Charles Atlas: Muscle Man
How the original 97-pound weakling transformed himself into Charles Atlas and brought the physical fitness movement to the masses
- By Jonathan Black
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Atlas threw out his equipment. He began flexing his muscles, using isometric opposition and adding range of motion to stress them further. He tensed his hands behind his back. He laced his fingers under his thighs and pushed his hands against his legs. He did biceps curls with one arm and squeezed his fist down with the other. Experimenting with varied techniques, and likely aided by exceptional genes, Atlas emerged from many months at home with a physique that stunned school chums when he first revealed himself on the beach. One of the boys exclaimed, "You look like that statue of Atlas on top of the Atlas Hotel!"
Several years later, he legally changed his name, adding Charles from his nickname "Charlie."
Holding up the world, however, wasn't a career. Atlas was too mild-mannered to go chasing neighborhood bullies, though on the New York subway he once lifted a troublemaker by his lapels and issued him a stern warning. A dutiful son, he learned leatherworking to pay the rent and support his mother. (His father had taken one look at his adopted home and high-tailed it back to Italy.) But Charlie hadn't built up his chest just to make purses. Eventually, he gave up on the leatherwork and took a $5-a-week job, doubling as janitor and strongman at the Coney Island sideshow, where he lay on a bed of nails and urged men from the audience to stand on his stomach.
And this might have been the last anyone heard of Charles Atlas had an artist not spotted him on the beach in 1916 and asked him to pose.
A boom in public sculpture was coming, and busy carvers were desperate for models with well-built bodies. Among the most prominent was socialite sculptor Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, who, watching Atlas disrobe, exclaimed, "He's a knockout!" Further impressed by his ability to hold a pose for 30 minutes, she soon had him running from studio to studio. By the time he was 25, Atlas was everywhere, posing as George Washington in Washington Square Park, as Civic Virtue in Queens Borough Hall, as Alexander Hamilton in the nation's capital. He was Dawn of Glory in Brooklyn's Prospect Park and Patriotism for the Elks' national headquarters in Chicago. Photographs of him in classic poses, nude or shockingly close to it and with more than a whiff of eroticism, suggest how much he liked the camera and the camera liked him.
And the money was good—$100 a week. Still, Atlas was restless, and ambitious, and when he saw an ad for a "World's Most Beautiful Man" photo contest, he sent in his picture.
The contest was sponsored by Physical Culture magazine, the brainchild of Bernarr Macfadden, a publisher and fitness fanatic, as well as one of the most bizarre figures in the annals of fitness entrepreneurs. (He would later found a publishing empire with True Story and True Romances magazines.) Macfadden was obsessive about his health. When he wasn't fasting, he ate carrots, beans, nuts and raw eggs. He slept on the floor and walked to work barefoot. Impressed with Atlas' photograph, he asked the young man to stop by his office. When Atlas stripped to his leopard bikini, Macfadden stopped the contest, though he waited for a second visit to hand over the $1,000 winner's check and celebrate with a glass of carrot juice.
Atlas got an even bigger jolt of publicity when, in 1922, Macfadden followed up the contest with "The World's Most Perfectly Developed Man" extravaganza at Madison Square Garden. Seven hundred and seventy-five men competed for the title, judged by a panel of doctors and artists. When Atlas walked away with a second trophy, Macfadden called a halt to any more contests, grousing that Atlas would win every year. Likely, he was merely hyping Atlas' next showstopper: starring in a Macfadden short, silent movie called The Road to Health, directed by one Frederick Tilney, a busy if unsung health and fitness expert. On a ride to the film studios in Fort Lee, New Jersey, one day, Tilney and Atlas decided to set up a mail-order business to sell an exercise routine. When, after a few years, their collaboration ended, Atlas went solo.
But an extraordinary body did not translate into a head for business, and, within a few years, the company floundered. With profits lagging, Atlas' advertising agency in 1928 turned over his account to its newest hire, Charles Roman, who was 21 and fresh out of New York University. What the young man came up with so impressed Atlas that four months after they met, Atlas offered him half the company on the condition that Roman would run it. It was the smartest move he ever made.
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Comments (45)
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In my teen's I was 6'2" and 170 lbs. thin but strong. I worked on weights and high bars, doing kips and giants. I developed some but not much. However, at age 21 I was in the U.S. Air Force and at a arm wrestle contest, I was able to hold off a large Irish buddy, and tie the contest among 50 or more men. I was always in good shape and having played a lot of basketball, volleyball and racquetball, my knee's gave out on me. So I had two partial knee replacements. That put me out of competition for over a couple of years. During that time, not being able to work out, I started pitting my muscles against them selves. Now at 83 and soon to be 84 on March 27th, I've rebuilt my body simply by following just one of Charles Atlas sessions, both fists against each other pressing hard 10 to 15 times every morning. Unbelievable!!!
