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Charles Atlas: Muscle Man

How the original 97-pound weakling transformed himself into Charles Atlas and brought the physical fitness movement to the masses

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  • By Jonathan Black
  • Smithsonian magazine, August 2009, Subscribe
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Charles Atlas tug of war with Rockettes
Charles Atlas playing tug of war with the Rockettes atop Radio City Music Hall. (Charles Atlas LTD)

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Young Charles Atlas

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  • Charles Atlas

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Yours in Perfect Manhood, Charles Atlas

by by Charles Gaines, George Butler and Charles Roman
Simon and Schuster, 1982

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  • Bodybuilders Through the Ages

Like tens of thousands of young men and boys before him, Tom Manfre first caught sight of Charles Atlas in the back pages of the comic books he read so voraciously. With a sculpted chest, leopard briefs girdling his hips, a piercing look on his granite-jawed face, Atlas seemed to be jabbing his finger at Manfre as he commanded: "Let Me Prove in 7 Days That I Can Make You a New Man!"

It was 1947, Manfre was 23 years old, and the man in the leopard-pattern briefs was the toast of New York City. He'd helped President Franklin Roosevelt celebrate his birthday at the Waldorf Astoria hotel. He cavorted on radio with Fred Allen and Eddie Cantor and on television with Bob Hope and Garry Moore. He stripped off his shirt at a Paris dinner party tossed by the designer Elsa Schiaparelli. His measurements had been entombed in the famous Crypt of Civilization, the repository of records at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta intended for unsealing in the year 8113. Scarcely a day went by that a newspaper columnist didn't feature an item about Atlas—dropping by to bend a couple of railroad spikes, perhaps, or ripping a Manhattan phone book in half.

Manfre stuck a check for $29.95 in the mail and got back a 12-lesson course of exercises the author called Dynamic-Tension. For 90 days, Manfre did the prescribed squats and leg-raises and sit-ups. He followed the tips on sleep and nutrition. He remembered to chew his food slowly. Pleased with the results, he sent a photograph of his new and improved body to Atlas and was invited to drop by to meet the man himself.

"I felt like a kid in a candy store," Manfre, 86, says today. "I was thrilled! He put an arm around me and said, ‘God was good to me, and I'm sure he'll be good to you.'" When Manfre won the Mr. World contest six years later, the first person he called to thank was Charles Atlas.

Manfre was not alone in his gratitude. During Atlas' heyday—the 1930s and '40s—two dozen women worked eight-hour days to open and file the letters that poured into his downtown Manhattan office. Grateful knock-kneed boys with scrawny arms and sunken chests reported that their lives had been turned around. King George VI of England signed up. Boxers and bodybuilders gave Dynamic-Tension a whirl. Mahatma Gandhi—Gandhi!—wrote to inquire about the course. A 1999 A&E biography, "Charles Atlas: Modern Day Hercules," included testimonials from Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jake "Body by Jake" Steinfeld.

This year marks the 80th that Atlas' mail-order company has been in business. Atlas himself is long gone—he died in 1972—and Charles Atlas Ltd. now operates out of a combined shrine, archive and office over a nail salon in the northern New Jersey town of Harrington Park. But the Internet has given Dynamic-Tension a new life. From all over the world, letters and e-mails continue to pour in, testament to one of the most successful fitness programs ever devised. And to its mythic founder.

The man who made history marketing his muscles was an unlikely hero. Born in Acri, a tiny town in southern Italy, he arrived with his parents at Ellis Island in 1903 at age 10. His name was Angelo Siciliano, and he spoke not a word of English.

He didn't look like much, either. Skinny and slope-shouldered, feeble and often ill, he was picked on by bullies in the Brooklyn neighborhood where his family had settled, and his own uncle beat him for getting into fights. He found little refuge at Coney Island Beach, where a hunky lifeguard kicked sand in his face and a girlfriend sighed when the 97-pound Atlas swore revenge.

