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Wikipedia

Female bodybuilding

Female bodybuilding is the female component of competitive bodybuilding. It began in the late 1970s, when women began to take part in bodybuilding competitions.[1]

Dayana Cadeau posing at the 2007 Olympia Press Conference.
Elena Seiple posing at the 2005 NPC Juniors

History

Origins

Female bodybuilding originally developed as an outgrowth of not only the late nineteenth-century European vaudeville and circus strongwomen acts, Bernarr Macfadden's turn of the century women's physique competitions, and the weightlifting of Abbye "Pudgy" Stockton, but also as an outgrowth of the men's bodybuilding. The contest formats of men's events during the 1950s to the mid-1970s had often been supplemented with either a women's beauty contest or bikini show. These shows "had little to do with women's bodybuilding as we know it today, but they did serve as beginning or, perhaps more properly, as a doormat for the development of future bodybuilding shows."[2][3] Physique contests for women date back to at least the 1960s with contests like Miss Physique, Miss Body Beautiful U.S.A., W.B.B.G. and Miss Americana, I.F.B.B. Maria Elena Alberici, as listed in the Almanac of Women's Bodybuilding, won two national titles in one year: Miss Body Beautiful U.S.A. in 1972, promoted by Dan Lourie and Miss Americana in 1972, promoted by Joe Weider. Mr. Olympia, Arnold Schwarzenegger was a judge at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York when Maria Elena Alberici (aka) Maria Lauren won Miss Americana.[4][5] It was not until the late 1970s, after the advent of the feminist movement and female powerlifting events that women were seen as capable of competing in their own bodybuilding competitions.[2][3]

1977–1979

Prior to 1977, bodybuilding had been considered strictly a male-oriented sport. Henry McGhee, described as the "primary architect of competitive female bodybuilding", was an employee of the Downtown Canton YMCA, carried a strong belief that women should share the opportunity to display their physiques and the results of their weight training the way men had done for years. The first official female bodybuilding competition was held in Canton, Ohio, in November 1977 and was called the Ohio Regional Women's Physique Championship. It was judged strictly as a bodybuilding contest and was the first event of its kind for women. Gina LaSpina, the champion, is considered the first recognized winner of a woman's bodybuilding contest. The event organizer, McGhee, told the competitors that they would be judged "like the men," with emphasis on muscular development, symmetry, and physique presentation. In 1978, McGhee organized the first National Women's Physique Championship, along with the short-lived United States Women's Physique Association (USWPA), which he formed to help organize women interested in competing in bodybuilding. The USWPA became defunct in 1980.[1][3]

On August 18, 1979, promoter George Snyder organized a "female bodybuilding" contest known as The Best in the World contest, which was the first IFBB-sanctioned event for women that awarded prize money to the top finishers, with the winner receiving $2,500. It was considered the forerunner for the Ms. Olympia competition. Although sanctioned as a bodybuilding contest, women were required to appear on stage in high heels. Doris Barrilleaux found the Superior Physique Association (SPA) in 1978, the first women's bodybuilding organization run for women and by women. She also began publishing the SPA News, a newsletter dedicated exclusively to female bodybuilding. SPA disseminated information to women about contests and proper training and dieting. On April 29, 1979, SPA held Florida's first official women's contest in which thirteen women competed. The contest was held in Brandon Florida and promoted by Megas Gym and Doris Barrilleaux. The winner of the show was Laura Combes. Also in 1979, the IFBB formed the IFBB Women's Committee; Christine Zane was appointed the first chairperson to serve as head of the newly formed committee. One of the significant differences between the SPA and the IFBB was that while the IFBB was organized and run by men, the SPA was run by women and for women.[3]

More contests started to appear in 1979. Some of these were the following:

  • The second U.S. Women's National Physique Championship, won by Kay Baxter, with Marilyn Schriner second and Cammie Lusko third.
  • The first IFBB Women's World Body Building Championship, held on June 16, won by Lisa Lyon, followed by Claudia Wilbourn, Stella Martinez, Stacey Bentley, and Bette Brown.
  • The Best In The World contest, held at Warminster, Pennsylvania on August 18, featuring a $5,000 prize fund, with $2,500 awarded for first place. Patsy Chapman was the winner, followed by April Nicotra, Bentley, Brown, and Carla Dunlap. (Levin, 1980)
  • The Robby Robinson Classic, held at the Embassy Auditorium in Los Angeles on August 25. Bentley finished first, also winning best legs and best poser, followed by Brown, Lusko, and Georgia Miller. (Roark, 2005)

Although these early events were regarded as bodybuilding contests, the women wore high-heeled shoes, and did not clench their fists while posing. Additionally, they were not allowed to use the three so-called "men's poses" — the double biceps, crab, and lat spread. The contests were generally held by promoters acting independently; the sport still lacked a governing body. That would change in 1980.

1980–1989

The 1980s is when female bodybuilding first took off. The early 1980s signified a transition from the fashionably thin "twiggy" body to one carrying slightly more muscle mass.[2] The National Physique Committee (NPC) held the first women's Nationals in 1980. Since its inception, this has been the top amateur level competition for women in the US. Laura Combes won the inaugural contest. The first World Couples Championship was held in Atlantic City, New Jersey on April 8. The winning couple was Stacey Bentley and Chris Dickerson, with April Nicotra and Robby Robinson in second. Bentley picked up her third consecutive victory in the Frank Zane Invitational on June 28, ahead of Rachel McLish, Lynn Conkwright, Suzy Green, Patsy Chapman, and Georgia Miller Fudge.

In 1980, the first Ms. Olympia (initially known as the "Miss" Olympia), the most prestigious contest for professional female bodybuilders, was held. Initially, the contest was promoted by George Snyder. The contestants had to send in resumes and pictures and were hand-picked by Snyder based on their potential to be fitness role models for the average American woman. The first winner was Rachel McLish, who had also won the NPC's USA Championship earlier in the year. The contest was a major turning point for the sport of women's bodybuilding. McLish turned out to be very promotable and inspired many future competitors to start training and competing. Stacey Bentley finished in fifth place, in what turned out to be her final competition. Also in 1980, the American Federation of Women Bodybuilders was also founded, representing a growing awareness of women bodybuilders in America. Winning competitors such as Laurie Stark (Ms. Southern States, 1988) helped to popularize the federation.[2][3]

Rachel McLish became the most successful competitor of the early 1980s. She lost her Ms. Olympia crown by finishing second to Kike Elomaa in 1981, but regained the title in 1982. A new major pro contest, the Women's Pro World Championship, was held for the first time in 1981 (won by Lynn Conkwright). Held annually through 1989, this was the second most prestigious contest of the time. McLish added this title to her collection in 1982. George Snyder lost the rights to the Ms. Olympia in 1982, and after this the contestants were no longer hand-picked, but instead qualified for the Ms. Olympia through placings in lesser contests. Women's bodybuilding was officially recognized as a sport discipline by the 1982 IFBB Congress in Bruges, Belgium.[6]

As the sport grew, the competitors' level of training gradually increased as did the use of anabolic steroids (most of the competitors in the earliest shows had very little weight training experience or steroid usage), and the sport slowly evolved towards more muscular physiques. This trend started to emerge in 1983. With McLish not competing in the big shows, Carla Dunlap took both the Pro World and Ms. Olympia titles. Dunlap possessed a more muscular physique than either McLish or Elomaa, and though she never repeated her successes of 1983, she would remain competitive for the rest of the decade.

In 1984, a new force emerged in women's bodybuilding. Cory Everson won the NPC Nationals, then defeated McLish to win the Ms. Olympia. At 5'9" and 150 pounds, Everson's physique set a new standard. She would go on to win six consecutive Ms. Olympia titles from 1984 to 1989 before retiring undefeated as a professional, the only female bodybuilder ever to accomplish this.

During this period, women's bodybuilding was starting to achieve some serious mainstream exposure. Lori Bowen, winner of the 1984 Pro World Championship, appeared in a widely broadcast commercial for Miller Lite beer with Rodney Dangerfield. Additionally, competitors Lynn Conkwright (1982) and Carla Dunlap (1984) were included in ABC's Superstars competition.

In 1985, a movie called Pumping Iron II: The Women was released. This film documented the preparation of several women for the 1983 Caesars Palace World Cup Championship. Competitors prominently featured in the film were Kris Alexander, Lori Bowen, Lydia Cheng, Carla Dunlap, Bev Francis, and Rachel McLish. At the time, Francis was actually a powerlifter, though she soon made a successful transition to bodybuilding, becoming one of the leading competitors of the late 1980s and early 1990s. The main theme of the movie pitted the sultry and curvaceous Rachel McLish, the current champion, against the super-muscular Bev Francis. This "rivalry" brought to light the true dilemma of Women's Bodybuilding and exposed the root of all the controversy (aesthetics vs size) which was the focal point at that time, and which still continues today. In 1985, the National Women's and Mixed Pairs Bodybuilding Championships were held in Detroit, Michigan by promoter/bodybuilder Gema Wheeler (Long). It was the first amateur bodybuilding event televised internationally by ESPN Sports.

For several years in the mid-1980s, NBC broadcast coverage of the Ms. Olympia contest on their Sportsworld program. The taped footage was telecast months after the contest and was usually used as secondary material to fill out programs featuring events such as boxing. Typically, the broadcasts included only the top several women. Nevertheless, Rachel McLish and some of her leading competitors were receiving national TV coverage. McLish authored two New York Times best-selling books - "Flex Appeal" (1984) and "Perfect Parts" (1987) – and was also starring in action films. The popularity was growing, and women were being empowered and inspired to train. In 1983, the top prize money for the women bodybuilding was $50,000, equal to that of male bodybuilding.

The Ms. International contest was introduced in 1986, first won by Erika Geisen. In 1987, the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU), who were sanctioning amateur bodybuilding at the time, positioned the International as a premiere amateur event. It was held in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The AAU brought Serge Nubret (a former Mr. World, Mr. Universe and Mr. Europe) from France to be the featured guest poser. Since 1988, the competition has been sanctioned by the IFBB. Since the demise of the Pro World Championship after 1989, the Ms. International has been second in prestige only to the Ms. Olympia. The 1989 Ms. International was noteworthy for the fact that the original winner, Tonya Knight, was later disqualified for using a surrogate for her drug test at the 1988 Ms. Olympia contest. Consequently, runner-up Jackie Paisley received the 1989 title. Knight was suspended from IFBB competition through the end of 1990 and was forced to return her prize money from the 1988 Ms. Olympia and 1989 Ms. International, a total of $12,000 (Merritt, 2006).

1990–1999

Normally, competitors must qualify for the Ms. Olympia by achieving certain placings in lesser pro contests. However, the cancellation of the Women's Pro World contest in 1990 left only the Ms. International as a Ms. Olympia qualifier. Consequently, the IFBB decided to open the Ms. Olympia to all women with pro cards, and a field of thirty competitors entered. Lenda Murray, a new pro from Michigan, earned a decisive victory and emerged as the successor to Cory Everson. Murray became the next dominant figure in the sport.

A new professional contest, the Jan Tana Classic, was introduced in 1991. The contest was named for its promoter, a marketer of tanning products, and ran annually until 2003 with the departure of Wayne Demilia (it was later briefly revived in 2007). The inaugural event was won by Sue Gafner. The Jan Tana filled the void left by the Women's Pro World contest and occupied the number three slot on the pro circuit throughout its lifetime. 1991 also saw Tonya Knight return to competition, winning the Ms. International.

