The Best Legs of All Time, From Tina Turner to Marilyn Monroe

Tina Turner Turns 77! Celebrating Her Knockout Stems—And More of the Best Legs by Decade Inline

Mistinguett, ca. 1910

1910s

Mistinguett, ca. 1910
Photo: Getty Images
Louise Brooks, 1928

1920s

Louise Brooks, 1928
Photo: Getty Images
Ginger Rogers in Rafter Romance, 1933

1930s

Ginger Rogers in Rafter Romance, 1933
Photo: Everett Collection
Marlene Dietrich, with comedian Freddie Lightner, during a USO show for U.S. servicemen, 1945

1940s

Marlene Dietrich, with comedian Freddie Lightner, during a USO show for U.S. servicemen, 1945
Photo: Getty Images
Marilyn Monroe

1950s

Marilyn Monroe
Photo: Everett Collection
Twiggy, 1967

1960s

Twiggy, 1967
Photo: Getty Images
Tina Turner

1970s

Tina Turner
Photo: Everett Collection
Grace Jones, 1989

1980s

Grace Jones, 1989
Photo: Ron Galella / WireImage
Cindy Crawford

1990s

Cindy Crawford
Photographed by Patrick Demarchelier, Vogue, June 1991
Gisele Bündchen

2000s

Gisele Bündchen
Photographed by David Sims, Vogue, October 2006
Karlie Kloss

2010s

Karlie Kloss
Photographed by Mario Testino, Vogue, July 2012

Tonight, Tina “The Queen of Rock 'n' Roll” Turner will be honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2018 Grammy Awards, and though the iconic artist is best known for her powerhouse vocals, her perfectly toned legs deserve their own place in the history books. Back in the '70s, Turner helped spark a collective yearning for strong stems by letting hers peek out from thigh-skimming skirts and boy shorts in photographs from that era, a stark contrast to waifish '60s limbs. Of course, like many iconic women who came before her, Turner stands tall in the collective memory for reasons beyond genetic luck: Yes, she had legs, but as ZZ Top put it, she also knew how to use them.

Drumsticks, gams, pins, pillars, uprights, getaway sticks—the sheer number of American colloquialisms for women's longest limbs are an indication of their power. Legs, of course, are more than a means of support and locomotion. They're the symbol of women's freedom. And a quick look back over the past 100 years confirms the shifting cultural ideas surrounding a seemingly innocuous slender calf, willowy ankle or sculpted thigh.

Despite the Victorians' attempts to conceal them under crinolines and cages, the turn of the century found legs kicking free and giving birth to what Vogue referred to in 1957 as the “beautiful American leg legend." Legs certainly haven't remained static since coming out of hiding: Not only does each decade have its own fashions, but its own ideal leg proportions, too—often best embodied by the celebrated stems of a cultural icon.

The long, solid limbs of Mistinguett—once the highest paid actress in the world—were insured for about half a million francs in 1919. While flapper fashion only revealed the leg to the knee, the long, form-following looks of the '30s required a few extra inches of skin to realize the line of the fashion. Name a better woman to stand for that decade of glamour than Ginger Rogers, who seemed to float on air with Fred Astaire. Marilyn Monroe represents the fuller '50s leg, which supported the curvy, hourglass shape, an ideal that was shattered by Twiggy's seemingly endless, and childlike toothpick limbs. The late '70s and early '80s fitness craze idealized the athletic aerobicized leg (cue Cindy Crawford in her Pepsi commercial, or, shown here, posing on the beach for Vogue). And these days, Karlie Kloss's “stilts” continue to combine sinewy strength with a dancer's fragile extenuation.

Here, a look a back at the some of the most memorable legs of all time.

See the videos.