On a visit to the Brooklyn Museum, he saw statuary depicting Hercules, Apollo and Zeus. That, and Coney Island's side­show, got him thinking. Body­building was then a fringe pursuit, its practitioners consigned to the freak tents beside the fat lady and the sword swallower. Alone at the top was Eugen Sandow, a Prussian strongman discovered by showman Florenz Ziegfeld. Sandow toured vaude­ville theaters, lifting ponies and popping chains with his chest. Atlas pasted a photo of Sandow on his dresser mirror and, hoping to transform his own body, spent months sweating away at home with a series of makeshift weights, ropes and elastic grips. The results were disappointing, but on a visit to the Bronx Zoo one day he had an epiphany, or so he would recall in his biography Yours in Perfect Manhood, by Charles Gaines and George Butler. Watching a lion stretch, he thought to himself, "Does this old gentleman have any barbells, any exercisers?...And it came over me....He's been pitting one muscle against another!"


Like tens of thousands of young men and boys before him, Tom Manfre first caught sight of Charles Atlas in the back pages of the comic books he read so voraciously. With a sculpted chest, leopard briefs girdling his hips, a piercing look on his granite-jawed face, Atlas seemed to be jabbing his finger at Manfre as he commanded: "Let Me Prove in 7 Days That I Can Make You a New Man!"

It was 1947, Manfre was 23 years old, and the man in the leopard-pattern briefs was the toast of New York City. He'd helped President Franklin Roosevelt celebrate his birthday at the Waldorf Astoria hotel. He cavorted on radio with Fred Allen and Eddie Cantor and on television with Bob Hope and Garry Moore. He stripped off his shirt at a Paris dinner party tossed by the designer Elsa Schiaparelli. His measurements had been entombed in the famous Crypt of Civilization, the repository of records at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta intended for unsealing in the year 8113. Scarcely a day went by that a newspaper columnist didn't feature an item about Atlas—dropping by to bend a couple of railroad spikes, perhaps, or ripping a Manhattan phone book in half.

Manfre stuck a check for $29.95 in the mail and got back a 12-lesson course of exercises the author called Dynamic-Tension. For 90 days, Manfre did the prescribed squats and leg-raises and sit-ups. He followed the tips on sleep and nutrition. He remembered to chew his food slowly. Pleased with the results, he sent a photograph of his new and improved body to Atlas and was invited to drop by to meet the man himself.

"I felt like a kid in a candy store," Manfre, 86, says today. "I was thrilled! He put an arm around me and said, ‘God was good to me, and I'm sure he'll be good to you.'" When Manfre won the Mr. World contest six years later, the first person he called to thank was Charles Atlas.

Manfre was not alone in his gratitude. During Atlas' heyday—the 1930s and '40s—two dozen women worked eight-hour days to open and file the letters that poured into his downtown Manhattan office. Grateful knock-kneed boys with scrawny arms and sunken chests reported that their lives had been turned around. King George VI of England signed up. Boxers and bodybuilders gave Dynamic-Tension a whirl. Mahatma Gandhi—Gandhi!—wrote to inquire about the course. A 1999 A&E biography, "Charles Atlas: Modern Day Hercules," included testimonials from Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jake "Body by Jake" Steinfeld.

This year marks the 80th that Atlas' mail-order company has been in business. Atlas himself is long gone—he died in 1972—and Charles Atlas Ltd. now operates out of a combined shrine, archive and office over a nail salon in the northern New Jersey town of Harrington Park. But the Internet has given Dynamic-Tension a new life. From all over the world, letters and e-mails continue to pour in, testament to one of the most successful fitness programs ever devised. And to its mythic founder.

The man who made history marketing his muscles was an unlikely hero. Born in Acri, a tiny town in southern Italy, he arrived with his parents at Ellis Island in 1903 at age 10. His name was Angelo Siciliano, and he spoke not a word of English.