The 1991 Ms. Olympia contest was the first to be televised live. Lenda Murray faced a serious challenge from the 1990 runner-up, Bev Francis. Francis had started bodybuilding in the mid-1980s, converting over from powerlifting. Over the years, she had gradually refined her physique to be more in line with judging standards. However, she came to the 1991 contest noticeably larger than in previous years. Francis was leading going into the night show, with Murray needing all of the first-place votes to retain her title. Murray managed to do just that, winning a somewhat controversial decision by one point.

In 1992, there was more controversy, this time at the 1992 Ms. International contest. In response to the increased size displayed by Murray and Francis at the previous Ms. Olympia, along with increasing drug abuse and androgenic side effects, the IFBB made an attempt to "feminize" the sport. The IFBB, led by Ben Weider, had created a series of "femininity" rules; one line in the judging rules said that competitors should not be "too big." Since extreme size generally requires extreme AAS usage, with more women gaining more androgenic (masculine) side effects, this was clearly an attempt to retain a higher level of female aesthetics and maintain the standard. The judges’ guide to the competitors stated that they were looking for a highly feminine and optimally developed, but not emaciated physique. The contest winner was Germany's Anja Schreiner, a blue-eyed blonde with a symmetrical physique who weighed 130 pounds at 5'7". The announcement of her victory met with so much booing from those who prefer size over aesthetics that Arnold Schwarzenegger had to step on stage to address the audience, saying "the hell with the judges". Many observers felt that the IFBB had instructed the judges to select the most marketable aesthetic physique, not the most muscular.

The 1992 Ms. International is also famous for an incident involving British competitor Paula Bircumshaw. Bircumshaw was the same height as Schreiner and possessed a similar level of symmetry and definition, but carried significantly more muscle, weighing in at 162 pounds. She was the clear audience favorite, but was relegated to eighth place. Normally, the top ten contestants are called out at the end of the show when the winners are announced, but the judges only called back the top six, hoping to keep Bircumshaw backstage. This resulted in an uproar from the crowd. With the audience chanting her name, Bircumshaw returned to the stage along with the top six competitors.

Advertising in Muscle & Fitness for the 1992 Ms. Olympia featured Schreiner prominently, relegating two-time defending champion Murray to a small "also competing" notice. Nevertheless, Murray also apparently met the "femininity" requirements, and managed to retain her title; Schreiner finished sixth, and promptly retired from competition.

Following the 1992 debacles, the judging rules were rewritten. The new rules retained provisions for aesthetics, but allowed the contests to be judged as physique contests. Lenda Murray continued to dominate the sport from 1990 to 1995, matching Cory Everson's record of six consecutive Ms. Olympia titles. Murray's closest rival was probably Laura Creavalle, who won the Ms. International title three times, and twice was runner-up to Murray at the Olympia. During this time, some additional professional shows were held, in addition to the three mainstays. The 1994 schedule included the Canada Pro Cup, won by Laura Binetti, and the first of three annual Grand Prix events in Prague, won by Drorit Kernes. In 1996, the Grand Prix in Slovakia was added. Besides providing the competitors with extra opportunities to win prize money, these contests also served as additional Ms. Olympia qualifiers.

The mid-1990s of bodybuilding was known as the "Dorian Era", AKA the "drug years". In 1996, Kim Chizevsky-Nicholls would win the Ms. Intentional and dethroned the Ms. International champion, Laura Creavalle. Also in 1996, she would unseat six-time defending champion, Lenda Murray. This was the first time that a pro female bodybuilder would win both the Ms. International and Ms. Olympia in the same year. She would retain her Ms. Olympia title in 1997 against Lenda Murray, who retired afterwards. At the 1997 Ms. Olympia, she competed at 157 pounds (71 kg). In 1998, she again won the Ms. Olympia title. The 1998 contest was held in Prague, Czech Republic, the first time the competition had been held outside the United States.

At the 1998 EFBB British Championships, Joanna Thomas won the lightweight and overall title, becoming the youngest woman in the world to ever to win an IFBB pro card at the age of 21.[7]

The 1999 Ms. Olympia was originally scheduled to be held on October 9 in Santa Monica, California. However, one month before the scheduled date, the IFBB announced that the contest had been cancelled.[8] The main cause was the withdrawal of promoter Jarka Kastnerova (who promoted the 1998 contest in Prague) for financial reasons, including a low number of advance ticket sales for the 1999 event.[9] The backlash following the announcement led to a flurry of activity, with the contest being rescheduled as part of the Women's Extravaganza (promoted by Kenny Kassel and Bob Bonham) in Secaucus, New Jersey on October 2. Last minute sponsorship came from several sources, most significantly in the form of $50,000 from Flex magazine. Amid all the turmoil, Kim Chizevsky-Nicholls won her fourth consecutive title. Chizevsky-Nicholls decided to retire from bodybuilding after winning the 1999 Ms. Olympia. According to Bill Dobbins, she retired due to gender discrimination guidelines set up by the IFBB that advocated for more "femininity" and less "muscularity" in the sport.[10]

2000–2010

 
Betty Pariso posing at the 2001 Extravaganza Strength Contest

The IFBB introduced several changes to Ms. Olympia in 2000. The first change was that Ms. Olympia contest would no longer be held as a separate contest, instead became part of the "Olympia Weekend" in Las Vegas and held the day before the men's show. The second change was when heavyweight and lightweight classes where added. The third change was the new judging guidelines for presentations were introduced. A letter to the competitors from Jim Manion (chairman of the Professional Judges Committee) stated that women would be judged on healthy appearance, face, makeup, and skin tone. The criteria given in Manion's letter included the statement "symmetry, presentation, separations, and muscularity BUT NOT TO THE EXTREME!"[11]

Of the three pro contests held in 2000, only the Ms. International named an overall winner - Vickie Gates, who had won the contest in 1999. The Jan Tana Classic and the Ms. Olympia simply had weight class winners. With Kim Chizevsky-Nicholls retiring from bodybuilding to pursue fitness competition, the Ms. Olympia title was shared by class winners Andrulla Blanchette and Valentina Chepiga.

The 2001 pro schedule opened routinely enough, with Vickie Gates winning the Ms. International title for the third consecutive year. However, the Ms. Olympia featured a "surprise" winner, as Juliette Bergmann returned to competition at age 42. Bergmann, the 1986 Pro World champion, had not competed since 1989. Entering the Olympia as a lightweight, she defeated heavyweight winner Iris Kyle for the overall title. In the five years that the Ms. Olympia was contested in multiple weight classes, this was the only time that the lightweight winner took the overall title.

In 2002, six-time Olympia winner Lenda Murray returned after a five-year absence. Bergmann (lightweight) and Murray (heavyweight) won the two weight classes in both 2002 and 2003. Murray won the overall title both years, setting a new standard of eight Ms. Olympia titles.

Murray was unseated as Ms. Olympia for the second time in 2004. Iris Kyle, a top pro competitor since 1999, defeated Murray in a close battle in the heavyweight class, and bested lightweight winner Dayana Cadeau for the overall title. Kyle became only the second woman to win both the Ms. International and Ms. Olympia titles in the same year, matching Kim Chizevsky-Nicholls's feat of 1996.

 
Contestant lineup of female bodybuilders at the FCPAQ 2006 Championship in Montreal, Canada

On 6 December 2004, IFBB Professional Division Vice Chairman Jim Manion issued a memo introducing the so-called '20 percent rule' to all IFBB professional female athletes. It read, “For aesthetics and health reasons, the IFBB Professional Division requests that female athletes in Bodybuilding, Fitness and Figure decrease the amount of muscularity by a factor of 20%. This request for a 20% decrease in the amount of muscularity applies to those female athletes whose physiques require the decrease regardless of whether they compete in Bodybuilding, Fitness or Figure. All professional judges have been advised of the proper criteria for assessing female physiques.” Needless to say the directive created quite a stir, and left many women wondering if they were one of “those female athletes whose physiques require the decrease”.[12] On April 20, 2005, the IFBB adopted, by a 9 for, 1 against, and 3 no votes for Resolution 2005–0001, which announced that starting with the 2005 Ms. Olympia that the IFBB was abolishing the weight class system adopted in 2000.[13]

The 2005 contest season saw another double winner, as Yaxeni Oriquen-Garcia won her third Ms. International title, then edged out defending champion Iris Kyle to win the Ms. Olympia. Also notable in 2005 was the return of Jitka Harazimova, who had last competed in 1999. Harazimova won the Charlotte Pro contest in her return to competition, qualifying her for the Ms. Olympia where she finished fourth. Also, in 2005, the documentary Supersize She was released. The documentary focused on focused on British professional female bodybuilder Joanna Thomas and her competing at the 2004 GNC Show of Strength and the 2004 Ms. Olympia.

In 2006, Iris Kyle won both the Ms. International and the Ms. Olympia, repeating her accomplishment of 2004. Iris won the Ms. International and Ms. Olympia for a third time in 2007. Also, 2007 saw the brief revival of the Jan Tana Classic, which featured two weight classes for the female competitors. The class titles were won by Stephanie Kessler (heavyweight) and Sarah Dunlap (lightweight), with Dunlap named the overall winner.

There was a bit of a controversy in the 2008 Ms. International. Iris Kyle was placed 7th due to "bumps" on her glutes, which according to head IFBB judge, Sandy Ranalli, was “distortions in her physique.”[14] Yaxeni Oriquen-Garcia went on to win the 2008 Ms. Olympia. Iris made up for this by winning the 2008 Ms. Olympia.

2010–2014

 
Female bodybuilders of the U.S. Army Military Police at the 2013 Muscle Beach Classic, Camp Foster, Okinawa (Japan)

Iris Kyle continued her success by winning both the Ms. International and the Ms. Olympia in 2009, 2010, and 2011. In 2012, Iris suffered an injury to her leg and thus couldn't attend the 2012 Ms. International.[15] Yaxeni Oriquen-Garcia won the 2012 Ms. International. Iris went on to win the 2012 Ms. Olympia and winning her seventh consecutive Olympia win and surpassing Lenda Murry's and she went on to retake the 2013 Ms. International after not being able to attend the 2012 Ms. International due to leg injury. At the 2013 Ms. Olympia, Iris won her ninth overall Olympia win, thus giving her more overall Olympia titles than any other bodybuilder, male or female.

In 2012, Venezuelan Adriana Martin won the National Physique Committee's South Florida Bikini Championship in the over-30 category.[16] At the time, the bikini division was a new element of the competition.

On June 7, 2013, event promoter of the Arnold Sports Festival, Jim Lorimer, announced that in 2014, the Arnold Classic 212 professional men's bodybuilding division would replace the Ms. International women's bodybuilding competition at the 2014 Arnold Sports Festival. Lorimer, in a statement, said “The Arnold Sports Festival was proud to support women's bodybuilding through the Ms. International for the past quarter century, but in keeping with demands of our fans, the time has come to introduce the Arnold Classic 212 beginning in 2014. We are excited to create a professional competitive platform for some of the IFBB Pro League's most popular competitors.”[17]

At the 2014 Ms. Olympia, Iris Kyle won her tenth overall Olympia win, beating her own previous record of nine overall Olympia wins. She also won her ninth consecutive Olympia title in a row, beating Lee Haney's and Ronnie Coleman's record eight consecutive Olympia titles in a row, thus giving her more overall and consecutive Olympia wins than any other bodybuilder, male or female, of all time. After winning she announced that she will be retiring from bodybuilding. The 2014 Ms. Olympia was the last Ms. Olympia competition held until that competition's relaunch in 2020.

