Esther Williams (born August 8, 1921, Inglewood, California, U.S.—died June 6, 2013, Beverly Hills, California) was an American swimming champion who became one of the most popular and profitable Hollywood movie stars of the 1940s and ’50s.
Williams was a teenaged swimming champion who set a record for the 100-metre breaststroke in 1939 and won national titles in Seattle, Washington, and Miami, Florida. She won a spot on the 1940 U.S. Olympic team, but the games, which were scheduled to be held in Helsinki, Finland, were cancelled because of the outbreak of World War II. Williams then worked briefly as a model before turning professional swimmer in 1940 when she starred with Johnny Weissmuller in Billy Rose’s San Francisco Aquacade. While performing in the Aquacade, she was spotted by a Hollywood talent scout, which led to a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. MGM patterned Williams’s career after that of the former Olympic figure skater-turned-Hollywood sensation Sonja Henie, promoting Williams as “Hollywood’s Mermaid” and “Queen of the Surf.”
Like many pretty young actresses at MGM, Williams was introduced to movie audiences in the popular Andy Hardy series, appearing in Andy Hardy’s Double Life in 1942. In 1944 she starred in Bathing Beauty, the first in a series of swimming musicals created especially for Williams. These bubbly Technicolor extravaganzas replaced the usual musical dance numbers with elaborately choreographed swimming, diving, and waterskiing displays and underwater ballet sequences, performed by Williams along with a bevy of other bathing beauties. The films—with such titles as On an Island with You (1948), Neptune’s Daughter (1949), Million Dollar Mermaid (1952), and Dangerous When Wet (1953; costarring Fernando Lamas, to whom Williams was married from 1969 until his death in 1982)—featured flimsy formulaic plots but were nevertheless entertaining and proved lucrative at the box office. In addition to movies, Williams starred in the popular television specials The Esther Williams Aqua Spectacle (1956) and Esther Williams at Cypress Gardens (1960).
Williams considered herself a swimmer rather than an actress, and her few attempts at straight dramatic roles were unremarkable. She retired from movies in the 1960s but continued to lend her name to a variety of swim-related products, including a line of swimming pools, and was an ardent supporter of the sport of synchronized swimming, which her films had helped popularize. Williams was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1966.