When Ziegfeld's
Follies began in 1907, advertisements for the show noted the "Ziegfeld Beauty Girls," along with other groups, including the "Gibson Bathing Girls," "Bewitching Peacock Girls," and many others. By 1912, Ziegfeld Girls were described as "ever-changing from widows to pink ladies, to cafe spirits, to troubadours, to drummers, to hockey girls, Purity League girls, and whatever girls—always shimmering, diverting and disappearing with the carefree abandon of butterflies," suggesting that the term referred generally to the women in the chorus. In 1916, star solo dancer
Ann Pennington, a Follies principal, was referred to as a Ziegfeld Follies Girl, indicating that the term applied headliners, members of the chorus, and any woman appearing in a Ziegfeld-branded production. Broad use of the term has continued to the present, with
Fanny Brice referred to in 2011 as a Ziegfeld Follies Girl. despite Brice not conforming "to the prevailing notion of female beauty and, more specifically, to the Ziegfeldian definition of it." ==More specific usage==