2015–present

 
Hofit Sharon, winner of the "Miss Bikini 2021" competition at the World Natural Bodybuilding Federation in Israel

On March 8, 2015, Wings of Strength announced the creation of the Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships. Regarded as the successor to the Ms. Olympia, Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships adopted the point qualification system that the Ms Olympia had.[18][19] On August 22, 2015, Margie Martin won the title and best poser award for the first 2015 Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships.[20]

Ms. Olympia relaunched in 2020, and Andrea Shaw won Ms. Olympia that year.[21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29]

Also in 2020, the American bodybuilder Jen Pasky Jaquin received the first IFBB pro card for female wheelchair bodybuilding.[30][31]

IFBB Hall of Fame

The IFBB established a Hall of Fame in 1999. The following women have been inducted:[32]

Competitions

Professional competitions

2023 IFBB Pro League Schedule

Competition Date Place Promoter Prize money
2023 IFBB Pro League Vancouver Island Showdown Pro 4/23/23   Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Corey Swiergoz
2023 IFBB Pro League New York Pro 5/20/23   Teaneck, New Jersey, United States Steve Weinberger
2023 IFBB Pro League Toronto Pro Supershow 6/4/23   Toronto, Ontario, Canada Ron Hache
2023 IFBB Pro League Puerto Rico Pro 6/24-25/23   San Juan, Puerto Rico Tim Gardner
2023 IFBB Pro League Mr. Big Evolution Pro 7/9/23   Estoril, Lisbon District, Portugal Mr. Big Evolution
2023 IFBB Pro League Lenda Murray Atlanta Pro

Masters Over 40

7/15-16/23   Duluth, Georgia, United States Wings of Strength
2023 IFBB Pro League Chicago Pro

Masters Over 40


Masters Over 50


Masters Over 55

7/21-22/23   Chicago, Illinois, United States Tim Gardner
2023 IFBB Pro League Tampa Pro

Masters Over 40


Masters Over 50


Masters Over 55

8/4-5/23   Tampa, Florida, United States
2023 IFBB Pro League Masters Olympia 8/26-27/23   Romania Wings of Strength
Alina Popa
2023 IFBB Pro League Masters Pro World Pro Championships

Masters Over 40


Masters Over 50


Masters Over 60

9/3/23   Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States Gary Udit
2023 IFBB Pro League European Pro Championships 9/17/23   Alicante, Valencian Community, Spain Emillio Martinez
Barbara Bagnuolo
2023 IFBB Pro League Rising Phoenix Pro 9/30/23   Phoenix, Arizona, United States Tim Gardner
2023 IFBB Pro League Ms. Olympia 11/3-5/23   Orlando, Florida, United States Dan Solomon
2023 IFBB Pro League Wings of Strength Romania Muscle Fest Pro 11/11/23   Bucharest, Romania Tim Gardner
Alina Popa

Qualifications for IFBB professional card

In order to become an "IFBB Pro" you must first earn your IFBB Pro Card. In order to win a bodybuilder looking to do this must first win a regional contest weight class. When a bodybuilder wins or places highly, they earn an invite to compete at their country's National Championships contest for that year. The winners of each weight class at the National Championships will then go head-to-head in a separate contest to see who is the overall Champion for the year. Depending on the federation, the overall Champion will be offered a pro card. Some federations offer Pro Cards to winners of individual weight class champions. This can mean that each year more than one bodybuilder may earn a Pro Card.

In the United States, the NPC (National Physique Committee) is affiliated with the IFBB and awards IFBB Pro Cards. The following competitions award IFBB Pro Cards:

  • NPC Women's National Championships has three weight classes: Lightweight, middleweight, and heavyweight. All three class winners in the contest are eligible for professional status.
  • NPC USA Championships has three weight classes. The overall winner is eligible for professional status.
  • IFBB World Championships, each weight class winner is eligible for pro status.
  • IFBB North American Championships, the overall winners is eligible for professional status.

Amateur competitions

2022 Pro Card Winners

Competition Place Date Name Country
Caribbean (Bermuda) Pro Qualifier   Hamilton, Bermuda March 31, 2022 Luciana Dasilveira   Bermuda
NPC Teen Collegiate & Masters National Championships   Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States July 20, 2022 Rebecca Woody   United States
Linda Perry
Eunice Martinez-Kitchen
Lori Conley
Erin Hawkins
Lena Betka
Marika Jones
NPC USA Championships   Las Vegas, Nevada, United States July 29, 2022 Gessica Campbell
Olympia Amateur Eastern Europe   Bucharest, Romania August 22, 2022 Soos Alexandra   Hungary
NPC North American Championships Pro Qualifier   Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States August 31, 2022 Ava Melillo   United States
Lea Geiger
Lea Geiger
Sarah Boes   Canada
Romania Muscle Fest Pro Qualifier   Bucharest, Romania November 12, 2022 Emilia Balkova   Bulgaria[33]

National Physique Committee (NPC) competitions

National level competitions
Qualifications for national level competitions

In order to qualify for national level competitions a competitor must place in one of the following:

  • Rank in the top three in their weight class of the Women's open division in a contest that has been sanctioned as a national qualifier.
  • First overall in an area championship of the open division.
  • Top two in a weight class from an area level national qualifier
  • Overall winner in a district level competition designated as a national qualifier.
  • Winner of the weight class in a regional competition designated as a national qualifier.
  • Weight class winners from the Armed Forces.
Qualifications for Junior USA, Teen and Masters Nationals

To qualify for Junior USA, Teen or Masters Nationals a competitor must place in one of the following:

  • Top five in a weight class from a national level competition
  • Top three in a weight class in the Teen or Masters Nationals
  • Class winner in the Armed Forces
  • Top three in a weight class from an Area national qualifier
  • Top two from a district level national qualifier
Qualifications for USA and Junior Nationals

In order to qualify for USA and Junior Nationals a competitor must place in one of the following:

  • Top five in a weight class from the Nationals, USA, Team Universe or Junior Nationals
  • Top three in a weight class from the Teen, Collegiate Masters Nationals
  • Class winner in the Armed Forces
  • First overall in an area level national qualifier
  • Top two in an area level national qualifier
  • Weight class winner from a district level competition designated as a national qualifier
Qualifications for Nationals and North American Championships

In order to qualify for Nationals or North American Championships a competitor must place in one of the following:

  • Top five in a weight class from the Nationals, NPC USA or North American Championships
  • Top five in a weight class from the Team Universe, Junior Nationals or Junior USA
  • Top five in a weight class from Teen Collegiate Masters Nationals
  • Top two in a weight class in the Armed Forces
  • Top two in a weight class in an area level national qualifier
  • Overall winner in a district level competition designated as a national qualifier
  • Class winners at the US and Nationals will be given five years of eligibility.

National Amateur Body-Builders' Association (NABBA) competitions

  • NABBA European Championships
  • NABBA Universe

World Fitness Federation competitions

Natural bodybuilding competitions

National Gym Association competitions

Fitness and figure competition

 
A female competitor during a bodybuilding show in Asia

There are two other categories of competition that are closely related to bodybuilding and are frequently held as part of the same event. Fitness competition has a swimsuit round, and a round that is judged on the performance of a routine including aerobics, dance, or gymnastics. Figure competition is a newer format, which combines female bodybuilding and gymnastics altogether, is judged solely on symmetry and muscle tone, with much less emphasis on muscle size than in bodybuilding.

In a competition, each woman poses in a bikini. She must strike different poses, while facing forward, to the side, and to the rear. During her poses, she must emphasize her arms, shoulders, chest, stomach, buttocks, and legs by flexing them. The judges carefully observe, evaluate, then numerically grade the firmness and shapeliness of the woman's physique.

In the figure division the same judging criteria is applied, but without a fitness routine.

Sexism and discrimination

Misogynistic attitudes towards female bodybuilding have existed ever since the creation of the sport, as the body type female bodybuilders possess is highly different from the beauty standard of a skinny and delicate woman.[34] In Studies in Popular Culture A.J. Randall et al. describe this as the result of a patriarchal society which emphasizes that femininity is created by altering one's body to cater to society's gendered expectations[35] When women venture away from gender expectations, society's view of their femininity begins to diminish. Female Bodybuilders experience this criticism of their body, as they build bodies which are commonly associated with the masculine identity.[36] Despite this there is a very dedicated female bodybuilding fan base.

The International Federation of Bodybuilding & Fitness has made several rules changes on the sport of female bodybuilding that relate to expected feminine identity. In 1992, the IFBB, attempted to "feminize" the sport by making the judges deduct points from competitors who were "too big," meaning too muscular.[37] The IFBB then made a rule change in 2000 that emphasized a need for the women to decrease muscularity once again.[38] Before Ms. International in 2005 the IFBB created another rule that required the women competing to decrease their own muscle mass by 20 percent to compete.[38] Yet the men's bodybuilding rules have not changed in the same time period. In Qualitative Research in Sport and Exercise Chris Shilling and Tanya Bunsell state that all of these rule changes reflect the IFBB's attempts to make women more closely fit gender expectations, as they all emphasize the need for the female bodybuilders to become less massive.[39] Bunsell and Shilling further state that male bodybuilding hasn't changed because their bodies are seen as masculine in identity, while female bodybuilding rules inhibit females from reaching the same muscularity.

In the documentary film Generation Iron 2, Iris Kyle, who stated she wanted to compete at the 2016 Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships, received an email from a show promoter that she had to requalify to attend. Under the Ms. Olympia rules, former Ms. Olympia champions were qualified for life. She stated she had been to do some work with them that she doesn't "agree with", but declined the offer. When asked to clarify, she stated that "sex sells" and that female bodybuilders sometimes sell muscle worship. While she was later allowed a special invite to the 2016 Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships, she declined to attend, instead focusing on training her boyfriend, Hidetada Yamagishi, for the 2017 Arnold Classic Men's Physique and focusing on their business venture.[40][41]

Government bans

  • Afghanistan – Women's bodybuilding is forbidden.[42]
  • Iran – On January 18, 2017, an Iranian female bodybuilder was arrested for "nudity" after she posted selfies of her flexing sleeveless on social media. "Nude", in this context refers to women not wearing a headscarf or revealing body parts like arms and legs.[43]

Performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs)

According to an Iron Man article, published on 1 May 2003 by Greg Zulak, who cites Dan Duchaine, author of the book Underground Steroid Handbook and worked with countless world-class female bodybuilders, listed the following performance-enhancing drugs that female bodybuilders may use:

Policies

In 2001, Katie Arnoldi, a former bodybuilder who wrote the book Chemical Pink about her bodybuilding career, said industry insiders know what goes on, but the sport is reluctant to test bodybuilders more strictly for steroids because big physiques draw big profits.[45] In the 2005 television documentary Supersize She, when Joanna Thomas was asked about steroid usage she said sarcastically "Yeah it's all about the steroids, you know. We just take steroids and look like this. Try this at home everyone, for a few weeks, and see how you look." She also said "Take what you like. A lot of people would not look like me. It's all of my life since I was 15 years old, dedication to this sport. It's not just about what people take. It's this." as she pointed to her brain.[46]

Policies of the International Federation of BodyBuilding and Fitness (IFBB)

According to the 2008 MSNBC documentary Hooked: Muscle Women, the IFBB does not routinely drug test athletes who compete in the federation. Also in the documentary, Kristy Hawkins said she thought steroids were "prevalent in every sport but with us it's just more obvious."[47]

Policies of the IFBB Pro League and the National Physique Committee (NPC)

In 2001, Sandy Ranalli of the NPC said drug testing can just be too expensive. "To be honest with you, we're such a small sport, it's just not financially feasible," says Ranalli of drug testing the athletes. She said, however, they try to do random testing occasionally. Ranalli also said that: "There's steroids in every sport … But to say you're not going to get to the competitive level … without steroids, that itself is false."[48][45]