He didn't look like much, either. Skinny and slope-shouldered, feeble and often ill, he was picked on by bullies in the Brooklyn neighborhood where his family had settled, and his own uncle beat him for getting into fights. He found little refuge at Coney Island Beach, where a hunky lifeguard kicked sand in his face and a girlfriend sighed when the 97-pound Atlas swore revenge.

On a visit to the Brooklyn Museum, he saw statuary depicting Hercules, Apollo and Zeus. That, and Coney Island's side­show, got him thinking. Body­building was then a fringe pursuit, its practitioners consigned to the freak tents beside the fat lady and the sword swallower. Alone at the top was Eugen Sandow, a Prussian strongman discovered by showman Florenz Ziegfeld. Sandow toured vaude­ville theaters, lifting ponies and popping chains with his chest. Atlas pasted a photo of Sandow on his dresser mirror and, hoping to transform his own body, spent months sweating away at home with a series of makeshift weights, ropes and elastic grips. The results were disappointing, but on a visit to the Bronx Zoo one day he had an epiphany, or so he would recall in his biography Yours in Perfect Manhood, by Charles Gaines and George Butler. Watching a lion stretch, he thought to himself, "Does this old gentleman have any barbells, any exercisers?...And it came over me....He's been pitting one muscle against another!"

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.

Roman knew a thing or two about writing ad copy and a lot about psychology, and he'd scarcely sharpened his pencils before he coined the term "Dynamic-Tension." He would do more than save the business; he would turn it into a marketing landmark. It was Roman who would write all the Atlas ads, from the "Hey, Skinny!" strips to the "97-Pound Weakling" and the "The Insult That Made a Man Out of ‘Mac'" series. The ads went straight to the male psyche. They preyed on every man's insecurity—that he wasn't "man enough" to defend his girl at the beach. At a time when the entire country was reeling from the 1929 stock-market crash and its aftermath, Atlas promised to restore a million battered egos.

"When the Depression struck, a characteristic response in America was to blame ourselves," says Harvey Green, a professor of history at Northeastern University and author of Fit for America: Health, Fitness, Sport and American Society, 1830-1940. "Atlas interpreted the desire to transform ourselves as a way of self-improvement."

The story of the two Charleses—Atlas and Roman— was a marriage of muscle and marketing that permanently altered America's approach to fitness. Before them, exercise had been the habit of a few, motivated by health first with vanity a distant second. Roman's ads heralded a new view of a man's body—as a measurement of success. As people migrated from rural America to cities filled with offices, making an impression became a priority. It was why Dale Carnegie, author of How to Win Friends and Influence People, had won so many readers. But where Carnegie preached advancement through social skills, Atlas evangelized for the body beautiful.

"Carnegie's message was, fit in—Atlas' was to be bigger than everybody else," says Green. "Then nobody would mess with you. The idea that physical size could give you confidence was a powerful message."

Brute size was all well and good, but proportions were what mattered to Atlas. "I don't stress the matter of chest expansion," he told Family Circle magazine in 1939, "because it is not important....I've had a fellow in here who could blow himself up like a frog...but it was just a trick, and he was underdeveloped in every way." Nor did big biceps impress Atlas as much as well-developed abs. In one of his lessons, he wrote, "It is all very well to have strong arms and a grip of steel, but of what use are these unless the abdominal area is in perfect condition?" The paragraph concludes: "The rectus abdomus muscles will stand out firmly like a washboard."

His values were curiously old-fashioned, even quaint. Manfre was always surprised by Atlas' interest in his life. "He'd constantly ask me questions. ‘What did you do yesterday? How's it going? Did you go to church? I've got a new exercise you should add in.'" That Atlas never stopped working to improve his exercise program also impressed Manfre. "He kept studying animals," says Manfre, "and not just four-legged ones. He'd say, ‘See that bird fly? See how he flaps his wings to push out his chest?' I'd sit there amazed."

