One of the largest surprises from the LIGO results regarding the first
gravitational wave detection (GW 150914) was the fact the black holes (BHs)
were "heavy", of order 30 - 40 solar masses. The most promising explanation for
this obesity is that the BH-BH merger occurred at low metallicity (Z): when the
iron (Fe) contents is lower this is expected to result in weaker mass loss
during the Wolf-Rayet (WR) phase. We therefore critically evaluate the claims
for the reasons of heavy BHs as a function of Z in the literature. Furthermore,
weaker stellar winds might lead to more rapid stellar rotation, allowing WR and
BH progenitor evolution in a chemically homogeneous manner. However, there is
as yet no empirical evidence for more rapid rotation amongst WR stars in the
low Z environment of the Magellanic Clouds. Due to the intrinsic challenge of
determining WR rotation rates from emission lines, the most promising avenue to
constrain rotation-rate distributions amongst various WR subgroups is through
the utilisation of their emission lines in polarised light. We thus provide an
overview of linear spectro-polarimetry observations of both single and binary
WRs in the Galaxy, as well as the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, at 50% and
20% of solar Z, respectively. Initial results suggest that the route of
chemically homogeneous evolution (CHE) through stellar rotation is challenging,
whilst the alternative of a post-LBV or common envelope evolution is more
likely.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, oral contribution: IAU Symposium 346 "High Mass
X-ray Binaries: illuminating the passage from massive binaries to merging
compact objects", Vienna, Austria, 27-31 August 201