Mitigation efforts

Bodybuilding causes increased lean body mass and decreased body fat, which causes breast tissue reduction in female athletes[49] whereas the current trend regarding the judges' search for "feminine" physique at competitions makes compensative breast augmentation with breast implants an increasingly popular procedure among female bodybuilders.[50] It is estimated that 80% of professional female bodybuilders get breast implants so they can maintain upper to lower body symmetry.[3]

Surveys and studies on side effects

  • A 1985 interview of ten weight-trained women athletes who consistently used anabolic steroids were interviewed about their patterns of drug use and the perceived effects. Anabolic steroids were used in a cyclical manner, often with several drugs taken simultaneously. All participants believed that muscle size and strength were increased in association with anabolic steroid use. Most also noted a deepening of the voice, increased facial hair, increased aggressiveness, clitoral enlargement, and menstrual irregularities. The participants were willing to tolerate these side effects but thought that such changes might be unacceptable to many women.[51]
  • A 1989 study of competitive female bodybuilders from Kansas and Missouri found that 10% use steroids on a regular basis. The female bodybuilders reported that they had used an average of two different steroids including nandrolone, oxandrolone, testosterone, metandienone, boldenone, and stanozolol.[52]
  • A 1991 study of nine female weightlifters using steroids and seven not using these agents has found that it appears that the self-administration of testosterone and anabolic steroids is increasingly practiced by women in sports where strength and endurance are important. Of the nine anabolic steroid users, seven took multiple anabolic steroids simultaneously. Thirty-fold elevations of serum testosterone were noted in the women injecting testosterone. In three of these women serum testosterone levels exceeded the upper limits for normal male testosterone concentrations. A significant compensatory decrease in sex hormone-binding globulin and a decrease in thyroid-binding proteins were noted in the women steroid users. Also, a 39% decrease in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol was noted in the steroid-using weightlifters. Most of the subjects in this study used anabolic steroids continuously, which raises concern about premature atherosclerosis and other disease processes developing in these women.[53]
  • A 2000 survey found that one-third of the female bodybuilders reported past or current steroid use and almost half of those who were non-steroid users admitted use of performance-enhancing drugs such as ephedrine. The study investigators found that women who used steroids were more muscular than their non-steroid-using counterparts and were also more likely to use other performance-enhancing substances.[54] Despite its popularity among female bodybuilding, usage of steroids among female bodybuilders, unlike male bodybuilding, is a taboo subject and rarely admitted use among female bodybuilders. Although the IFBB officially bans the usage of performance-enhancing drugs, it does not test athletes rigorously.[55]
  • A 2009 survey of both men and women found that while men overall use anabolic–androgenic steroids, more women than men who use anabolic–androgenic steroids were competitive bodybuilders or weightlifters, with only 33.3% describing themselves as "recreational lifters" with no interest in competition. The survey found that 75% of the women experienced clitoral enlargement, half had irregular periods and showed changes in their voices. Despite this 90% said they would continue to use steroids.[56]

Cultural references

Release date Media title Episode title Media type
3 May 1985 Pumping Iron II: The Women American documentary film
1995 Geraldo American daytime television tabloid talk show
2000 On the Inside Bodybuilders American television documentary show
18 August 2000 The Cell American-German film
16 October 2000 Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends Body Building British television documentary show
2001 The Greatest Bodies American television documentary
3 May 2002 Sabrina the Teenage Witch Driving Mr. Goodman American television sitcom
2 February 2003 The Simpsons The Strong Arms of the Ma American animated sitcom
18 October 2004 Taboo Gender Benders American documentary television show
12 December 2004 Totally Spies! The Incredible Bulk French-Canadian children and teenagers' animated action comedy sitcom
April 2005 Supersize She British television documentary
19 January 2008 Bigger, Stronger, Faster* American documentary film
27 April 2008 Hooked: Muscle Women American television documentary
? The Oliver Geissen Show German talk show
9 September 2008 Wipeout The Special Episode American television game show
9 May 2010 Twisted Sisters American documentary film
12 May 2017 Generation Iron 2 American documentary film
7 June 2017 Swole The Last of the Iron Sisters American-Canadian documentary webisode series
11 February 2019 American Dad! One-Woman Swole American adult animated sitcom

See also

References

  1. ^ a b The History & Evolution of Women's Bodybuilding Muscle Insider
  2. ^ a b c d Bunsell, Tanya (12 April 2013). Strong and Hard Women: An ethnography of female bodybuilding. Routledge. ISBN 9781136250866. Retrieved 26 August 2018 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Lowe, Maria R. (26 August 1998). Women of Steel: Female Bodybuilders and the Struggle for Self-definition. NYU Press. ISBN 9780814750940. Retrieved 26 August 2018 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Strength and Health magazine, August, 1972, page 43 by Ralph Pepino
  5. ^ Muscle Builder, Vol 14, Num 2, Page 24, May 1973 by Ben Weider
  6. ^ (PDF). Ifbb.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 13, 2013. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  7. ^ . 6 February 2003. Archived from the original on 6 February 2003. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  8. ^ "International Federation of Body-builders". Billdobbins.com. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  9. ^ "Photographic image of letter" (JPG). Billdobbins.com. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  10. ^ "KIM CHIZEVSKY: THE BEST FEMALE BODYBUILDER OF ALL TIME?". Bill Dobbins Photography.[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ "Photographic image of letter". Billdobbins.com. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  12. ^ . 7 December 2004. Archived from the original on 7 December 2004. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  13. ^ . 24 May 2005. Archived from the original on 24 May 2005. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  14. ^ . MESO-Rx. Archived from the original on 2014-01-08.
  15. ^ "Muscle Gossip #49- Iris Kyle Injured". RX Muscle. 2012. Retrieved June 11, 2012.
  16. ^ Raterman, David. "Bikini champ: 'You can still be a mom and get yourself in shape'". Sun-Sentinel.com. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
  17. ^ "Ms. International Dropped from 2014 Arnold Sports Festival". Hard Body News. June 7, 2013. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  18. ^ Tim Gardner Productions December 8, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ ANNOUNCING THE ‘2015 IFBB WINGS OF STRENGTH RISING PHOENIX WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS’ 2015-09-05 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Development, Muscular. "Margie Martin Wins Women's Bodybuilding - IFBB Texas Pro 2015". www.musculardevelopment.com. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  21. ^ "BREAKING: The Ms. Olympia Competition Coming Back In 2020". FitnessVolt. 15 September 2019. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
  22. ^ "Andrea Shaw Crowned 2020 Ms. Olympia Champion". December 19, 2020.
  23. ^ JAKE WOOD WAS A BODYBUILDING FAN LONG BEFORE BECOMING OLYMPIA OWNER, Muscle & Fitness, Roger Lockridge
  24. ^ Jake Wood: From Aerospace to owning the Olympia brand, Evolution of Bodybuilding, August 18, 2020, Kevin Grech
  25. ^ Olympia President Jake Wood Confirms Masters Olympia Coming Next Year: ‘Definitely by 2023’, Fitness Volt, February 14th 2022, Doug Murray
  26. ^ OLYMPIA Sold to Jake Wood, The Barbell, February 14, 2020, Greg Merritt
  27. ^ Jake Wood: His Vision For Make Bodybuilding for Every Body, Southern Muscle Guide, Rachel Payne
  28. ^ Monday Night Muscle Special Guest: Jake Wood, Digital Muscle, August 17, 2020, by Shawn Ray
  29. ^ If I Were Jake Wood What Changes Would I Make to the Olympia?, Strong Fitness, Matt Weik
  30. ^ "Jen Pasky Jaquin Receives First Ever Female Wheelchair Bodybuilder IFBB Pro Card". December 19, 2020.
  31. ^ "Jen Pasky Jaquin".
  32. ^ . Ifbbpro.com. Archived from the original on 2012-10-06. Retrieved 2012-10-03.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on November 19, 2022. Retrieved November 19, 2022.
  34. ^ Forbes, Gordan B., Rade Brooke, and Adams-Curtis Leah. "Body Dissatisfaction in Women and Men: The Role of Gender-Typing and Self-Esteem." Sex Roles 44.7 (2001): 461-84. Print.
  35. ^ Randall A., Hall S.,& Rogers, M. "Masculinity on stage: Competitive male bodybuilders." Studies in Popular Culture 14 (1992): 57-69.
  36. ^ Jennifer, Wesely. "Negotiating Gender, Bodybuilding, and the Natural/Unnatural Continuum." Sociology of Sport Journal 18.2 (2001): 162-80. Print.
  37. ^ Jennifer, Hargreaves. Sporting Females: Critical Issues in the History and Sociology of Women's Sports. London: Routledge, 1994. Print
  38. ^ a b Racanelli, Tony. "The Evolution: From Women's Bodybuilding to Women's Physique", RX Muscle, 3 February 2012.
  39. ^ Shilling, Chris, and Tanya Bunsell. "The Female Bodybuilder as a Gender Outlaw." Qualitative Research in Sport and Exercise 1.2 (2009): 141-59. Print
  40. ^ Generation Iron 2
  41. ^ Here’s How The 2022 Mr. Olympia Qualification System Works
  42. ^ "Afghan Women's Strength on Display in Gyms". Washington Times. Archived from the original on 2013-02-03. Retrieved 2012-11-12.
  43. ^ "Iran Female Bodybuilder Jailed For 'Un-Islamic Photos' Of Her Biceps And Fitness Workouts". Indiatimes.com. 19 January 2017. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  44. ^ "Unchained: Safe Steroid Stack?". Ironmanmagazine.com. Retrieved 2012-11-01.
  45. ^ a b Secret World of Women's Bodybuilding
  46. ^ Supersize She Joanna Thomas Female Bodybuilding Documentary
  47. ^ Hooked Muscle Women bodybuilding
  48. ^
  49. ^ FAQs: Bodybuilding After Breast Augmentation With Breast Implants, ImplantInfo.com
  50. ^ They Need Bosoms, too - Women Weight Lifters 2016-10-22 at the Wayback Machine, Cosmeticsurgery.com
  51. ^ Strauss, RH; Liggett, MT; Lanese, RR (1985). "Anabolic steroid use and perceived effects in ten weight-trained women athletes". JAMA. 253 (19): 2871–3. doi:10.1001/jama.1985.03350430083032. PMID 3989963.
  52. ^ Tricker, R; O'Neill, MR; Cook, D (1989). "The incidence of anabolic steroid use among competitive bodybuilders". J Drug Educ. 19 (4): 313–25. doi:10.2190/egt5-4ywd-qx15-flkk. PMID 2621538. S2CID 39716787.
  53. ^ Malarkey, WB; Strauss, RH; Leizman, DJ; Liggett, M; Demers, LM (1991). "The incidence of anabolic steroid use among competitive bodybuilders". Am J Obstet Gynecol. 165 (5 Pt 1): 1385–90. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(91)90374-z. PMID 1835565.
  54. ^ "McLean Hospital | News &amp Information : Press Releases". Mclean.harvard.edu. 2000-01-26. Retrieved 2012-10-03.
  55. ^ "Female Bodybuilding Without Steroids". Livestrong.com. Retrieved 2012-10-03.
  56. ^ "Women and Steroids". Ironmanmagazine.com. 7 October 2011. Retrieved 2012-11-01.

