File - Richard Rothrock
Transcription
File - Richard Rothrock
A DIVING INTO HISTORY: CELEBRITIES & SCANDAL AT THE TOLEDO CLUB POOL 10 FEBRUARY 2012 s you step out of the locker room, you feel the cool of the tile against your bare feet. There seems a slight chill in the air. The thump thump of a jogger on the running track is heard overhead. But ahead lies the pool, its blue-green surface inviting you forward. Some mornings a slight whiff of steam rises into the air. You dip your toe in the water and the temperature is warm, warmer than you thought it would be. Not like swimming in the bracing chill of the Maumee River or whatever summer camp lake your parents exiled you to in your youth. The water feels more like cool bath water: inviting you in. So you slide yourself in; or jump. The water envelops you and you swiftly feel at home. You surface and look around. The water feels warm and welcoming. The pool has 5 lanes. You start to swim; backstroke or crawl or whatever stroke you find most comfortable. It’s 25 yards long; up and back 36 times equals a mile. And as you swim, your thoughts might begin to wander. One can visit The Toledo Club many times over and never venture into its home in the athletic wing, but during its first 10 years of operation, The Toledo Club pool was the center of the club’s social world. Some of the world’s best divers and swimmers, national and Olympic champions, celebrities and movie stars have all tested the waters in which you glide. Some are famous, some infamous. But they all are an illustrious part of the history of our Club. The Toledo Club pool opened in 1926, as part of the athletic wing expansion. While many jokes have been made that the first leak was reported in 1927, it quickly developed a reputation for being a “fast” pool. Getting a swimmer to define what makes a pool fast turns out to be as difficult as swimming the English Channel, but a fast pool seems best defined as one that makes a swimmer feel fast. Temperature plays a factor, as cooler water feels less thick. Lane lines are also important, as the proper ones cut down on the wave action of the pool. However it gets defined, The Toledo Club pool was the “it” pool in Northwest Ohio. On March 1, 1927, the first national aquatic event ever staged in Toledo took place at the Club: the University of Michigan vs. the Detroit Yacht Club. In what would become a trend, tickets cost $1 and that included dinner and dancing in the Main Dining Room. A year later, the Club hosted its first Olympians as four U.S. women’s champions graced the pool and demonstrated their prowess: 14 yearold Eleanor Holm, the world individual medley champion; “America’s Diving Queen” Helen Meany; Agnes Geraghty, world breaststroke champion, and Martha Norelius, billed as the fastest woman swimmer ever. Hosting Olympic champions soon became a common event at the Club. Exhibitions normally ran about two hours and were always followed by the obligatory dinner and dance in the Main Dining Room where the swimmers mingled with the members. Tickets continued to be $1 throughout the 1930s. In 1931, champions Helene Madison and Georgia Coleman showed off their talents with Ms. Madison attempting to break the 200-yard freestyle record. This was not beyond the realm of possibility as she set 16 world records in 1930-31. “Queen Helene,” as she was known in the press, went on to win 3 gold medals in the 1932 Los Angeles Summer Olympics. Often the exhibitions featured supporting appearances from some of the Club’s junior members. A 1934 exhibition by Olympic diver Katherine Rawls also featured two 4 year-old tots displaying their swimming abilities. Another 1934 exhibition headlined by diving champ Dick Degner (“The Fred Astaire of diving” and inventor of the full layout) also featured the Detroit Athletic Club’s 13-year-old girls champ Halina Tomski taking on her Toledo Club rivals. Besides celebrity and Olympic demonstrations, our pool regularly hosted Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) and National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competitions. continued on page 12 FEBRUARY 2012 11 12 continued from page 11 The 1935 Women’s City Swimming Championship was held here though entry forms indicated that the Club reserved “the right to reject any entry.” Tickets were to be sold to “Toledo Club members, parents and friends of the contestants only.” A vibrant Toledo Club Junior Boys swim team often competed against their counterparts at the Detroit Athletic Club. Of all the illustrious people to jump into our pool, three individuals stand out: JOHNNY WEISMULLER is remembered today as the most popular movie Tarzan ever. Debuting in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s Tarzan the Ape Man (1932,) he