
French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
Suzanne Lenglen revolutionized women's tennis in the 1920s, with her daring outfits and aggressive style of play.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
"She had that thing that we love in our public figures -- she had a sense of drama," author Larry Engelmann told CNN's Open Court.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
"When she walked out on the court, when she walked down the street after the match, there was a certain passion, drama, gloriousness, a suffering to her that seemed to indicated depths that people wanted to see in a national figure," Engelmann says.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
Lenglen never played at Roland Garros, which was built after she retired in 1927, but the second show court there has since been named after her -- and the statue outside commemorates one of her most iconic action images.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
"When she was young, she studied dance -- she studied ballet and people said she played tennis like a dancer," Engelmann says. "She walked around the court between points on her tip toes. She posed a certain way when she was going to serve."

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
"Suzanne learned tennis from the best male players," Engelmann says. "She was very competitive and she played a much more sophisticated game and she broke the limits. It was a sort of quantum leap into a more aggressive, athletic game."

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
Lenglen is pictured here with fellow French tennis star Rene Lacoste, who went on to launch his own fashion house.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
"She also wore very fashionable clothing on the court -- French designers designed for her," Engelmann says. "There was more transparency to her gowns. She wore short-sleeved blouses when she played. In a period of time when light skin was highly prized -- she took glory in being out in the sun and having a tan."

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
She was one of the world's most famous female athletes in the 1920s, and her success inspired a character in "Le Train Bleu," a production by the Diaghilev Ballet Russe which featured costumes by Coco Chanel.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
After retiring, Lenglen helped set up a tennis school near Roland Garros. She is pictured here with students in 1937, a year before her death at the age of 39. She had long suffered poor health, and was diagnosed with leukemia not long before she died.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
Lenglen's crown as the queen of women's tennis was taken by American Helen Wills Moody, pictured left with Hollywood actress Joan Crawford.

French Open's favorite 'Flapper' —
Mary Pierce was the last Frenchwoman to hold the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen for the winner of the Paris grand slam when she triumphed at Roland Garros in 2000.