The personal touch was his hallmark; his lessons took the form of letters signed by the man himself: "Yours for Health and Strength" or "Yours for Perfect Development" or "Yours in Perfect Manhood" or (during World War II) "Yours for a Lasting Peace." Long before personal trainers, Atlas tried to create an intimate bond with his "students." That the exercises could be performed alone at home, without risk of embarrassment at a YMCA or club, was part of their appeal. "You will understand these exercises better," Atlas empathized, "if you read them out loud to yourself in a private room where you will not be disturbed."

Of course, not everyone bought into Dynamic-Tension. Most notably, Atlas feuded with a man named Bob Hoffman, who published Strength & Health magazine and sold York barbells on the side. In a celebrated case filed with the Federal Trade Commission in 1936, Hoffman called the Atlas system "dynamic hooey" and stood on his thumbs before the commission to prove the value of barbells. The FTC was apparently impressed—but not persuaded. In its finding of fact, it declared that Atlas "has employed and developed his said system since he was seventeen years of age and has attained his own great strength by the use of his own methods without relying upon apparatus." The FTC dismissed the suit and issued an order warning Hoffman not to disparage Atlas again.

John D. Fair, author of the biography Muscletown USA: Bob Hoffman and the Manly Culture of York Barbell, says he found articles in old issues of Physical Culture in which Atlas admitted he supplemented his exercises by using weights. But Fair also gives credit to Atlas. "He was an awfully nice guy with a great body, handsome and very strong," he told me. "He was a look, a household name. Hoffman admired him, but Hoffman was a businessman."

Terry Todd, an author and expert in sports and exercise history, who with his wife, Jan, has collected a major archive of physical culture memorabilia at the University of Texas, is also skeptical. "Dynamic-Tension can build muscle only to a limited degree," Todd says. "To build up muscle you need weights. But back then it was hard to make money in weights. You needed something cheap to make and cheap to ship. Atlas wasn't the only one who saw the value of mail order."

In fact, a fellow bodybuilder says he saw Atlas lift weights when they worked out at a Brooklyn YMCA in the early 1940s. "I never saw Angie lift heavy," says Terry Robinson, referring to Atlas by another nickname. "He just did a lot of repetitions." Robinson did not hold it against him. Atlas "was always smiling," he says. "He never showed off. He was a humble guy."

Atlas may have sneaked a few weight curls into his workouts, but as far as anyone knows he otherwise lived the virtuous life. He was an active promoter of the Boy Scouts. Asked for advice, he would say, "Live clean, think clean and don't go to burlesque shows." On the rare occasion when he dropped by a nightclub, usually in the company of Roman, he tried to talk the other patrons into switching to orange juice. And unlike Roman, who spent his growing fortune on luxury cars, yachts and private planes, Atlas had few known indulgences beyond a taste for white double-breasted suits. He lived in a four-room, fifth-floor Brooklyn apartment with his wife, Margaret, to whom he was singularly devoted, and his two children, Diana and Charles Jr. (Charles Jr. died last year of respiratory failure at age 89; Diana, now 89, declined to be interviewed for this article.) The family retreat was a modest home at Point Lookout on Long Island.

But he seemed to love the limelight. There are innumerable photos of Atlas hoisting bathing beauties or horsing around with boxers Max Baer and Joe Louis and golfer Gene Sarazen. He seemed to delight in publicity stunts, most of them engineered by Roman. He leashed himself to a 145,000-pound locomotive in a Queens railroad yard and towed it 112 feet. He entertained inmates at Sing-Sing (prompting the headline "Man Breaks Bar at Sing-Sing—Thousands Cheer, None Escape"). To protest an office dress code, he encouraged all the women on his staff to wear shorts to work in the summer. Then he appointed his private secretary president of the Long Live Shorts Club.