introduced the famous Tarzan yell, which he credited to his training in yodeling. Prior to putting on the loincloth, his swimming record more than justified his appearance at the Club. In a decade of swimming, he never lost a race on FEBRUARY 2012 his way to winning 52 U.S. championships and 5 Olympic gold medals. Weissmuller appeared at The Toledo Club on June 19, 1931, courtesy of the Lasalle & Koch department store as part of a national tour promoting BVD swimwear. ELEANOR HOLM – Probably BUSTER CRABBE – Following Eleanor had first leaped into the club pool in 1928, when she was a teenager. When she returned in 1936, she was a 22 year-old celebrity who had already won gold in the backstroke event at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics. Screen tests with major studios followed and that same year she was named a future star, along with Ginger Rogers and Gloria Stuart. in Weismuller’s wake, Hawaii-raised Buster Crabbe amassed similar swimming credentials (an NCAA title and Olympic gold medal.) In 1932, he appeared at the Club as part of the Los Angeles Athletic Club Men’s team, along with national long distance swimmer Tom Blankenburg and the Hawaiian sprint swimmers Miola and Manuella Kalili. In the late 1930s, he also starred as Tarzan in several movies before branching off to play Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers in Universal Studios’ classic Saturday morning serials. the most infamous swimmer ever to break the surface of our pool was Eleanor Holm, who spent a decade reigning as America’s premier female aquatic star before an Olympic scandal derailed her athletic career. And yet, Eleanor already showed a mischievous streak that drew the ire of U.S. Olympic officials who often viewed her behavior as unbecoming for a lady and amateur athlete. In 1933, she married Art Jarrett, the bandleader at Los Angeles’s Cocoanut Grove nightclub, where Eleanor enjoyed singing with the band. Wearing just her white bathing suit, high heels and a white cowboy hat, she’d croon Johnny Mercer’s “I’m An Old Cowhand From the Rio Grande,“ not the demur feminine image expected to be cultivated by a U.S. Olympic athlete. Still, she remained the world backstroke champion and was expected to win again at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. On March 27, 1936, she joined high diver Elbert Root in a Toledo Club demonstration in which she attempted to set a world record in the pool, followed by the usual dinner and dance. No word on whether she took a turn at the microphone. That July, Eleanor sailed to Europe with the U.S. Olympic team. While crossing the Atlantic, chaperones spotted her sipping champagne at a cocktail party. When reminded that it was past curfew, Eleanor retorted, “Did you make the Olympic team or did I?” Accounts vary as to what happened next. Some claim champagne was tossed in various faces. Others claim the chaperones were drunker than Ms. Holm. Either way, U.S. Olympic head Avery Brundage took a dim view of her attitude. He accused her of “extreme alcoholism” and kicked her off the team. Her teammates lobbied on her behalf, but the officials held firm. Eleanor was a spectator in Berlin. Her transgression pales in comparison to today’s athletes but her misbehavior made national headlines. The negative publicity only made her more famous In 1938, she played a Jane figure in the movie Tarzan’s Revenge. The next year she divorced Jarrett and headlined Broadway producer Billy Rose’s Aquacade water show at the 1939 New York World’s Fair, receiving top billing above Johnny Weissmuller, Esther Williams, and Buster Crabbe. Soon afterwards, Rose divorced his wife, Funny Girl Fanny Brice, and married Eleanor instead. They divorced too, in the 1950s. Eleanor was married for a third time to an oil tycoon. She always maintained that her Olympic disqualification resulted mainly from her turning down an unwanted proposition from Mr. Brundage, rather than excessive drinking. When Holm and Crabbe and Weismuller starred together in the Aquacade, did they ever reminisce about their times at The Toledo Club? Of the glories of Northwest Ohio’s fast pool? Of dinner and dancing? Of champagne and cocktails? Or the clink of glasses and crystalline laughter? Time does not record these facts, but I’d like to think they did between stories of movies and music and swimming. So the next time you take a dip in our pool and feel the desire to either dive like Fred Astaire, belt out a Tarzan yell, save the planet from Ming the Merciless, or toss champagne in someone’s face, you are merely following in the path of past celebrity guests at The Toledo Club pool. Everybody in the water! R The author gratefully acknowledges Nathalie Helm’s assistance with the club archives. FEBRUARY 2012 13