Further reading

  • "Rewind: review of February issues from five, 10 and 15 years ago", Flex, February 2003
  • Levin, Dan, "Here She Is, Miss, Well, What?", Sports Illustrated, March 17, 1980
  • Merritt, Greg, "15 Biggest Controversies and Shocking Moments in Bodybuilding History", Flex, February 2006
  • Roark, Joe, "Featuring 2005 Hall of Fame Inductee: Stacey Bentley", Flex, August 2005
  • Todd, Jan, "Bodybuilding", St. James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture, Gale Group, 1999
  • Women's Physique Publication, published from December 1976 through 1991 (also appeared under the names WASP and WSP)
  • Women's Physique World, published two to six times per year since 1984

External links

  • OIFBB Professional League
  • Canadian Bodybuilding Federation

female, bodybuilding, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, octob. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Female bodybuilding news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Female bodybuilding is the female component of competitive bodybuilding It began in the late 1970s when women began to take part in bodybuilding competitions 1 Dayana Cadeau posing at the 2007 Olympia Press Conference Elena Seiple posing at the 2005 NPC Juniors Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 1977 1979 1 3 1980 1989 1 4 1990 1999 1 5 2000 2010 1 6 2010 2014 1 7 2015 present 2 IFBB Hall of Fame 3 Competitions 3 1 Professional competitions 3 1 1 2023 IFBB Pro League Schedule 3 1 2 Qualifications for IFBB professional card 3 2 Amateur competitions 3 2 1 2022 Pro Card Winners 3 2 2 National Physique Committee NPC competitions 3 2 2 1 National level competitions 3 2 2 2 Qualifications for national level competitions 3 2 3 National Amateur Body Builders Association NABBA competitions 3 3 World Fitness Federation competitions 3 4 Natural bodybuilding competitions 3 4 1 National Gym Association competitions 4 Fitness and figure competition 5 Sexism and discrimination 5 1 Government bans 6 Performance enhancing drugs PEDs 6 1 Policies 6 1 1 Policies of the International Federation of BodyBuilding and Fitness IFBB 6 1 2 Policies of the IFBB Pro League and the National Physique Committee NPC 6 1 3 Mitigation efforts 6 1 4 Surveys and studies on side effects 7 Cultural references 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit Female bodybuilding originally developed as an outgrowth of not only the late nineteenth century European vaudeville and circus strongwomen acts Bernarr Macfadden s turn of the century women s physique competitions and the weightlifting of Abbye Pudgy Stockton but also as an outgrowth of the men s bodybuilding The contest formats of men s events during the 1950s to the mid 1970s had often been supplemented with either a women s beauty contest or bikini show These shows had little to do with women s bodybuilding as we know it today but they did serve as beginning or perhaps more properly as a doormat for the development of future bodybuilding shows 2 3 Physique contests for women date back to at least the 1960s with contests like Miss Physique Miss Body Beautiful U S A W B B G and Miss Americana I F B B Maria Elena Alberici as listed in the Almanac of Women s Bodybuilding won two national titles in one year Miss Body Beautiful U S A in 1972 promoted by Dan Lourie and Miss Americana in 1972 promoted by Joe Weider Mr Olympia Arnold Schwarzenegger was a judge at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York when Maria Elena Alberici aka Maria Lauren won Miss Americana 4 5 It was not until the late 1970s after the advent of the feminist movement and female powerlifting events that women were seen as capable of competing in their own bodybuilding competitions 2 3 1977 1979 Edit Prior to 1977 bodybuilding had been considered strictly a male oriented sport Henry McGhee described as the primary architect of competitive female bodybuilding was an employee of the Downtown Canton YMCA carried a strong belief that women should share the opportunity to display their physiques and the results of their weight training the way men had done for years The first official female bodybuilding competition was held in Canton Ohio in November 1977 and was called the Ohio Regional Women s Physique Championship It was judged strictly as a bodybuilding contest and was the first event of its kind for women Gina LaSpina the champion is considered the first recognized winner of a woman s bodybuilding contest The event organizer McGhee told the competitors that they would be judged like the men with emphasis on muscular development symmetry and physique presentation In 1978 McGhee organized the first National Women s Physique Championship along with the short lived United States Women s Physique Association USWPA which he formed to help organize women interested in competing in bodybuilding The USWPA became defunct in 1980 1 3 On August 18 1979 promoter George Snyder organized a female bodybuilding contest known as The Best in the World contest which was the first IFBB sanctioned event for women that awarded prize money to the top finishers with the winner receiving 2 500 It was considered the forerunner for the Ms Olympia competition Although sanctioned as a bodybuilding contest women were required to appear on stage in high heels Doris Barrilleaux found the Superior Physique Association SPA in 1978 the first women s bodybuilding organization run for women and by women She also began publishing the SPA News a newsletter dedicated exclusively to female bodybuilding SPA disseminated information to women about contests and proper training and dieting On April 29 1979 SPA held Florida s first official women s contest in which thirteen women competed The contest was held in Brandon Florida and promoted by Megas Gym and Doris Barrilleaux The winner of the show was Laura Combes Also in 1979 the IFBB formed the IFBB Women s Committee Christine Zane was appointed the first chairperson to serve as head of the newly formed committee One of the significant differences between the SPA and the IFBB was that while the IFBB was organized and run by men the SPA was run by women and for women 3 More contests started to appear in 1979 Some of these were the following The second U S Women s National Physique Championship won by Kay Baxter with Marilyn Schriner second and Cammie Lusko third The first IFBB Women s World Body Building Championship held on June 16 won by Lisa Lyon followed by Claudia Wilbourn Stella Martinez Stacey Bentley and Bette Brown The Best In The World contest held at Warminster Pennsylvania on August 18 featuring a 5 000 prize fund with 2 500 awarded for first place Patsy Chapman was the winner followed by April Nicotra Bentley Brown and Carla Dunlap Levin 1980 The Robby Robinson Classic held at the Embassy Auditorium in Los Angeles on August 25 Bentley finished first also winning best legs and best poser followed by Brown Lusko and Georgia Miller Roark 2005 Although these early events were regarded as bodybuilding contests the women wore high heeled shoes and did not clench their fists while posing Additionally they were not allowed to use the three so called men s poses the double biceps crab and lat spread The contests were generally held by promoters acting independently the sport still lacked a governing body That would change in 1980 1980 1989 Edit The 1980s is when female bodybuilding first took off The early 1980s signified a transition from the fashionably thin twiggy body to one carrying slightly more muscle mass 2 The National Physique Committee NPC held the first women s Nationals in 1980 Since its inception this has been the top amateur level competition for women in the US Laura Combes won the inaugural contest The first World Couples Championship was held in Atlantic City New Jersey on April 8 The winning couple was Stacey Bentley and Chris Dickerson with April Nicotra and Robby Robinson in second Bentley picked up her third consecutive victory in the Frank Zane Invitational on June 28 ahead of Rachel McLish Lynn Conkwright Suzy Green Patsy Chapman and Georgia Miller Fudge In 1980 the first Ms Olympia initially known as the Miss Olympia the most prestigious contest for professional female bodybuilders was held Initially the contest was promoted by George Snyder The contestants had to send in resumes and pictures and were hand picked by Snyder based on their potential to be fitness role models for the average American woman The first winner was Rachel McLish who had also won the NPC s USA Championship earlier in the year The contest was a major turning point for the sport of women s bodybuilding McLish turned out to be very promotable and inspired many future competitors to start training and competing Stacey Bentley finished in fifth place in what turned out to be her final competition Also in 1980 the American Federation of Women Bodybuilders was also founded representing a growing awareness of women bodybuilders in America Winning competitors such as Laurie Stark Ms Southern States 1988 helped to popularize the federation 2 3 Rachel McLish became the most successful competitor of the early 1980s She lost her Ms Olympia crown by finishing second to Kike Elomaa in 1981 but regained the title in 1982 A new major pro contest the Women s Pro World Championship was held for the first time in 1981 won by Lynn Conkwright Held annually through 1989 this was the second most prestigious contest of the time McLish added this title to her collection in 1982 George Snyder lost the rights to the Ms Olympia in 1982 and after this the contestants were no longer hand picked but instead qualified for the Ms Olympia through placings in lesser contests Women s bodybuilding was officially recognized as a sport discipline by the 1982 IFBB Congress in Bruges Belgium 6 As the sport grew the competitors level of training gradually increased as did the use of anabolic steroids most of the competitors in the earliest shows had very little weight training experience or steroid usage and the sport slowly evolved towards more muscular physiques This trend started to emerge in 1983 With McLish not competing in the big shows Carla Dunlap took both the Pro World and Ms Olympia titles Dunlap possessed a more muscular physique than either McLish or Elomaa and though she never repeated her successes of 1983 she would remain competitive for the rest of the decade In 1984 a new force emerged in women s bodybuilding Cory Everson won the NPC Nationals then defeated McLish to win the Ms Olympia At 5 9 and 150 pounds Everson s physique set a new standard She would go on to win six consecutive Ms Olympia titles from 1984 to 1989 before retiring undefeated as a professional the only female bodybuilder ever to accomplish this During this period women s bodybuilding was starting to achieve some serious mainstream exposure Lori Bowen winner of the 1984 Pro World Championship appeared in a widely broadcast commercial for Miller Lite beer with Rodney Dangerfield Additionally competitors Lynn Conkwright 1982 and Carla Dunlap 1984 were included in ABC s Superstars competition In 1985 a movie called Pumping Iron II The Women was released This film documented the preparation of several women for the 1983 Caesars Palace World Cup Championship Competitors prominently featured in the film were Kris Alexander Lori Bowen Lydia Cheng Carla Dunlap Bev Francis and Rachel McLish At the time Francis was actually a powerlifter though she soon made a successful transition to bodybuilding becoming one of the leading competitors of the late 1980s and early 1990s The main theme of the movie pitted the sultry and curvaceous Rachel McLish the current champion against the super muscular Bev Francis This rivalry brought to light the true dilemma of Women s Bodybuilding and exposed the root of all the controversy aesthetics vs size which was the focal point at that time and which still continues today In 1985 the National Women s and Mixed Pairs Bodybuilding Championships were held in Detroit Michigan by promoter bodybuilder Gema Wheeler Long It was the first amateur bodybuilding event televised internationally by ESPN Sports For several years in the mid 1980s NBC broadcast coverage of the Ms Olympia contest on their Sportsworld program The taped footage was telecast months after the contest and was usually used as secondary material to fill out programs featuring events such as boxing Typically the broadcasts included only the top several women Nevertheless Rachel McLish and some of her leading competitors were receiving national TV coverage McLish authored two New York Times best selling books Flex Appeal 1984 and Perfect Parts 1987 and was also starring in action films The popularity was growing and women were being empowered and inspired to train In 1983 the top prize money for the women bodybuilding was 50 000 equal to that of male bodybuilding The Ms International contest was introduced in 1986 first won by Erika Geisen In 1987 the Amateur Athletic Union AAU who were sanctioning amateur bodybuilding at the time positioned the International as a premiere amateur event It was held in Atlantic City New Jersey The AAU brought Serge Nubret a former Mr World Mr Universe and Mr Europe from France to be the featured guest poser Since 1988 the competition has been sanctioned by the IFBB Since the demise of the Pro World Championship after 1989 the Ms International has been second in prestige only to the Ms Olympia The 1989 Ms International was noteworthy for the