Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of female professional bodybuilders. All people listed here have an IFBB pro card. This list is incomplete; you can ...
Nikki Fuller (born January 23, 1968) is an American professional female bodybuilder.At her largest, Fuller weighed 200 lb (91 kg). In competition, her height was listed at 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) and her biceps measured 18 in (457 mm).
Nataliya Kuznetsova, also spelled Natalia (née Trukhina; born July 1, 1991), is a Russian professional female bodybuilder and powerlifter. Kuznetsova began powerlifting at fourteen years of age in an attempt to gain muscle mass. [2] [3]
Lesa Lewis was born in Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. She grew up in a family with three brothers and three sisters. She ran track, played basketball, danced, and swam in high school.
In 1982, Muscle & Fitnessran a three-page photo feature on different types of female bodybuilding physiques—Shelly Gruwell with the long, lean physique most like a model; Rachel McLish epitomizing the muscular, average framed woman; Baxter with the more muscular than average (for a bodybuilder) but still graceful build (she was posed with ...
By 1988, she was competing in bodybuilding shows. In 1998, she quit her job with the postal service to focus on a fitness career and became a certified personal trainer. She began her acting career in 2000 with Scary Movie. Today she continues to perform in bodybuilding shows and to pursue her acting career. [1]
Georgia Fudge (also known as Georgia Miller) was one of the first professional female bodybuilders in the early 1980s. [1] At a height of 5 ft 8 in, she competed at a bodyweight of around 125–130 lb. Georgia Fudge is in Florida. While she no longer models, she remains active in the fitness and wellness industry.
Since then she has appeared in body building magazines such as Flex, Ironman, Natural Bodybuilding Magazine and Woman's Physique World. [2] Christine was the subject of the 2001 documentary film Highway Amazon directed by Ronnie Cramer. The film showed Fetzer traveling the country wrestling men in hotel rooms (muscle worship). [3]