Banana George
Not many can learn to water ski at the age of 40 and expect to end up in
the Hall of Fame. George
Alfred Blair did, and most of the journey was completed on his bare
feet.
Blair was a successful New Jersey businessman in 1955 when he
experienced his first exposure to water skiing.
He had gone to Florida to recuperate from a fusion operation on
his back and he had watched the action on at a nearby ski school in Fort
Lauderdale.
The instructor, Lyle Lee, encouraged the visitor to try the sport but
Blair protested that he was in a back brace and was fearful of
re-injury. "I've seen you
get out of your chair and I've seen you walk," Blair said Lee told him
"If you can walk, you can ski."
Using a training boom on the towboat, Blair got up on skis, back brace
and all, and his life hasn't been the same since.
"For 13 years I had been in excruciating pain," Blair recalls.
"I could do nothing without pain, and now suddenly I was
water-skiing. It changed my
whole life."
His excitement was shared by his wife and four daughters, all learning
to ski before returning to New Jersey and sharing their new sport with
their friends.
Soon the Blair's opened tow ski schools, one in Red Bank and the other
outside Edison, near New York City.
They operated the schools successfully for over 20 years.
The family also put on ski shows regularly and competed in
three-event tournaments and ski racing marathons, but George's real
romance with the sport began when he learned to ski on his bare feet at
the age of 46.
His barefoot acts soon became the star attraction of the ski shows in
which he also flew the flat kite, performed on a three-foot stool atop a
disk and skied on hydrofoils.
Blair's costumes were his favorite color yellow, and as he skied off the
course at the end of the show, he ate a banana, which he concealed in
his costume. A fan painted a banana and the words "Banana George" on a
shirt for him and thus began a trademark that would become known to
water ski observers throughout the world
Blair's expertise as a barefooter was demonstrated eventually on all
seven continents, the final one Antarctica where he barefooted on
Whaler's Bay in 1986, a feat that earned him a place in the Guinness
Book of Records and enabled him to become water skiing's premier
international ambassador.
His skill has been demonstrated in hundreds of shows at Florida's
Cypress Gardens. He has
accompanied Cypress Gardens skiers to many countries and has visited
others on his own. In all,
Blair figures he has put on exhibitions in 45 countries, including a
visit to the Soviet Union in 1988, a year after recuperating from a back
fracture sustained while practicing barefoot jumping.
This goodwill tour to Yalta, Leningrad and Moscow helped to open
the door to a closer relationship between skiers in Europe's eastern
Bloc and those in the rest of the world.
Blair has championed the cause of water skiing through his membership
and generous support of the American Water Ski Educational Foundation,
the American Water Ski Association and the American Barefoot Club.
His peers in ABC elected him Man of the Year in 1982, 1986 and
1988.
He has won his share of tournament titles in barefoot competition,
especially in jumping. He
held the national jumping record for the Veterans Division at 34 feet.
Born January 22, 1915 in Toledo, Ohio, Blair has not permitted his
preoccupation with water skiing to prevent him from maintaining an
active interest in a number of successful businesses, including banking,
real estate, photography and the entertainment industry.
He also has become something of an advertising figure with his
barefooting. At the time of his induction in the Hall of Fame, a
full-color General Mills ad showing "Banana George" in action had just
appeared in magazines with a total readership of over 124,000,000.
The ad featured a caption "Kids like this eat cheerios."
And they also enjoy barefooting -- at age 76.
