A Friend Stopped By | 10/13/2009 4:00 am
Chrissie Evert, We Hardly Knew Ye! by Michele Willens

Editor’s Note: Michele Willens is the co-author of Face It: What Women Really Feel As Their Looks Change (forthcoming from Hay House this February).
A couple that I have known and loved for 19 years recently split up. So why did that not disturb me as much as the announcement that Chris Evert and Greg Norman were separating after 15 months?I played tournament tennis as a youngster, so perhaps I was a bit more invested in Evert. Ever since she burst into our court consciousness at the age of 16 — with her perfectly pinned ponytail, sculpted body and pixie face — she was and grew into the perfect role model, at least for "my" sport. While her predecessors (and successors) would turn muscular and macho, she was a woman who looked great and had great manners, to boot. (She never quite said "nice shot" but she had this way of uttering "yeah" that meant the same.)
| Maybe she lost a tad bit of her sex appeal and maybe I felt just a little bit relieved. Good! She was a long-married lady like the rest of us. |
I never really thought about her as being a sexual object, however. She was so tidy, so controlled. But suddenly, she was engaged to Jimmy Connors, the bad boy of the circuit. While the marriage never happened, it was an ominous sign, perhaps: Did Chrissie have an edge? A need to be bullied? A dark side, even?
Then the career pretty much ended and the marriages began. John Lloyd seemed the perfect choice: an English gentleman. Yes! Chris was as clean as we thought and they practically blinded the eye with their golden niceness. Alas, the marriage did not last long and the doubts arose. Was she not as stable as we thought? Somehow, the idea of Chris Evert and divorce just did not seem graspable. Surely, it must have been him.
Then before you could say 30-love, Chris grabbed possibly the only man better-looking than John Lloyd: Andy Mill. Even the sport was different this time. A skier with a body to kill. Together they began making gorgeous little baby boys and schussing the slopes of Aspen together. Chris appeared as tennis commentator now and then, and I was relieved to see she remained as wry and friendly and girl-next-door as ever. She never looked better as she coasted through her 40s. Maybe she lost a tad bit of her sex appeal and maybe I felt just a little bit relieved. Good! She was a long-married, aging (albeit well) lady like the rest of us.
And then the unspeakable happened. She left Andy! For one of his closest friends! For a married man! With children of his own! And a golfer! The emotions were furiously churning through me, and I am sure I was not alone. Could I still cling to my notion of Miss Chrissie being the ultimate Queen of Nice? Was it time to accept the fact that she may be complicated, if not conniving?
Then there was the jealousy. How dare she find a dashing, equally fit and successful athlete at the age of 52! Greg Norman and Chris Evert were so damned handsome — even sexy — together that it was infuriating. But I finally got past that and chose to use her once again as a symbol, the embodiment now of what a 50-something woman could look like and love like. Yes, she was aging a bit and not afraid to show it. But something in her screamed, "I’m not dead yet!" and she and Greg became the picture not of the cause of two fractured families and some blasted friendships, but of hope, health and hormonal happiness. Go for it, guys.
And now. What can I say?























23 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Yes, we too enjoyed watching Chris Evert for many years. But this last episode with Greg Norman was not very becoming to either of them, and they seemed anything but attractive.
Like us, Chris Evert, has had her ups and downs in the romanace department. It is not for any of us to judge her in any way. People fall in and out of love every day. The only difference is that most of us are not high profile people where our every move might be considered "news."
Obviously, it is time for Chris Evert to "move on" in her life. Bravo, Chris! Lead your own life and do what is best for you!
Michelle, I truly feel at a loss, because I don’t understand the meaning of this article. Was it to say you idolized Chris Evert and now because she has experienced what millions of women experienced throughout the world, you feel you can no longer look at her in the same way?
If this is it, what purpose does this serve and what learning experience or bonding experience does it offer other women? As I said, I may be alone on this but I just don’t understand the meaning of your article.
Maybe this is an example of what women do when they have their own money. This means she only needs to adjust to the degree she wants at that moment.
E.
Very good article! What did the one writer mean about… *it was not factual, just speculation*? Really? I think it was truly factual. Marriages, divorces, 3 sons, tennis career, etc… What wasn’t true?
Chrissie Evert may have been a class act at one time, but definitely not now. If you doubt it ask the 5 children that were left in the wake of the two divorces, as well as the two devasted spouses. I read Greg admitted that he and wife Laura tried counseling to save their marriage but the *pull* (sex drives?) between he and Chrissie was too strong.
Sadly, many people accept and make excuses for any conduct of celebrities. Recent late-nite host is an example. Former president’s intern another. Two S.C. married politicians and exposed girlfriends. Of course people act stupid and make mistakes. But as I told my children, actions have consequences - be prepared to pay them if you do the wrong thing. To simply shrug and act like they’re irrelevant has hurt our youth and society. All of those mentioned above and others do have wives and children, let’s keep their pain in mind and not be so quick to give the offenders a *so, what - it’s nothing pass*.