bros.) ... Cameo
  • Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood (1976) (Paramount) ... Crewman

Misc

  • Johnny was featured on the cover of The Beatles Album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
  • Johnny's name was used on an episode of Family Guy entitled "He's Too Sexy For His Fat" (season 2, episode 17) when Stewie was reluctant to go swimming and became immediately confident once he hit the water. He said "...I feel like a young Johnny Weissmuller"
  • Chuck Wissmiller, of the television series Family Plots, is the nephew of Johnny Weissmuller.

Literature

  • Johnny Weismuller Jr., Tarzan My Father, Toronto: ECW Press 2002

Media

(audio)
Weissmuller's famous "Tarzan yell" (file info)
audio sequence extracted from one of Weissmuller's Tarzan movies
Problems listening to the files? See media help.


External links


Preceded by:
Frank Merrill
Actors to portray Tarzan
1932-1948
Succeeded by:
Buster Crabbe

Credits

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