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Bev Francis: The Female Bodybuilding Disrupter

Bev Francis: The Female Bodybuilding Disrupter

[html]Bev Francis was introduced to the bodybuilding world in 1985, featured in the movie Pumping Iron II: The Women. Bev was a successful and celebrated athlete, a champion powerlifter, and a national shot-put champion. She also had more muscle and was stronger than the other female bodybuilders of the period. But to understand why she […]
                              

Bev Francis was introduced to the bodybuilding world in 1985, featured in the movie Pumping Iron II: The Women. Bev was a successful and celebrated athlete, a champion powerlifter, and a national shot-put champion. She also had more muscle and was stronger than the other female bodybuilders of the period. But to understand why she was such a disruption in the sport, you have to look at the history of bodybuilding for women up to that point.


Female bodybuilder Bev Francis posing while sitting down on a column
When Bev Francis first appeared on the scene in PUMPING IRON II, she had the body of a champion powerlifter. After a few years of bodybuilding training, her physique was more symmetrical and aesthetic Bill Dobbins

The first contests for modern female bodybuilding, according to IFBB women’s archivist/historian Steve Wennerstrom, began in 1977. But the co*petitors back then had not been training long or seriously enough to have developed much muscle. In those days, it was mostly a matter of women dieting hard enough to get very lean. Right up through the first Ms. Olympia in 1980, these were basically dieting contests. In the beginning, in many cases, the women were discouraged from hitting bodybuilding poses, and in some, they were required to wear high heels, like a beauty pageant.


Muscular woman Bev Francis performing a dumbbell workout
Bill Dobbins

Now, we understand nowadays that it takes many years of serious workouts to create what we recognize as a real bodybuilding physique. For example, it took decades for men’s bodybuilding to see physiques on stage like Steve Reeves or Bill Pearl in the 1950s or Arnold or Sergio Oliva in the 1960s. Actual sports, rather than skills like billiards or throwing darts, are progressive by definition. The athletes of today are always better than those of the past. So, the earliest female bodybuilders did not have much muscle, but as more women got involved, trained for more years, and set higher goals for themselves, by the early 1980s women bodybuilders on stage began showing more and more mass muscle and muscularity.


But not a whole lot more. This kind of evolution takes time. And one problem in those early days was that the federations and the judges tended to react negatively if a woman


bodybuilder displayed more muscle than the given standard of the day. As Pumping Iron author Charles Gaines has observed, women who develop their muscles for primarily aesthetic purposes are a new archetype, something never before seen at any time or place in history. How they looked represented a challenge to popular ideas on femininity, morphology, and se*ual and gender identity. So much of the culture disapproved of these women as they began to develop more muscle and, of course, federation officials and judges are part of the culture.


Old School Cool image of Bev Francis sitting on a pedestal
This kind of photo helped convince her critics as to the aesthetic qualities of Bev Francis’ physique. Bill Dobbins

In the 1980s, Rachel McLish started off the decade by winning the first Ms. Olympia. Rachel was lean, elegant, and beautiful, so was a great example to be the first famous woman bodybuilder to introduce the sport to the world. Then Rachel was followed a few years later by Cory Everson. Cory was tall, 5’9”, and had a physique developed by years of athletic co*petition as a heptathlete. Cory had lots of very aesthetic muscle, but not the degree of muscularity that would soon characterize female bodybuilders like Lenda Murray. Cory won the Ms. Olympia title six years in a row, starting in 1984, and her body and good looks helped her to find success on television and in several movies. Because of this, during that period of the late 1980s, Cory WAS the face of female bodybuilding as far as the public was concerned.


It was in this context that Bev Francis came on the scene. With the body of a powerlifter, including a lot of muscle, Bev only trained as a bodybuilder for a few months leading up to the filming of Pumping Iron II. So, her physique did not have the aesthetics that we associate with bodybuilding. This presented contest judges with a dilemma. Bev on stage next to somebody with so much less muscle, like Rachel McLish, was very much a matter of apples versus oranges. The judges had never seen a woman on stage with this much solid muscle. So, there wasn’t really much precedent for making a judgment like this. This was totally new territory.


Female bodybuilding legend Bev Francis posing in a one piece
Even from the beginning of her bodybuilding career, Bev Francis was capable and confident when it came to posing. Bill Dobbins

If you watch the movie, you’ll see that Bev finished eighth in the contest. This was controversial in part because a lot of advocates of bodybuilding for women thought Bev was being subjected to the same kind of rejection for having so much muscle as has happened to other co*petitors like Laura co*bes or Kay Baxter. But this was not really true. A good way of demonstrating this is by co*paring Bev’s physique in 1985 with how she looked winning the 1987 IFBB World Championship, defeating the amazing Anja Langer. After several years of actual bodybuilding training, Bev showed much better symmetry and proportion, a small waist, and great conditioning. In other words, an ACTUAL bodybuilding physique. With these vast improvements in physique, Bev also overwhelmed Anja with the quality and dynamism of her presentation. Anja seemed hesitant on stage, while Bev radiated energy and confidence.


Bev Francis was the first to present impressive size and definition to the co*petitive stage. She paved the way for those to co*e like Lenda Murray, Kim Chizevsky, Yaxeni Oriquen, and Iris Kyle in the ’90s, and to our present champions, Andrea Shaw, Helle Trevino, and Margie Martin. Women with lots of aesthetic muscle and muscularity have beco*e the norm and standard in the industry. It may be hard for younger fans to appreciate the degree to which Bev Francis was a disrupter in those early years, but she definitely was.



         
         

            
Female bodybuilders in the 70's lining up to be judged in a female bodybuilding co*petition
         

      

   
   

                  
                     


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Bev Francis Career Acco*plishments


Australian Track and Field team member: 1977, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982



  • (Missed 1980 track season due to knee injury)

  • Events: Shotput, discus, javelin, and 100-meter reserve

  • Broke Australian Shotput Record: 1977


World Powerlifting Champion: 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985



  • Broken more than 40 World Powerlifting records

  • Status: UNDEFEATED POWERLIFTING co*PETITOR


Bev Francis: first woman to bench press over 300lbs



  • Best lifts: Squat – 500lbs, Bench Press – 335lbs, Deadlift – 501lbs

  • Star of movie “Pumping Iron II-The Women” filmed in 1983, released in 1985


IFBB World Professional Bodybuilding Championship: 1st place – 1987



  • Ms. Olympia Bodybuilding Championship: 3rd place – 1987, 1988, 1989

  • Ms. Olympia Bodybuilding Championship: 2nd place – 1990, 1991


Opened “Bev Francis Bodybuilding Gym” – Long Island, New York in 1987



  • Expanded Gym to “Bev Francis Gold’s Gym” – Syosset, New York in 1990

  • Changed name to Powerhouse Gym, Bev Francis in 2005



         
         

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