Potato Salad

[One of the Silverback Davids (Arid Zone SBs) posted a video on Facebook, noting that it got weird around the 1:15 mark. “What could be interesting, funny, or weird about a song called “Solid Potato Salad?” Now I know, and I will add that “weird” is an understatement.

He also posted the following interesting factoid in the wake of Elon Musk becoming the planet’s first trillionaire.

MILLION / BILLION / TRILLION

A million seconds ago, it was June 1, 2026.

A billion seconds ago, it was September of 1994.

A trillion seconds ago, it was 30,000 BCE, at the peak of the last ice age, and humans were sharing the earth with Neanderthals, wooly mammoths, and saber-tooth cats.

SB SM]

Who needs AI when the real world has acts like this.

BTW, courtesy of Gemini, Google’s AI gremlin, here’s more on the ladies Ross:

The Ross Sisters were a trio of American entertainers—Aggie, Maggie, and Elmira Ross—best known for their jaw‑dropping acrobatic dance performances during the 1940s.

🌟 Who Were They?

  • Born in Texas (Elmira 1923, Maggie 1925, Aggie 1927).
  • Raised in a musically inclined family and trained from a young age.
  • They combined tight vocal harmonies with extreme contortion, acrobatics, and ballet, creating a very unusual act for the era.

🎬 1944: Their Big Moment

Their most famous appearance came in the 1944 MGM musical film Broadway Rhythm.

They performed the number:

“Solid Potato Salad”

It starts like a fairly standard Andrews Sisters‑style harmony tune…
Then, about a minute in, things get progressively wilder.

What made it legendary:

  • Seamless harmonizing while executing extreme splits and backbends.
  • Walking down stairs in full splits.
  • Rotating their torsos nearly 180 degrees.
  • A finale involving synchronized back‑arching flips.

The performance is often described as:

  • Mesmerizing
  • Surreal
  • Slightly unsettling
  • Decades ahead of its time

For many modern viewers, it feels like something out of David Lynch or Cirque du Soleil—except it’s 1944 MGM.


🎭 Why They’re Not More Famous

Despite their talent:

  • They didn’t get sustained major studio promotion.
  • They toured extensively instead of becoming recurring film stars.
  • They later transitioned into nightclub performance circuits.
  • By the 1950s, the act faded from mainstream visibility.

In the internet era, their “Solid Potato Salad” clip went viral, bringing them cult status.


💡 Cultural Impact

Today, the Ross Sisters are:

  • Considered pioneers of combining acrobatics and close harmony.
  • Frequently cited as one of the most astonishing performances of classic Hollywood musicals.
  • A recurring “Wait…what did I just watch?” discovery on YouTube and social media.

If you’d like, I can also give you:

  • A short, punchy blog-ready summary
  • A deeper dive into how MGM used specialty acts in wartime musicals
  • Or context about 1940s harmony groups they were compared to (like the Andrews Sisters)

Leave a Reply

Powered by WordPress.com.

Up ↑

Discover more from Silverback Digest

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading