Willa Worthington McGuire Cook |
1982 Hall of Fame Inductee |
|
Water
skiing was ready for Willa Worthington.
When
she came East from her home in Lake Oswego, Ore., in 1946 to enter her
first National Water Ski Championships at Holland, Mich., the organized
sport was just emerging into true national status. She won the
slalom, tricks and overall titles to launch a tournament career that was
equaled only by her years as water skiing's most talented show skier.
Willa
began water skiing in 1942 at the insistence of her father Wally who was
operating a marina in Lake Oswego. She was 14 at the time, and her
interest in athletics was confined to her training to become an AAU diver.
However, she was spending some time on the water riding an aquaplane, and
when her father insisted she try a pair of water skis, she was hooked.
Her first time around the lake convinced her that this was "the
greatest of all sports."
Three
years later, Don Ibsen, one of water skiing's pioneers, brought a
traveling ski show to Lake Oswego, and when he saw Willa' s natural
ability, he invited her to perform a hula act with his troupe and
convinced her that she should aim for the national championships.
Ibsen
proved to be a good judge of talent. Until her retirement from
active competition in 1955, Willa won the overall crown in eight of the
nine Nationals she entered. She picked up 18 national event titles
and never lost in tricks at the Nationals. She scored a rare
"clean sweep" of all three events in the 1949 and 1951
Championships.
She
represented the U.S. at four world tournaments - - in 1949 at Juan Les
Pins, France; 1950 at Cypress Gardens; 1953 at Toronto, Canada, and 1955
at Beirut, Lebanon. She won the overall title three times and scored five
world event victories in the process.
Willa
describes as her "proudest moment" in the sport her carrying the
American flag in the victory parade of nations at Beirut as the band
played "The Star Spangled Banner."
Willa's
show career began in earnest in 1947, when she organized the lake Oswego
Water Ski Club and encouraged the members to form a traveling ski show
that played at festivals. A ballet routine she developed became the
most popular act in the show.
Word
of her talent spread, and in 1948 Dick Pope invited her to join the
Cypress Gardens Show to perform as prima ballerina and teach his aquamaids.
She continued as the show's star attraction for 10 years, all the while
designing costumes, choreographing routines, directing films, performing
in numerous motion picture and TV Productions, and teaching water skiing
to many young hopefuls who later became champion tournament skiers as well
as show stars. She was the first to employ a musical background for
show skiing.
Among
her many other show innovations were the back swan, the backward jump
(which they said at the time couldn't be done), the toe 360 and the swivel
swan. Willa used the swivel swan in her winning tricks routine at
the 1950 world tournament, but it was later outlawed as a "gadget not
readily available to all." However, her swivel ski became the
standard for water ski shows ever since.
Innovations
in tricks came naturally for Willa. "My theory is if you can
feel it, Ski it," she once commented, adding "I do a lot of
analyzing and dry-run skiing in my mind and then I transpose it to the
practice session." That's the way she taught her skiing pupils,
and it serves as a successful formula for trick skiers to this day.
As
it has done for so many others, water skiing opened a whole new world for
Willa. "I was just a country girl," she says.
"I knew pigs and chickens and horses, and I knew water, but little
did I dream where water skiing would take me."
She
and her husband, Bob Cook, are determined to give something back to the
sport. Most moments they can spare are spent in working for the
American Water Ski Educational Foundation. He is a member of the
foundation's Board of Trustees, and she heads the Museum Committee,
employing her talent as an artist and designer in the development of the
Water Ski Museum/hall of Fame in Winter Haven.
"What we have to give is only what we have experienced," she says. Her gift to water skiing has been full measure. |
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