If it can take the horn of a bull to break a glass ceiling then that was surely the singular achievement of Patricia McCormick, a Missouri-born American who in the early 1950s became the world's first professional female bullfighter, drawing legions of fans and the attentions of Time, Sports Illustrated and Look magazines.
McCormick, who died recently in a nursing home in Texas aged 83, first fell in love with the ring during a holiday to Mexico City when she was just 7. Years later, while studying in El Paso, Texas, she regularly crossed the border to Ciudad Juarez, where she trained and found a sponsor.
It was an unlikely quest in a sport so laden with macho traditions but, against her parents' wishes, she persevered and made her debut in Juarez in 1951.
Thus was launched a career as a matadora that spanned 10 years and hundreds of bullfights, most in Mexico and some in Venezuela. The response from male fighters, who never allowed her to take the initiation ceremony that would have made her a fully fledged matadora on equal terms, veered from admiration to condescension.
"She fights larger bulls than does any other woman and she kills well," Carlos Arruza, the Mexican torero, once said of her. "Her only defect is that she is a woman." Rafael Solana, a bullfighting critic, once said she was the "most courageous woman I have ever seen".