fact that the original winner Tonya Knight was later disqualified for using a surrogate for her drug test at the 1988 Ms Olympia contest Consequently runner up Jackie Paisley received the 1989 title Knight was suspended from IFBB competition through the end of 1990 and was forced to return her prize money from the 1988 Ms Olympia and 1989 Ms International a total of 12 000 Merritt 2006 1990 1999 Edit Normally competitors must qualify for the Ms Olympia by achieving certain placings in lesser pro contests However the cancellation of the Women s Pro World contest in 1990 left only the Ms International as a Ms Olympia qualifier Consequently the IFBB decided to open the Ms Olympia to all women with pro cards and a field of thirty competitors entered Lenda Murray a new pro from Michigan earned a decisive victory and emerged as the successor to Cory Everson Murray became the next dominant figure in the sport A new professional contest the Jan Tana Classic was introduced in 1991 The contest was named for its promoter a marketer of tanning products and ran annually until 2003 with the departure of Wayne Demilia it was later briefly revived in 2007 The inaugural event was won by Sue Gafner The Jan Tana filled the void left by the Women s Pro World contest and occupied the number three slot on the pro circuit throughout its lifetime 1991 also saw Tonya Knight return to competition winning the Ms International The 1991 Ms Olympia contest was the first to be televised live Lenda Murray faced a serious challenge from the 1990 runner up Bev Francis Francis had started bodybuilding in the mid 1980s converting over from powerlifting Over the years she had gradually refined her physique to be more in line with judging standards However she came to the 1991 contest noticeably larger than in previous years Francis was leading going into the night show with Murray needing all of the first place votes to retain her title Murray managed to do just that winning a somewhat controversial decision by one point In 1992 there was more controversy this time at the 1992 Ms International contest In response to the increased size displayed by Murray and Francis at the previous Ms Olympia along with increasing drug abuse and androgenic side effects the IFBB made an attempt to feminize the sport The IFBB led by Ben Weider had created a series of femininity rules one line in the judging rules said that competitors should not be too big Since extreme size generally requires extreme AAS usage with more women gaining more androgenic masculine side effects this was clearly an attempt to retain a higher level of female aesthetics and maintain the standard The judges guide to the competitors stated that they were looking for a highly feminine and optimally developed but not emaciated physique The contest winner was Germany s Anja Schreiner a blue eyed blonde with a symmetrical physique who weighed 130 pounds at 5 7 The announcement of her victory met with so much booing from those who prefer size over aesthetics that Arnold Schwarzenegger had to step on stage to address the audience saying the hell with the judges Many observers felt that the IFBB had instructed the judges to select the most marketable aesthetic physique not the most muscular The 1992 Ms International is also famous for an incident involving British competitor Paula Bircumshaw Bircumshaw was the same height as Schreiner and possessed a similar level of symmetry and definition but carried significantly more muscle weighing in at 162 pounds She was the clear audience favorite but was relegated to eighth place Normally the top ten contestants are called out at the end of the show when the winners are announced but the judges only called back the top six hoping to keep Bircumshaw backstage This resulted in an uproar from the crowd With the audience chanting her name Bircumshaw returned to the stage along with the top six competitors Advertising in Muscle amp Fitness for the 1992 Ms Olympia featured Schreiner prominently relegating two time defending champion Murray to a small also competing notice Nevertheless Murray also apparently met the femininity requirements and managed to retain her title Schreiner finished sixth and promptly retired from competition Following the 1992 debacles the judging rules were rewritten The new rules retained provisions for aesthetics but allowed the contests to be judged as physique contests Lenda Murray continued to dominate the sport from 1990 to 1995 matching Cory Everson s record of six consecutive Ms Olympia titles Murray s closest rival was probably Laura Creavalle who won the Ms International title three times and twice was runner up to Murray at the Olympia During this time some additional professional shows were held in addition to the three mainstays The 1994 schedule included the Canada Pro Cup won by Laura Binetti and the first of three annual Grand Prix events in Prague won by Drorit Kernes In 1996 the Grand Prix in Slovakia was added Besides providing the competitors with extra opportunities to win prize money these contests also served as additional Ms Olympia qualifiers The mid 1990s of bodybuilding was known as the Dorian Era AKA the drug years In 1996 Kim Chizevsky Nicholls would win the Ms Intentional and dethroned the Ms International champion Laura Creavalle Also in 1996 she would unseat six time defending champion Lenda Murray This was the first time that a pro female bodybuilder would win both the Ms International and Ms Olympia in the same year She would retain her Ms Olympia title in 1997 against Lenda Murray who retired afterwards At the 1997 Ms Olympia she competed at 157 pounds 71 kg In 1998 she again won the Ms Olympia title The 1998 contest was held in Prague Czech Republic the first time the competition had been held outside the United States At the 1998 EFBB British Championships Joanna Thomas won the lightweight and overall title becoming the youngest woman in the world to ever to win an IFBB pro card at the age of 21 7 The 1999 Ms Olympia was originally scheduled to be held on October 9 in Santa Monica California However one month before the scheduled date the IFBB announced that the contest had been cancelled 8 The main cause was the withdrawal of promoter Jarka Kastnerova who promoted the 1998 contest in Prague for financial reasons including a low number of advance ticket sales for the 1999 event 9 The backlash following the announcement led to a flurry of activity with the contest being rescheduled as part of the Women s Extravaganza promoted by Kenny Kassel and Bob Bonham in Secaucus New Jersey on October 2 Last minute sponsorship came from several sources most significantly in the form of 50 000 from Flex magazine Amid all the turmoil Kim Chizevsky Nicholls won her fourth consecutive title Chizevsky Nicholls decided to retire from bodybuilding after winning the 1999 Ms Olympia According to Bill Dobbins she retired due to gender discrimination guidelines set up by the IFBB that advocated for more femininity and less muscularity in the sport 10 2000 2010 Edit Betty Pariso posing at the 2001 Extravaganza Strength Contest The IFBB introduced several changes to Ms Olympia in 2000 The first change was that Ms Olympia contest would no longer be held as a separate contest instead became part of the Olympia Weekend in Las Vegas and held the day before the men s show The second change was when heavyweight and lightweight classes where added The third change was the new judging guidelines for presentations were introduced A letter to the competitors from Jim Manion chairman of the Professional Judges Committee stated that women would be judged on healthy appearance face makeup and skin tone The criteria given in Manion s letter included the statement symmetry presentation separations and muscularity BUT NOT TO THE EXTREME 11 Of the three pro contests held in 2000 only the Ms International named an overall winner Vickie Gates who had won the contest in 1999 The Jan Tana Classic and the Ms Olympia simply had weight class winners With Kim Chizevsky Nicholls retiring from bodybuilding to pursue fitness competition the Ms Olympia title was shared by class winners Andrulla Blanchette and Valentina Chepiga The 2001 pro schedule opened routinely enough with Vickie Gates winning the Ms International title for the third consecutive year However the Ms Olympia featured a surprise winner as Juliette Bergmann returned to competition at age 42 Bergmann the 1986 Pro World champion had not competed since 1989 Entering the Olympia as a lightweight she defeated heavyweight winner Iris Kyle for the overall title In the five years that the Ms Olympia was contested in multiple weight classes this was the only time that the lightweight winner took the overall title In 2002 six time Olympia winner Lenda Murray returned after a five year absence Bergmann lightweight and Murray heavyweight won the two weight classes in both 2002 and 2003 Murray won the overall title both years setting a new standard of eight Ms Olympia titles Murray was unseated as Ms Olympia for the second time in 2004 Iris Kyle a top pro competitor since 1999 defeated Murray in a close battle in the heavyweight class and bested lightweight winner Dayana Cadeau for the overall title Kyle became only the second woman to win both the Ms International and Ms Olympia titles in the same year matching Kim Chizevsky Nicholls s feat of 1996 Contestant lineup of female bodybuilders at the FCPAQ 2006 Championship in Montreal Canada On 6 December 2004 IFBB Professional Division Vice Chairman Jim Manion issued a memo introducing the so called 20 percent rule to all IFBB professional female athletes It read For aesthetics and health reasons the IFBB Professional Division requests that female athletes in Bodybuilding Fitness and Figure decrease the amount of muscularity by a factor of 20 This request for a 20 decrease in the amount of muscularity applies to those female athletes whose physiques require the decrease regardless of whether they compete in Bodybuilding Fitness or Figure All professional judges have been advised of the proper criteria for assessing female physiques Needless to say the directive created quite a stir and left many women wondering if they were one of those female athletes whose physiques require the decrease 12 On April 20 2005 the IFBB adopted by a 9 for 1 against and 3 no votes for Resolution 2005 0001 which announced that starting with the 2005 Ms Olympia that the IFBB was abolishing the weight class system adopted in 2000 13 The 2005 contest season saw another double winner as Yaxeni Oriquen Garcia won her third Ms International title then edged out defending champion Iris Kyle to win the Ms Olympia Also notable in 2005 was the return of Jitka Harazimova who had last competed in 1999 Harazimova won the Charlotte Pro contest in her return to competition qualifying her for the Ms Olympia where she finished fourth Also in 2005 the documentary Supersize She was released The documentary focused on focused on British professional female bodybuilder Joanna Thomas and her competing at the 2004 GNC Show of Strength and the 2004 Ms Olympia In 2006 Iris Kyle won both the Ms International and the Ms Olympia repeating her accomplishment of 2004 Iris won the Ms International and Ms Olympia for a third time in 2007 Also 2007 saw the brief revival of the Jan Tana Classic which featured two weight classes for the female competitors The class titles were won by Stephanie Kessler heavyweight and Sarah Dunlap lightweight with Dunlap named the overall winner There was a bit of a controversy in the 2008 Ms International Iris Kyle was placed 7th due to bumps on her glutes which according to head IFBB judge Sandy Ranalli was distortions in her physique 14 Yaxeni Oriquen Garcia went on to win the 2008 Ms Olympia Iris made up for this by winning the 2008 Ms Olympia 2010 2014 Edit Female bodybuilders of the U S Army Military Police at the 2013 Muscle Beach Classic Camp Foster Okinawa Japan Iris Kyle continued her success by winning both the Ms International and the Ms Olympia in 2009 2010 and 2011 In 2012 Iris suffered an injury to her leg and thus couldn t attend the 2012 Ms International 15 Yaxeni Oriquen Garcia won the 2012 Ms International Iris went on to win the 2012 Ms Olympia and winning her seventh consecutive Olympia win and surpassing Lenda Murry s and she went on to retake the 2013 Ms International after not being able to attend the 2012 Ms International due to leg injury At the 2013 Ms Olympia Iris won her ninth overall Olympia win thus giving her more overall Olympia titles than any other bodybuilder male or female In 2012 Venezuelan Adriana Martin won the National Physique Committee s South Florida Bikini Championship in the over 30 category 16 At the time the bikini division was a new element of the competition On June 7 2013 event promoter of the Arnold Sports Festival Jim Lorimer announced that in 2014 the Arnold Classic 212 professional men s bodybuilding division would replace the Ms International women s bodybuilding competition at the 2014 Arnold Sports Festival Lorimer in a statement said The Arnold Sports Festival was proud to support women s bodybuilding through the Ms International for the past quarter century but in keeping with demands of our fans the time has come to introduce the Arnold Classic 212 beginning in 2014 We are excited to create a professional competitive platform for some of the IFBB Pro League s most popular competitors 17 At the 2014 Ms Olympia Iris