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 5 of 6)
As the world prepared for the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin and the specter of National Socialism grew more alarming, Atlas bemoaned the poor state of U.S. distance running and touted the value of exercise to improve the readiness of American troops. "A study of the reasons for rejection of army applicants made by Atlas," read one syndicated newspaper story, "shows that nearly one-third of the defects are those which could be largely minimized by proper care and training." He was past the age to serve in the military, but he posed for a Treasury Department sale of Victory Bonds.
Though never a zealot like Macfadden, he was single-minded in trumpeting the value of health and the means to attain it. His exercises were framed with detailed lifestyle advice: on how to dress, sleep, breathe, eat and relax. (He urged "Music Baths.") He penned long treatises on various maladies, and his company published books on everything from child rearing to relationship advice. In his view, marriage itself was subject to the vagaries of a robust sense of well-being. "The lack of glorious, vigorous health," he noted, "would prove to be, if the divorce records were analyzed, the most common reason why so many marriages ‘crack up.'" He even counseled on the best way to start the day: "Get up immediately on awakening in the morning....Don't dillydally. GET UP!"
By the 1950s the business counted nearly a million pupils worldwide and the Dynamic-Tension regimen had been translated into seven languages. Ads in more than 400 comic books and magazines brought in 40,000 new recruits each year. Celebrity pupils included comedian Fred Allen, Rocky Marciano, Joe DiMaggio and Robert Ripley. (Ripley once wrote in his "Believe It or Not" column that he saw Atlas swim a mile through storm-tossed waters off a New York beach to tow a rowboat and its panicked occupants back to shore.)
Even as Atlas' days slipped into mundane routine, and he himself slipped into middle age, he would show up most afternoons at his Manhattan office to answer mail and preach fitness to fans who came by to view their idol in person. Dinner in Brooklyn was invariably broiled steak and fresh fruit and vegetables. He often ended the day practicing Dynamic-Tension in the mirror, though he also exercised regularly at the New York Athletic Club, where he was secure enough to offer marketing tips to potential rivals.
"I was working out at the club in the late '50s when I ran into Atlas," remembers Joe Weider, founder of Muscle & Fitness magazine and a former competitive bodybuilder then marketing barbells. "He came over to me and tried to offer me some business advice. He said a 100-pound barbell set was heavy to ship. Then he said, ‘Joe, I just send a course and some pictures, and I make so much more money than you. You should do that, too.'"
Atlas suffered a jarring blow in 1965 when Margaret died of cancer; he was so distraught he briefly considered joining a monastery. Instead, he fell back on what he knew best: tending to his body. He took long runs on the beach near Point Lookout. He bought a condominium in Palm Beach, Florida, and kept up a morning routine of 50 knee bends, 100 sit-ups and 300 push-ups. Occasionally a photo of him appeared, bronzed and flaunting his godlike chest, his measurements almost exactly the same as those enshrined in the Crypt of Civilization. In 1970, he sold his half of the company to Charles Roman but continued on as a consultant. On December 23, 1972, Charles Atlas died in a Long Island hospital of a heart attack. He was 79 years old.
It was the beginning of the fitness boom. The year Atlas died, maverick inventor Arthur Jones introduced his first Nautilus exercise machine, which offered variable resistance; it was joined on the workout floor by the Lifecycle exercise bike, which got its marketing kick from the budding science of aerobics. Other workout routines—Pilates, step aerobics, Spinning—would lure members to ever-multiplying health clubs. Charles Atlas Ltd., meanwhile, was selling the same mail-order course, but without Atlas as living icon and with neither branded equipment nor a franchised gym, the company profile dimmed. One day, Roman received a letter from Jeffrey C. Hogue, an Arkansas lawyer who said he'd idolized Atlas since the course rescued him from terminal insecurity decades earlier—and he wanted to buy the business.
"We met at the Players Club," Hogue recalls. "Mr. Roman told me how much [money] he wanted and I did something I advise no client ever to do. I didn't negotiate. It just didn't feel right."
Hogue declines to disclose the sale price, but he says he had to borrow a considerable portion of the money. The company's global reach surprised him, he says—he recounts that the first letter he opened was from a student in Nepal—but it was making only a modest profit.
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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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