Abbye "Pudgy" Stockton

Abbye "Pudgy" Stockton (August 11, 1917  – June 26, 2006) was a professional strongwoman and forerunner of present-day female bodybuilders, who became famous through her involvement with Muscle Beach in the 1940s.

Abbye "Pudge" Stockton
Bodybuilder
Personal info
NicknamePudgy
Born(1917-08-11)August 11, 1917
California
DiedJune 26, 2006(2006-06-26) (aged 88)
Santa Monica, California
Height5 ft 2 in (1.57 m)
Weight115 lb (52 kg)
Professional career
Pro-debut
  • 1948 Miss Physical Culture Venus
  • 1948
Best win
  • 1948 Miss Physical Culture Venus
  • 1948
ActiveRetired

Abbye Eville was born on August 11, 1917, and moved to Santa Monica, California, in 1924. She acquired the nickname "Pudgy" as a child, and the name stuck, even though she weighed approximately 115 pounds at a height of 5'2". She began dating UCLA student Les Stockton during her senior year of high school; they were married in 1941.

Career

Stockton and her husband were frequent visitors to Muscle Beach, where they primarily worked on acrobatics and gymnastics. One of their most famous feats involved Pudgy serving as the "understander", supporting Les (180 pounds) over her head in a hand to hand stand. Pudgy quickly became a media favorite, and was included in pictorials in Life, Pic, and Laff. She was also featured in the newsreels Whatta Build and Muscle Town USA, as well as ads for Ritamine Vitamin Company and the Universal Camera Company. She estimated that she was featured on the cover of forty-two magazines by the end of the 1940s (Todd, 1999). She posed with many of the top male bodybuilders of the time, including John Grimek and Steve Reeves (Black, 2004).

In 1944, Stockton began writing a regular column on women's training, "Barbelles", in Strength & Health magazine,[1] then the most influential fitness magazine in the world. She also helped organize the first sanctioned weightlifting contests for women. The first of these contests with a sanction from the Amateur Athletic Union was held on February 28, 1947, at the Southwest Arena in Los Angeles. In that contest, Stockton pressed 100 pounds, snatched 105 pounds, and clean and jerked 135 pounds.

Physique contests for women were virtually non-existent in the 1940s, and Stockton held only one such title during her career – she was named "Miss Physical Culture Venus" in 1948. She was inducted into the IFBB Hall of Fame in 2000.

Pudgy and husband Les had a daughter. Les died on April 19, 2004, at the age 87 from melanoma (Roark, 2004). Abbye died on June 26, 2006, at the age of 88 from complications due to Alzheimer's disease.

gollark: Which is not what people appear to want.
gollark: That was the extreme end (okay, upper high end) of the scale I was positing.
gollark: Seriously? My fonts don't have Unicode 13 support yet?!
gollark: Yes, I'm aware, I said "slightly".
gollark: It's very ethical because we were able to use science™ to rebind the definitions of ethics to be cooler.

References

  1. Conis, Elena (2008-01-06). "A 'lady of iron' and a model for fitness". Los Angeles Times. David Hiller. Retrieved 2008-01-06.
  • Black, Jane, "Abbye 'Pudgy' Stockton", Milo, June, 2004
  • Roark, Joe, "Les Stockton Remembered", Flex, August, 2004
  • Thomas, Al, "Out of the Past...A Fond Remembrance: Abbye 'Pudgy' Stockton", Body & Power, March, 1981
  • Todd, Jan, "Pudgy Stockton", St. James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture, Gale Group, 1999
  • Todd, Jan, "The Legacy of Pudgy Stockton", Iron Game History, January, 1992
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