Draft:Chili Williams

Chili Williams (December 16, 1921 - October 17, 2003), born Marian Sorenson, also known as the Polka Dot Girl and later known as Marian Uhlman, was an American Pin-up model and actress. A photograph of her wearing a polka-dot bikini appeared in Life magazine in 1943 and became one of the most popular pin-up photographs of World War II. Following the popularity of her pin-up photographs, she also appeared in approximately 20 motion pictures between 1944 and 1952.

Early years
Williams was born Marian Sorenson in 1921 in Minneapolis, Minnestoa. She graduated from Marshall High School. After graduating from high school, she worked as a stenographer and model for a fur store in Saint Paul, Minnesota. She also posed for photographs, one of which was seen by New York glamor artist Earl Moran.

The Polka Dot Girl
In June 1943, Marian Sorenson moved to New York City and joined Harry Conover's modeling agency. Conover gave Sorenson the name "Chili Williams". Conover had come up with the name previously and was waitng for the right girl.

Williams was photographed in 1943 wearing a polka dot bikini in the surf at Fire Island near the South Shore of Long Island in New York. Conover sent one of the photographs to Life magazine for its "Pictures to the Editor" column. Life published the photograph in its September 27, 1943, issue, along with Conover's letter stating:"This picture shows Miss Chili Williams, my newest Cover Girl. . . . This is one of her first pictures.'"

In issues that followed, Life published letters from soldiers asking for copies of the photograph. Finally, Life published a full-page copy of the famous photograph in its November 22, 1943, issue. The magazine noted that, since the photograph first appeared in the September 27 issue, Williams "has become the No. 1 pin-up girl of the U. S. armed forces."

Syndicated newspaper columnist Earl Wilson wrote in December 1943 that "the picture that caused all this rumpus" showed Williams "popping prominently out of a pair of polka dot bating pants and a form-fitting polka dot bra." Wilson noted that, while others had been described as the No. 1 Pin-Up Girl, Williams was "the No 1 No. 1 Pin-Up Girl." He joked that the editors of Life "hate cheesecake like poison", but bowed to the demand for more Chili Williams.

By August 1944, Williams received "a record-breaking deluge of over 100,000 requests for her picture." Among the letters was an official communication from the crew of the submarine USS Trigger asking her to accept the title of "Trigger Girl." (The Trigger was sunk two years later with thd loss of the entire crew.)

During the height of her popularity in late 1943, she was seen dining regularly with South American playboy and billionaire Jorge Guinle. The pair were regulars at the Stork Club, El Morocco, and the swing clubs of 52nd Street.

In 1944, the Army Engineers hired Williams to pose for a series of photographs to be used for training lectures on the use of camouflage. The Army stated in an official release that, by using images of Williams, "vital principles are impressed in the minds of camouflage students in a most effective manner."

In 1948, Williams was the grand marshal of a parade in San Mateo, California, while riding on a polka-dotted horse.

In 1969, The Baltimore Sun wrote:"Undoubtedly, the two most famous pin-up pictures of the war (the war) were the one of Betty Grable looking back over her shoulder at the camera, and the one of Chili Williams in a two-piece polka dot bathing suit. By today's standards the pictures were puritanical. But though unrevealing, they were sexy in a way that today's Playboy type pinup will never be. The fold-out bunnies were objects and Betty and Chili were people."

Family and later years
Williams' first marriage ended in divorce. She married John Uhlman, a corporate public-relations representatitve, in 1954. They operated a dress shop in Las Vegas, Nevada, during the 1950s. She had a daughter, Amy, and a son, Cary. Williams and her husband later moved to Garden Grove, California. Interviewed in 1977 for a "where are they now?" story, she said:"My life is much happier and fulfilled now. The glamor life was fun, but I was never very happy in that business. Otherwise, I haven't changed much. I still wear the same size -- 10 or 12 -- and I have a few character lines on my face. I wear a bikini at the beach sometimes I'm always going to the ocean; it's in my blood. I still feel I am the same person in that picture.'"

Williams died in California in 2003.