Kyle won her tenth overall Olympia win beating her own previous record of nine overall Olympia wins She also won her ninth consecutive Olympia title in a row beating Lee Haney s and Ronnie Coleman s record eight consecutive Olympia titles in a row thus giving her more overall and consecutive Olympia wins than any other bodybuilder male or female of all time After winning she announced that she will be retiring from bodybuilding The 2014 Ms Olympia was the last Ms Olympia competition held until that competition s relaunch in 2020 2015 present Edit Hofit Sharon winner of the Miss Bikini 2021 competition at the World Natural Bodybuilding Federation in Israel On March 8 2015 Wings of Strength announced the creation of the Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships Regarded as the successor to the Ms Olympia Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships adopted the point qualification system that the Ms Olympia had 18 19 On August 22 2015 Margie Martin won the title and best poser award for the first 2015 Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships 20 Ms Olympia relaunched in 2020 and Andrea Shaw won Ms Olympia that year 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Also in 2020 the American bodybuilder Jen Pasky Jaquin received the first IFBB pro card for female wheelchair bodybuilding 30 31 IFBB Hall of Fame EditThe IFBB established a Hall of Fame in 1999 The following women have been inducted 32 1999 Carla Dunlap Cory Everson and Rachel McLish 2000 Bev Francis Lisa Lyon and Abbye Stockton 2001 Kay Baxter Diana Dennis and Kike Elomaa 2002 Laura Combes 2003 Lynn Conkwright 2004 Ellen van Maris 2005 Stacey Bentley 2006 Claudia Wilbourn 2007 Laura Creavalle 2008 Kim Chizevsky Nicholls 2009 Juliette Bergmann 2010 Lenda Murray and Vickie Gates 2011 Tonya Knight and Anja LangerCompetitions EditProfessional competitions Edit See also International Federation of BodyBuilding and Fitness List of professional bodybuilding competitions and Professional bodybuilding 2023 IFBB Pro League Schedule Edit Competition Date Place Promoter Prize money2023 IFBB Pro League Vancouver Island Showdown Pro 4 23 23 Victoria British Columbia Canada Corey Swiergoz2023 IFBB Pro League New York Pro 5 20 23 Teaneck New Jersey United States Steve Weinberger2023 IFBB Pro League Toronto Pro Supershow 6 4 23 Toronto Ontario Canada Ron Hache2023 IFBB Pro League Puerto Rico Pro 6 24 25 23 San Juan Puerto Rico Tim Gardner2023 IFBB Pro League Mr Big Evolution Pro 7 9 23 Estoril Lisbon District Portugal Mr Big Evolution2023 IFBB Pro League Lenda Murray Atlanta Pro Masters Over 40 7 15 16 23 Duluth Georgia United States Wings of Strength2023 IFBB Pro League Chicago Pro Masters Over 40 Masters Over 50 Masters Over 55 7 21 22 23 Chicago Illinois United States Tim Gardner2023 IFBB Pro League Tampa Pro Masters Over 40 Masters Over 50 Masters Over 55 8 4 5 23 Tampa Florida United States2023 IFBB Pro League Masters Olympia 8 26 27 23 Romania Wings of StrengthAlina Popa2023 IFBB Pro League Masters Pro World Pro Championships Masters Over 40 Masters Over 50 Masters Over 60 9 3 23 Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United States Gary Udit2023 IFBB Pro League European Pro Championships 9 17 23 Alicante Valencian Community Spain Emillio MartinezBarbara Bagnuolo2023 IFBB Pro League Rising Phoenix Pro 9 30 23 Phoenix Arizona United States Tim Gardner2023 IFBB Pro League Ms Olympia 11 3 5 23 Orlando Florida United States Dan Solomon2023 IFBB Pro League Wings of Strength Romania Muscle Fest Pro 11 11 23 Bucharest Romania Tim GardnerAlina PopaQualifications for IFBB professional card Edit In order to become an IFBB Pro you must first earn your IFBB Pro Card In order to win a bodybuilder looking to do this must first win a regional contest weight class When a bodybuilder wins or places highly they earn an invite to compete at their country s National Championships contest for that year The winners of each weight class at the National Championships will then go head to head in a separate contest to see who is the overall Champion for the year Depending on the federation the overall Champion will be offered a pro card Some federations offer Pro Cards to winners of individual weight class champions This can mean that each year more than one bodybuilder may earn a Pro Card In the United States the NPC National Physique Committee is affiliated with the IFBB and awards IFBB Pro Cards The following competitions award IFBB Pro Cards NPC Women s National Championships has three weight classes Lightweight middleweight and heavyweight All three class winners in the contest are eligible for professional status NPC USA Championships has three weight classes The overall winner is eligible for professional status IFBB World Championships each weight class winner is eligible for pro status IFBB North American Championships the overall winners is eligible for professional status Amateur competitions Edit 2022 Pro Card Winners Edit See also List of female professional bodybuilders Competition Place Date Name CountryCaribbean Bermuda Pro Qualifier Hamilton Bermuda March 31 2022 Luciana Dasilveira BermudaNPC Teen Collegiate amp Masters National Championships Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United States July 20 2022 Rebecca Woody United StatesLinda PerryEunice Martinez KitchenLori ConleyErin HawkinsLena BetkaMarika JonesNPC USA Championships Las Vegas Nevada United States July 29 2022 Gessica CampbellOlympia Amateur Eastern Europe Bucharest Romania August 22 2022 Soos Alexandra HungaryNPC North American Championships Pro Qualifier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United States August 31 2022 Ava Melillo United StatesLea GeigerLea GeigerSarah Boes CanadaRomania Muscle Fest Pro Qualifier Bucharest Romania November 12 2022 Emilia Balkova Bulgaria 33 National Physique Committee NPC competitions Edit Main article National Physique Committee National level competitions Edit Qualifications for national level competitions Edit In order to qualify for national level competitions a competitor must place in one of the following Rank in the top three in their weight class of the Women s open division in a contest that has been sanctioned as a national qualifier First overall in an area championship of the open division Top two in a weight class from an area level national qualifier Overall winner in a district level competition designated as a national qualifier Winner of the weight class in a regional competition designated as a national qualifier Weight class winners from the Armed Forces Qualifications for Junior USA Teen and Masters NationalsTo qualify for Junior USA Teen or Masters Nationals a competitor must place in one of the following Top five in a weight class from a national level competition Top three in a weight class in the Teen or Masters Nationals Class winner in the Armed Forces Top three in a weight class from an Area national qualifier Top two from a district level national qualifierQualifications for USA and Junior NationalsIn order to qualify for USA and Junior Nationals a competitor must place in one of the following Top five in a weight class from the Nationals USA Team Universe or Junior Nationals Top three in a weight class from the Teen Collegiate Masters Nationals Class winner in the Armed Forces First overall in an area level national qualifier Top two in an area level national qualifier Weight class winner from a district level competition designated as a national qualifierQualifications for Nationals and North American ChampionshipsIn order to qualify for Nationals or North American Championships a competitor must place in one of the following Top five in a weight class from the Nationals NPC USA or North American Championships Top five in a weight class from the Team Universe Junior Nationals or Junior USA Top five in a weight class from Teen Collegiate Masters Nationals Top two in a weight class in the Armed Forces Top two in a weight class in an area level national qualifier Overall winner in a district level competition designated as a national qualifier Class winners at the US and Nationals will be given five years of eligibility National Amateur Body Builders Association NABBA competitions Edit Main article National Amateur Bodybuilders Association NABBA European Championships NABBA UniverseWorld Fitness Federation competitions Edit Main article World Fitness Federation Natural bodybuilding competitions Edit Main article Natural bodybuilding National Gym Association competitions Edit Main article National Gym AssociationFitness and figure competition EditMain article Fitness and figure competition A female competitor during a bodybuilding show in Asia There are two other categories of competition that are closely related to bodybuilding and are frequently held as part of the same event Fitness competition has a swimsuit round and a round that is judged on the performance of a routine including aerobics dance or gymnastics Figure competition is a newer format which combines female bodybuilding and gymnastics altogether is judged solely on symmetry and muscle tone with much less emphasis on muscle size than in bodybuilding In a competition each woman poses in a bikini She must strike different poses while facing forward to the side and to the rear During her poses she must emphasize her arms shoulders chest stomach buttocks and legs by flexing them The judges carefully observe evaluate then numerically grade the firmness and shapeliness of the woman s physique In the figure division the same judging criteria is applied but without a fitness routine Sexism and discrimination EditMisogynistic attitudes towards female bodybuilding have existed ever since the creation of the sport as the body type female bodybuilders possess is highly different from the beauty standard of a skinny and delicate woman 34 In Studies in Popular Culture A J Randall et al describe this as the result of a patriarchal society which emphasizes that femininity is created by altering one s body to cater to society s gendered expectations 35 When women venture away from gender expectations society s view of their femininity begins to diminish Female Bodybuilders experience this criticism of their body as they build bodies which are commonly associated with the masculine identity 36 Despite this there is a very dedicated female bodybuilding fan base The International Federation of Bodybuilding amp Fitness has made several rules changes on the sport of female bodybuilding that relate to expected feminine identity In 1992 the IFBB attempted to feminize the sport by making the judges deduct points from competitors who were too big meaning too muscular 37 The IFBB then made a rule change in 2000 that emphasized a need for the women to decrease muscularity once again 38 Before Ms International in 2005 the IFBB created another rule that required the women competing to decrease their own muscle mass by 20 percent to compete 38 Yet the men s bodybuilding rules have not changed in the same time period In Qualitative Research in Sport and Exercise Chris Shilling and Tanya Bunsell state that all of these rule changes reflect the IFBB s attempts to make women more closely fit gender expectations as they all emphasize the need for the female bodybuilders to become less massive 39 Bunsell and Shilling further state that male bodybuilding hasn t changed because their bodies are seen as masculine in identity while female bodybuilding rules inhibit females from reaching the same muscularity In the documentary film Generation Iron 2 Iris Kyle who stated she wanted to compete at the 2016 Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships received an email from a show promoter that she had to requalify to attend Under the Ms Olympia rules former Ms Olympia champions were qualified for life She stated she had been to do some work with them that she doesn t agree with but declined the offer When asked to clarify she stated that sex sells and that female bodybuilders sometimes sell muscle worship While she was later allowed a special invite to the 2016 Wings of Strength Rising Phoenix World Championships she declined to attend instead focusing on training her boyfriend Hidetada Yamagishi for the 2017 Arnold Classic Men s Physique and focusing on their business venture 40 41 Government bans Edit Afghanistan Women s bodybuilding is forbidden 42 Iran On January 18 2017 an Iranian female bodybuilder was arrested for nudity after she posted selfies of her flexing sleeveless on social media Nude in this context refers to women not wearing a headscarf or revealing body parts like arms and legs 43 Performance enhancing drugs PEDs EditAccording to an Iron Man article published on 1 May 2003 by Greg Zulak who cites Dan Duchaine author of the book Underground Steroid Handbook and worked with countless world class female bodybuilders listed the following performance enhancing drugs that female bodybuilders may use Oxymetholone Anadrol Oxandrolone Anavar Clenbuterol Nandrolone decanoate Deca Durabolin Methandrostenolone Dianabol Boldenone Equipose Fluoxymesterone Halotestin Human growth hormone Ethylestrenol Maxibolan Tamoxifen Novaldex Methenolone Primabolan Trenbolone Stanozolol Winstrol Testosterone 44 Policies Edit In 2001 Katie Arnoldi a former bodybuilder who wrote the book Chemical Pink about her bodybuilding career said industry insiders know what goes on but the sport is reluctant to test bodybuilders more strictly for