Posted by S. Frank Sciarra on January 9,2013 | 11:11 AM
I hope your muscles pop
Posted by on December 26,2012 | 03:54 PM
i have the original Charles Atlas 12 section workout manuals if there anyone out there interested in buying it and enjoying it then please contact me at my email address
Posted by debbie on March 5,2012 | 02:11 PM
To Paul Harvey Jr.
Hi Paul,
I wonder if you could shoot me an email?
Thanks,
Bill
wgibbons@shaw.ca
Posted by Bill Gibbons on February 8,2012 | 04:23 PM
Wow! I just purchased a wonderful 1971 photo of Charles Atlas and his live-in housekeeper/companion, Ann Lucas. She would travel with him to Palm Beach Florida every November until late spring, wen he would return to New York. I must say, Mr. Atlas was very dapper gentleman indeed.
Posted by Bill Gibbons on February 3,2012 | 07:17 PM
I read the whole article. Quite moving, really. I bought a Charles Atlas course last year, read it through and then just continued with the free weights as usual.
Here's the deal:
I'm 56 years old and am in pretty good shape. I'm going to have a very long-delayed training session on Mr. Atlas' system. I really wanted to have a crack at this when I was about 18 years old - that was nearly 40 years back, so it should be interesting to see what happens after 6 or 7 months.
I'm adding my e-mail address to this comment, so that interested parties may be able to communicate with me.
stephenpeach655@btinternet.com
Here goes. First training day is tomorrow.
Five, four, three, two, one, gulp.
Posted by Steve Peach. on January 13,2012 | 07:12 PM
Hello Mr. Torch,
I was acquainted with Mr. Atlas' son, Charles Jr for a number of years prior to his passing in 2008 at the age of 89. I can answer all your questions.
Email me at wgibbons@shaw.ca
Posted by Bill Gibbons on December 31,2011 | 05:44 PM
Hi my name is Paul Harvey Jr and my grandfather George Harvey married 1 Ms. Siciliano yes it was Charles "Atlas" Siciliano's cousin. When it Italy she lived only 2 houses down from him and it was said that she had to protect him on his way home cause he was a little weekling. It is great to know someone in my family is an Icon.
Posted by Paul Harvey Jr on November 15,2011 | 05:54 PM
I sent for the Charles Atlas Course abot 60 years ago.I got the idea from an add in a comic book.I think this would be a good way for someone with no access to wts or a gym to work out.I guess you could compare it to the Isometric courses that came out later.
You will never get really strong,or a great build without using wts properly.Im sure Mr Atlas used Wts as well.He had some tricks in the course,like how to rip phone books in half etc.It got me into a good life style of workouts and exercize I have used all my life.I would like to see the course again.Mine is long gone.
Posted by Frank Dolllinger on October 19,2011 | 02:00 AM
@ Mr. Bill Torch and Bill Aronia,
please emale me at wgibbons@shaw.ca
Tyanks!
Bill Gibbons
Friend of the late Charles V. Atlas Jr.
Posted by Bill Gibbons on May 2,2011 | 07:45 PM
@shelly Boyle,
Hi Shelly, I was friends with Charles Atlas Jr until his passing three years ago at the age of 89. He was Diane Spinelli's brother.
Can you email me at the following?
wgibbons@shaw.ca
Best wishes,
Bill Gibbons
Posted by Bill Gibbons on May 2,2011 | 07:38 PM
The Charles Atlas course is as good as anything else I've ever tried. I've had a go at a lot of training regimes over the past 38 or so years - but the Atlas system has the best combination of moves.
The only issue I have with it is the fact that there are no guides on breathing whilst exercising. The manuals I've read make no mention of this, so I assume Atlas expected his students to breathe normally during their training. This wouldn't work very well.
I wonder why Atlas didn't publicise the breathing angle?
Posted by Steve Peach on April 12,2011 | 08:24 PM
Many kids are teased and beaten up because most bullies think PHYSICAL strengh is everything. It's not - it's strength of character that's important.
Charles Atlas proved you can overcome obstacles that can hold you back.
Posted by Lisa on March 24,2011 | 11:19 PM
I am happy to say that I was friends with Charles Atlas's granddaughter, Valerie Spinelli. She was the daughter of Atlas's daughter, Diana. I was good friends with Valerie in Brooklyn in the 1960's and she was very proud to be Atlas's granddaughter. She named her first child Charles. I met Charles Atlas only once. It was in late 1960's and Valerie took me to their apartment. I expected to meet a very muscular and large man but in person at that time, he looked like anyone's grandpa. The only thing that stood out was at how very tan he was.
Posted by shelly boyle on February 25,2011 | 01:26 PM
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