Poetry in Motion
Maria
has been described in countless books over the past 40 years but a recurring
theme is her feline quality. Here are but a few examples:-
TED TINLING (Washington Port, 1989)
"She was an actress. I would leave her alone for a few minutes
and she would do her poses in front of the mirror and please herself how the
dress was going to look on her."
C.
M. (“Jimmy”) JONES (Lawn Tennis Magazine)
“A one-grip stroke maker,
Maria’s backhand was a poem of sweeping grace and her volleys the brushings of a
master artist. Send her a lob and she pounced with the menacing swiftness of a
panther to bury the ball with a frightening finality; hers was a smash no man
would scorn.”
GWEN ROBYNS (“Wimbledon: The Hidden Drama”,
published 1973)
“She looked like an exotic
Siamese cat as she roamed the court. Maria was sinuous, sensuous and feminine.
They called her the Queen of Wimbledon.”
TED TINLING (“A Handful of Summers” by
Gordon Forbes, published 1978)
“Maria Bueno, a magnificent
panther of a woman.”
BUD COLLINS (“Tennis Encyclopaedia”,
published 1997)
“... the incomparably
balletic and flamboyant Bueno. Volleying beautifully, playing with breathtaking
boldness and panache, the lithe Brazilian became the first South American woman
to win the Wimbledon singles.
MAX
ROBERTSON (“Wimbledon 1877 - 1977", published 1977)
“Rarely, if ever, has such
physical beauty of movement been combined with such marvellous strokes, to which
timing gave ferocious power, allied usually to impeccable length. She looked
like a panther hunting for the kill. At peak form her game was imperious; all
she lacked was Little Mo’s consistency..... At her height, Maria had been a
queen whose grace and power were without compare.”
DAVID GRAY (“Shades of Gray”, published
1988)
“Miss Bueno, slim, dark,
swift, and super-feminine in her inconsistency, her love for a fine dress and
for a quick cry of admiration.... “
JOHN BARRETT (“100 Wimbledon Championships,
A Celebration”, published 1986)
“Between 1959 and 1964 we
were treated to three regal wins from the artistic racket of the elegant queen
of Brazilian tennis, Maria Bueno. Here
was poetry in motion whose every movement combined the grace of a ballet dancer
with the controlled power of a top gymnast.”
FRANÇOISE DURR
“She was such a beautiful
player. I used to watch her play, and not watch the ball at all.”

- The Bueno Game
-
Descriptions of Maria's unique and classic style ...
- The Nicknames
-
What she was called ...
- Photo Gallery
-
Some pictures and an information request form ...