Swimming Pretty: The Untold Story of Women in Water
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
A groundbreaking history of how women found synchronicity—and power—in water.
“If you’re not strong enough to swim fast, you’re probably not strong enough to swim ‘pretty,’” said a young Esther Williams to theater impresario Billy Rose. Since the nineteenth century, tensions between beauty and strength, aesthetics and athleticism have both impeded and propelled the careers of female swimmers—none more so than synchronized swimmers, for whom Williams is often considered godmother.
In this revelatory history, Vicki Valosik traces a century of aquatic performance, from vaudeville to the Olympic arena, and brings to life the colorful cast of characters whose “pretty swimming” not only laid the groundwork for an altogether new sport but forever changed women’s relationships with water. Williams, who became a Hollywood sensation for her splashy “aquamusicals,” was just one in a long, bedazzled line of swimmers who began their careers as athletes but found greater opportunity, and often social acceptance, in the world of show business.
Early starlets like Lurline the Water Queen performed “scientific” swimming, a set of moves previously only practiced by men—including Benjamin Franklin—that focused on form and exhibited mastery in the water. Demonstrating their fancy feats in aquariums and water tanks rolled onto music hall stages, these women stunned Victorian audiences with their physical dexterity and defied society’s rigid expectations of what was proper and possible for their sex.
Far more than bathing beauties, they ushered in sensible swimwear and influenced lifesaving and physical education programs, helping to drop national drowning rates and paving the way for new generations of female athletes. When a Chicago physical educator matched their aquatic movements to music in the 1920s, young girls flocked to take part in “synchronized swimming.” But despite overwhelming love from audiences and the Olympic ambitions of its practitioners, “synchro” was long perceived as little more than entertaining pageantry, and its athletes would face a battle against the current to earn a spot at the highest echelons of sport.
Now, on the fortieth anniversary of synchronized swimming’s elevation to Olympic status, Swimming Pretty honors its incredible history of grit, glamor, and sheer athleticism.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Women swimmers have navigated tensions between athletics and performance, sport and spectacle, for generations," according to this comprehensive debut history. Valosik, a synchronized swimmer and Georgetown University writing instructor, traces how women's involvement in aquatic activities has evolved alongside societal attitudes since the 18th century, when norms around female modesty required that women wear long, bulky swimming gowns that "made even the simple acts of moving or floating in the water impossible." Increased demand for entertainment at the end of the 19th century presented an opening for some women to become "ornamental swimmers" who performed in glass tanks for paying audiences. This combination of art and exercise eventually transformed into synchronized swimming, whose evolution Valosik charts from its origins in water pageants developed by the Red Cross to promote swimming skills to the sport's debut at the 1984 Olympic games. Profiles of notable swimmers highlight how women's sports intersected with larger societal currents, as when Valosik suggests that 19-year-old Gertrude Ederle's 1926 swim across the English Channel, during which she beat the fastest man's record by over two hours, helped make the figure of the female swimmer a symbol of women's burgeoning political freedom. An incisive marriage of sports and cultural history, this is well worth diving into. Photos.