Arts & Culture

Celebrate Seventy-Five Years of Florida’s Weeki Wachee Mermaids

And see photos of that time Elvis showed up

Photo: Courtesy of Bonnie Georgiadis

A vintage photo from 1958 of Weeki Wachee mermaids Flo Mcnabb and Bonnie Georgiadis.

Ever since it opened in 1947, the charmingly kitschy Weeki Wachee Springs, which is now a state park that sits an hour and a half west of Orlando, has been holding its own among those other Florida attractions you may have heard of. For one thing, it’s got mermaids. For another, the mermaids swim and dance in crystal-clear water fed by an ancient spring.

“The setting itself is what makes this place magical,” says John Athanason, a specialist with Florida’s Adventure Coast Tourism Bureau who has worked with the park for more than twenty years. “It’s not a girl swimming in a tank. When you’re sitting inside the theater and the curtain rises and you see this beautiful spring, you’re awestruck. There’s no other theater like it in the entire world.”

photo: Bob Reed
An underwater performance from 1947.

Besides the acrobatic mermaids pirouetting underwater while catching their breath with hookah-like air tubes, there’s the real possibility that a manatee might crash a live show—I’ve seen it. The performers made way for the friendly giant, spinning alongside it while we audience members, separated from the spring by a giant wall of glass, shrieked in delight from our subterranean seats.

photo: Bob Reed
The park’s first underground theater.

To mark seventy-five years of such memories, Weeki Wachee is throwing an anniversary party this week. On January 12, Florida’s Adventure Coast Visitors Bureau will unveil the Mermaid Tale Trail, which features twenty-seven mermaid statues, hand-painted by regional artists, placed throughout nearby Brooksville and surrounding Hernando County. Local officials will also dedicate the park and the towering Adagio statue out front as National Historic Landmarks. One of the original mermaids, Dianne Wyatt McDonald, whose pose inspired the famed statue, also plans to attend the party. (Now in her nineties, McDonald shared her recollections of the park in an entertaining interview here).

“Whenever I sink beneath the surface of that beautiful water, I don’t want to get out again,” another mermaid, Vicki Smith, told me when she was seventy-eight and still performing. “There’s a freedom there. The movement of the current feels like silk wrapping you, and the bubbles become silver pearls all around.”

photo: Courtesy Weeki Wachee Springs State Park
Elvis with the Weeki Wachee mermaids in 1961.
photo: Courtesy Weeki Wachee Springs State Park
Elvis watches a performance from the theater.

Performers, travelers, Floridians, and stars alike have found inspiration at Weeki Wachee. Visitors to the park can swim in the sandy-bottomed springs, refreshed by water that stays a mild seventy-two degrees year-round. Elvis Presley himself made time to visit Weeki Wachee in 1961 when he was filming Follow That Dream in Florida. Three thousand fans turned up, and as these photos show, the setting worked its magic on Presley.

Find more information about Weeki Wachee memories—and the anniversary festivities here.


CJ Lotz Diego is Garden & Gun’s senior editor. A staffer since 2013, she wrote G&G’s bestselling Bless Your Heart trivia game, edits the Due South travel section, and covers gardens, books, and art. Originally from Eureka, Missouri, she graduated from Indiana University and now lives in Charleston, South Carolina, where she tends a downtown pocket garden with her florist husband, Max.


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