Born in Los
Angeles, Esther Williams grew up swimming in
playground pools and surfing at local beaches. By
age 16, she represented the powerful Los Angeles
Athletic Club swim team and had earned three
national championships in both the breaststroke and
freestyle. She was on the 1940 Olympic team headed
for Tokyo when World War II intervened, canceling
the games – along with her hopes for the gold and
international fame.
Still,
she was attracting attention in other ways. In 1940
newspaper sports reportage, swimmers were frequently
lined up for cheesecake photos, flashing big smiles
and lots of leg. With her stunning good looks and
tall, well-muscled frame, Esther was a standout! It
didn't take long for legendary showman Billy Rose to
notice the photogenic champion. Rose needed a female
lead to star opposite Olympian and screen star
Johnny Weismuller in his San Francisco Aquacade
review. He invited Williams up for an audition and,
so the story goes, Weismuller himself picked her out
of a casting call of 75 hopefuls. Her performing
career had begun.
The
Aquacade was a true spectacle - a Broadway musical
in swimsuits complete with hundreds of swimmers,
divers, singing and special effects. Williams was
featured as Aquabelle #1, performing choreographed
duet swims with Aquadonis #1 (Weismuller).
In a
memo to his publicity department. Rose explained
that, "I want to pivot everything around Williams.
It is up to us to make this girl known up and down
the coast. With the possible exception of Eleanor
HoIm (the 1936 Olympic swimmer who was also Rose's
wife), she's the most beautiful swimming champion in
the history of aquatics."
MGM
executives who saw her in the Aquacade agreed. They
offered Williams a screen test - paired with none
other than Clark Gable. Gable liked her, the studio
liked her, and she was signed to a contract. She
made her film debut opposite Mickey Rooney in Andy
Hardy's Double Life in 1942.
As
Williams explains, "The popular Andy Hardy series
movies were MGM's tests for its promising stars such
as Judy Garland, Lana Turner and Donna Reed. If you
didn’t.*make it in those pictures, you were never
heard from again."
The
audience response to the athletic All-American girl
was phenomenal, and the studio put Williams' career
into high gear. Midway through filming Mr. Coed with
Red Skelton, they changed the name of the movie to
Bathing Beauty and made Esther Williams the star,
demoting Skelton to supporting lead.
Bathing
Beauty was Hollywood's first swimming movie, and it
created a new genre that was perfectly suited to
Esther’s beauty and athletic skills. A special
90-foot square, 20-foot deep pool was built at Stage
30 on the MGM lot, complete with hydraulic lifts,
hidden air hoses and special camera cranes for
overhead shots.
"No one
had ever done a swimming movie before," she
explains, "so we just made it up as we went along. I
ad-libbed all my own underwater movements." Famous
choreographer Busby Berkeley was responsible for the
film's elaborate water scenes - complete with
fountains, flames, smoke and, as Williams herself
admits, lots of pretty girls swimming around with
bows in their hair. It worked. According to
Williams, Bathing Beauty was second only to Gone
with the Wind as the most successful film of 1944.
During
the mid-40s, the MGM musicals were the most popular
form of entertainment in the world. By the tail end
of World War II, Williams was a pinup favorite with
returning Gl’s. Meanwhile, MGM's publicity mill kept
churning out headlines and photo opportunities – she
once counted 14 magazines on a local newsstand
featuring her picture on the cover. Esther Williarns
was America's sweetheart for more than 18 years,
appearing in 26 movies from the early 1940's to the
end of the '5Os, all but the last few for MGM.
Although she had a few dry-land roles in such films
as Take Me Out to the Ball Game, it was the lavish
water spectaculars that made her a top box-office
draw and that became her cinematic trademark. Like
ice skater Sonja Henie before her, Williams was one
of the few female athletes to successfully cross
over to widespread entertainment success. Her movie
career played a major role in the promotion of
competitive and synchronized swimming, which she is
credited with popularizing. As International
Swimming Hall of Fame literature explains, "If
swimming would make his daughter grow up to look
like Esther Williams, then father was willing to pay
for the lessons."
Although movie making was exhausting work - Williams
estimates that she swam more than 1,000 collective
miles while making her movies and was in the water
so many hours each day that she took naps with her
legs on the pool deck and her head floating in the
water - she found time to marry three times (last to
Fernando Lamas) and have three children (Benjamin,
Kimball and Susan) during her second marriage to
radio singer Ben Gage.
I don't
know to this day how I managed to fit into those
bathing suits when I was pregnant," she says, "but I
did." She still refers to each child by the movie
she was making before they were born. "There I was,
diving off platforms with Ben in Neptune's Daughter,
going underwater in silver lame' with Kim in Pagan
Love Song and learning how to water ski with Susie
in Easy to Love...and somehow I stayed a size 10
through it all."
Williams showed that she had a head for enterprise
between those broad swimmer's shoulders. "I got into
business because I knew those musicals couldn't go
on forever. In fact, I was doing some department
store modeling at the time, and I told my bosses to
hold my job. This movie-making thing wouldn't last.
I mean, how many swimming movies could they make?"
When
someone came to her with the idea of putting her
name on a line of backyard swimming pools, she
agreed. Twenty-five years later. "Esther 'Williams
is the most well-known name in the above-ground pool
business today.'' says Jerry Herson of the Delair
Group in new Jersey, the company that actually
manufactures the pools and sells them from
California to Maine. Then came licensing agreements
with fashion swimwear manufacturers that ultimately
led to her own Esther Williams Collection sold in
department stores, targeting older women and based
on the retrospective look of her full-cut movie
swimsuit designs. There's also a line of fitness
swimsuits in the works, "I'm reading my mail
carefully." she says. "Somebody has to give a little
thought to the woman who has nursed a baby and I
want to apply my knowledge of what feels good in the
water for that woman. I think there's a void in the
market right now for that kind of swimsuit."
Her
appearances at openings and benefits usually cause a
sensation. "When I go to business conventions for my
products, it sometimes takes me over four hours to
sign all the autographs and pose for pictures," she
says. "Everyone wants a photo for their store, and I
never turn anyone down, no matter how long it
takes."
'Williams has had a full life, as an athlete, movie
star, mother, businesswoman. Spokesperson and an
inspiration to millions. But the one thing that
binds it all together, the one thing that keeps her
going, is her connection to water and to swimming.
"I think the joy that showed through in my swimming
movies comes from my lifelong love of the water,"
she explains. "No matter what I was doing, the best
I felt all day was when I was swimming."
Then
there's her relationship with her children, all
three of whom she taught to swim soon after birth.
That's part of her philosophy about the magic of
water. "One of the reasons I gave them this gift of
swimming so early in their lives was because I loved
having them with me in the water. And when I saw
them take to it, it was a shared joy that we had in
common.
Asked if she still
swam, she laughed. "You know, I always get asked
that. Of course I still swim. I'll go in later when
I have the pool to myself."
Reprinted in part
from the July / August, 1994 issue of
"Competitor For Women" - article by Harald Johnson