steroids because big physiques draw big profits 45 In the 2005 television documentary Supersize She when Joanna Thomas was asked about steroid usage she said sarcastically Yeah it s all about the steroids you know We just take steroids and look like this Try this at home everyone for a few weeks and see how you look She also said Take what you like A lot of people would not look like me It s all of my life since I was 15 years old dedication to this sport It s not just about what people take It s this as she pointed to her brain 46 Policies of the International Federation of BodyBuilding and Fitness IFBB Edit Main article International Federation of BodyBuilding and Fitness According to the 2008 MSNBC documentary Hooked Muscle Women the IFBB does not routinely drug test athletes who compete in the federation Also in the documentary Kristy Hawkins said she thought steroids were prevalent in every sport but with us it s just more obvious 47 Policies of the IFBB Pro League and the National Physique Committee NPC Edit Main article National Physique Committee In 2001 Sandy Ranalli of the NPC said drug testing can just be too expensive To be honest with you we re such a small sport it s just not financially feasible says Ranalli of drug testing the athletes She said however they try to do random testing occasionally Ranalli also said that There s steroids in every sport But to say you re not going to get to the competitive level without steroids that itself is false 48 45 Mitigation efforts Edit Bodybuilding causes increased lean body mass and decreased body fat which causes breast tissue reduction in female athletes 49 whereas the current trend regarding the judges search for feminine physique at competitions makes compensative breast augmentation with breast implants an increasingly popular procedure among female bodybuilders 50 It is estimated that 80 of professional female bodybuilders get breast implants so they can maintain upper to lower body symmetry 3 Surveys and studies on side effects Edit A 1985 interview of ten weight trained women athletes who consistently used anabolic steroids were interviewed about their patterns of drug use and the perceived effects Anabolic steroids were used in a cyclical manner often with several drugs taken simultaneously All participants believed that muscle size and strength were increased in association with anabolic steroid use Most also noted a deepening of the voice increased facial hair increased aggressiveness clitoral enlargement and menstrual irregularities The participants were willing to tolerate these side effects but thought that such changes might be unacceptable to many women 51 A 1989 study of competitive female bodybuilders from Kansas and Missouri found that 10 use steroids on a regular basis The female bodybuilders reported that they had used an average of two different steroids including nandrolone oxandrolone testosterone metandienone boldenone and stanozolol 52 A 1991 study of nine female weightlifters using steroids and seven not using these agents has found that it appears that the self administration of testosterone and anabolic steroids is increasingly practiced by women in sports where strength and endurance are important Of the nine anabolic steroid users seven took multiple anabolic steroids simultaneously Thirty fold elevations of serum testosterone were noted in the women injecting testosterone In three of these women serum testosterone levels exceeded the upper limits for normal male testosterone concentrations A significant compensatory decrease in sex hormone binding globulin and a decrease in thyroid binding proteins were noted in the women steroid users Also a 39 decrease in high density lipoprotein cholesterol was noted in the steroid using weightlifters Most of the subjects in this study used anabolic steroids continuously which raises concern about premature atherosclerosis and other disease processes developing in these women 53 A 2000 survey found that one third of the female bodybuilders reported past or current steroid use and almost half of those who were non steroid users admitted use of performance enhancing drugs such as ephedrine The study investigators found that women who used steroids were more muscular than their non steroid using counterparts and were also more likely to use other performance enhancing substances 54 Despite its popularity among female bodybuilding usage of steroids among female bodybuilders unlike male bodybuilding is a taboo subject and rarely admitted use among female bodybuilders Although the IFBB officially bans the usage of performance enhancing drugs it does not test athletes rigorously 55 A 2009 survey of both men and women found that while men overall use anabolic androgenic steroids more women than men who use anabolic androgenic steroids were competitive bodybuilders or weightlifters with only 33 3 describing themselves as recreational lifters with no interest in competition The survey found that 75 of the women experienced clitoral enlargement half had irregular periods and showed changes in their voices Despite this 90 said they would continue to use steroids 56 Cultural references EditRelease date Media title Episode title Media type3 May 1985 Pumping Iron II The Women American documentary film1995 Geraldo American daytime television tabloid talk show2000 On the Inside Bodybuilders American television documentary show18 August 2000 The Cell American German film16 October 2000 Louis Theroux s Weird Weekends Body Building British television documentary show2001 The Greatest Bodies American television documentary3 May 2002 Sabrina the Teenage Witch Driving Mr Goodman American television sitcom2 February 2003 The Simpsons The Strong Arms of the Ma American animated sitcom18 October 2004 Taboo Gender Benders American documentary television show12 December 2004 Totally Spies The Incredible Bulk French Canadian children and teenagers animated action comedy sitcomApril 2005 Supersize She British television documentary19 January 2008 Bigger Stronger Faster American documentary film27 April 2008 Hooked Muscle Women American television documentary The Oliver Geissen Show German talk show9 September 2008 Wipeout The Special Episode American television game show9 May 2010 Twisted Sisters American documentary film12 May 2017 Generation Iron 2 American documentary film7 June 2017 Swole The Last of the Iron Sisters American Canadian documentary webisode series11 February 2019 American Dad One Woman Swole American adult animated sitcomSee also EditAnna Cervantes Bill Dobbins List of professional female bodybuilders List of professional bodybuilding competitions List of female fitness amp figure competitors Pumping Iron II The Women Sthenolagnia Strongwoman Supersize She Women s Physique WorldReferences Edit a b The History amp Evolution of Women s Bodybuilding Muscle Insider a b c d Bunsell Tanya 12 April 2013 Strong and Hard Women An ethnography of female bodybuilding Routledge ISBN 9781136250866 Retrieved 26 August 2018 via Google Books a b c d e f Lowe Maria R 26 August 1998 Women of Steel Female Bodybuilders and the Struggle for Self definition NYU Press ISBN 9780814750940 Retrieved 26 August 2018 via Google Books Strength and Health magazine August 1972 page 43 by Ralph Pepino Muscle Builder Vol 14 Num 2 Page 24 May 1973 by Ben Weider IFBBrulebook PDF Ifbb com Archived from the original PDF on August 13 2013 Retrieved February 11 2013 Joanna Thomas 2001 Jan Tana Winner 6 February 2003 Archived from the original on 6 February 2003 Retrieved 26 August 2018 International Federation of Body builders Billdobbins com Retrieved 26 August 2018 Photographic image of letter JPG Billdobbins com Retrieved 26 August 2018 KIM CHIZEVSKY THE BEST FEMALE BODYBUILDER OF ALL TIME Bill Dobbins Photography permanent dead link Photographic image of letter Billdobbins com Retrieved 26 August 2018 IFBB Advisory Notice 7 December 2004 Archived from the original on 7 December 2004 Retrieved 26 August 2018 IFBB Advisory Notice 2005 003 24 May 2005 Archived from the original on 24 May 2005 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Iris Kyle Discusses Ms International Results with Pro Bodybuilding Weekly MESO Rx Archived from the original on 2014 01 08 Muscle Gossip 49 Iris Kyle Injured RX Muscle 2012 Retrieved June 11 2012 Raterman David Bikini champ You can still be a mom and get yourself in shape Sun Sentinel com Retrieved 2018 11 20 Ms International Dropped from 2014 Arnold Sports Festival Hard Body News June 7 2013 Retrieved December 4 2013 Tim Gardner Productions Archived December 8 2015 at the Wayback Machine ANNOUNCING THE 2015 IFBB WINGS OF STRENGTH RISING PHOENIX WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS Archived 2015 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Development Muscular Margie Martin Wins Women s Bodybuilding IFBB Texas Pro 2015 www musculardevelopment com Retrieved 26 August 2018 BREAKING The Ms Olympia Competition Coming Back In 2020 FitnessVolt 15 September 2019 Retrieved 2020 04 03 Andrea Shaw Crowned 2020 Ms Olympia Champion December 19 2020 JAKE WOOD WAS A BODYBUILDING FAN LONG BEFORE BECOMING OLYMPIA OWNER Muscle amp Fitness Roger Lockridge Jake Wood From Aerospace to owning the Olympia brand Evolution of Bodybuilding August 18 2020 Kevin Grech Olympia President Jake Wood Confirms Masters Olympia Coming Next Year Definitely by 2023 Fitness Volt February 14th 2022 Doug Murray OLYMPIA Sold to Jake Wood The Barbell February 14 2020 Greg Merritt Jake Wood His Vision For Make Bodybuilding for Every Body Southern Muscle Guide Rachel Payne Monday Night Muscle Special Guest Jake Wood Digital Muscle August 17 2020 by Shawn Ray If I Were Jake Wood What Changes Would I Make to the Olympia Strong Fitness Matt Weik Jen Pasky Jaquin Receives First Ever Female Wheelchair Bodybuilder IFBB Pro Card December 19 2020 Jen Pasky Jaquin IFBB Pro Hall of Fame Ifbbpro com Archived from the original on 2012 10 06 Retrieved 2012 10 03 2022 Pro Card Winners Archived from the original on November 19 2022 Retrieved November 19 2022 Forbes Gordan B Rade Brooke and Adams Curtis Leah Body Dissatisfaction in Women and Men The Role of Gender Typing and Self Esteem Sex Roles 44 7 2001 461 84 Print Randall A Hall S amp Rogers M Masculinity on stage Competitive male bodybuilders Studies in Popular Culture 14 1992 57 69 Jennifer Wesely Negotiating Gender Bodybuilding and the Natural Unnatural Continuum Sociology of Sport Journal 18 2 2001 162 80 Print Jennifer Hargreaves Sporting Females Critical Issues in the History and Sociology of Women s Sports London Routledge 1994 Print a b Racanelli Tony The Evolution From Women s Bodybuilding to Women s Physique RX Muscle 3 February 2012 Shilling Chris and Tanya Bunsell The Female Bodybuilder as a Gender Outlaw Qualitative Research in Sport and Exercise 1 2 2009 141 59 Print Generation Iron 2 Here s How The 2022 Mr Olympia Qualification System Works Afghan Women s Strength on Display in Gyms Washington Times Archived from the original on 2013 02 03 Retrieved 2012 11 12 Iran Female Bodybuilder Jailed For Un Islamic Photos Of Her Biceps And Fitness Workouts Indiatimes com 19 January 2017 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Unchained Safe Steroid Stack Ironmanmagazine com Retrieved 2012 11 01 a b Secret World of Women s Bodybuilding Supersize She Joanna Thomas Female Bodybuilding Documentary Hooked Muscle Women bodybuilding BUILT amp BROKEN What bodybuilders do to their bodies and brains FAQs Bodybuilding After Breast Augmentation With Breast Implants ImplantInfo com They Need Bosoms too Women Weight Lifters Archived 2016 10 22 at the Wayback Machine Cosmeticsurgery com Strauss RH Liggett MT Lanese RR 1985 Anabolic steroid use and perceived effects in ten weight trained women athletes JAMA 253 19 2871 3 doi 10 1001 jama 1985 03350430083032 PMID 3989963 Tricker R O Neill MR Cook D 1989 The incidence of anabolic steroid use among competitive bodybuilders J Drug Educ 19 4 313 25 doi 10 2190 egt5 4ywd qx15 flkk PMID 2621538 S2CID 39716787 Malarkey WB Strauss RH Leizman DJ Liggett M Demers LM 1991 The incidence of anabolic steroid use among competitive bodybuilders Am J Obstet Gynecol 165 5 Pt 1 1385 90 doi 10 1016 0002 9378 91 90374 z PMID 1835565 McLean Hospital News amp amp Information Press Releases Mclean harvard edu 2000 01 26 Retrieved 2012 10 03 Female Bodybuilding Without Steroids Livestrong com Retrieved 2012 10 03 Women and Steroids Ironmanmagazine com 7 October 2011 Retrieved 2012 11 01 Further reading Edit Rewind review of February issues from five 10 and 15 years ago Flex February 2003 Levin Dan Here She Is Miss Well What Sports Illustrated March 17 1980 Merritt Greg 15 Biggest Controversies and Shocking Moments in Bodybuilding History Flex February 2006 Roark Joe Featuring 2005 Hall of Fame Inductee Stacey Bentley Flex August 2005 Todd Jan Bodybuilding St James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture Gale Group 1999 Women s Physique Publication published from December 1976 through 1991 also appeared under the names WASP and WSP Women s Physique World published two to six times per year since 1984External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Female bodybuilding OIFBB Professional League Canadian Bodybuilding Federation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Female bodybuilding amp oldid 1151279935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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