Atlas may have been more canny than he seemed. He never missed the chance to promote his business, whether posing with fans or lamenting the slovenly state of American manhood. A guest "appearance" with former heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey on a radio show in 1936, following a trip to England to open a London branch of the company, gives a flavor of Atlas' promotional skills:

Dempsey: Well, Charlie, I am certainly glad to see you safely back in the United States, but thought you might surprise us all by coming back on the German zeppelin.

Atlas: No, but if they ever reach the stage where they have flying gymnasiums I might do that, Jack.

Dempsey: How did you find the English people, Charlie? Did they seem to be in as good physical condition as our boys over here?

Atlas: On the contrary, they appeared in much better physical condition than our boys. The Englishman ... doesn't allow that chest of his to slip down below his belt, where you find most of the American chests. If some of the boys over here don't begin taking daily exercises, they'll be carrying their paunches around in baskets."

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.

And then the Internet brought Charles Atlas back to life.

It turned out the World Wide Web was the perfect marketing tool: cheaper even than the back pages of comics, international in scope, the ideal vehicle for mail- order sales. Seemingly immune from inflation—the course now sells for $49.95, only $20 more than in the early 1930s—Atlas' promise to "Make You a New Man!" was only a click away in banner ads on youth-oriented sites. The company says it now does 80 percent of its business online. "We are literally overwhelmed by the Web site activity," says Hogue, who declines to provide figures on revenue or growth. And such high-profile brands as the Gap, Mercedes and IBM have licensed the Atlas image or "Hey, Skinny!" comic strips for retro advertisements.

Charles Atlas came from a simpler time. His publicity stunts would hardly have interested today's celebrity magazines. He neither drank nor smoked, and his personal life was free of scandal. Steroids, had they been available then, would not have interested him. He sprang from the back pages of comic books and promised every bullied, insecure young man the means to take control of his life.

If he hadn't been real, no one would have believed him.

Jonathan Black wrote Yes, You Can! (2006), about motivational speaking. He is now at work on a book on fakery.

Editor's Note: This article has been revised to make the following corrections: The name of the co-author of Yours in Perfect Manhood is Charles Gaines. Fellow bodybuilder Terry Robinson used the nickname of "Angie" to refer to Charles Atlas.


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Comments (45)

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

I have eleven of the original "Health and strength" lessons from his 116th st New York address. Unfortunately i loaned the 12th issue to a friend and it never returned,and neither did he.It was most treasured, by his salutation, the P.S. said "Don`t forget pearl harbor."

Posted by Wayne Hornstein on January 24,2011 | 12:52 PM

I found thr orignal course of charles atlas is it worth anything

Posted by doriann on November 17,2010 | 09:53 PM

The Charles Atlas course is the real deal. Thank You Charles Atlas.

Posted by isaac morrow jr on October 30,2010 | 04:01 PM

In this day of soaring obesity, the Dynamic Tension course cannot be excelled. It has helped me add muscle, lose fat, gain energy, and has even helped me develope a more optimistic outlook on life. Atlas is not an easy quick-fix solution. It is a honest method given by an honest man. It inspires, uplifts, and perfects every person who applies the methods. If that is what you are willing to pay, Atlas has what you want.

Posted by Dr. Kirby M. Hill on September 25,2010 | 06:33 PM

In researching historical information on Mr Atlas, I have a few questions from his biographers:
In researching Mr Charles Atlas' biographical history I have a few questions for his biographers, or those who have information on these question:
Are there any true accounts of young Mr Sicialano getting into fights with bullies, or is the story of sand being thrown into his face more of a myth? Did Mr Atlas, as an adolescent or young adult get into any truly newsworthy physical fights as he got older? I was told that a NYC newspaper reported and published information on a bloody fist fight (in a NYC subway?) around 1925. Is there any truth to this story?
Is there any information on how Charles Atlas met his wife, Margaret, and her background. Was she married before she met Mr.Sicialano (Charles Atlas), and did she have any children of her own before she met Mr. Atlas?

Thank you in advance for any information on these issues.

Is Mr. Atlas' daughter still alive

Posted by Bill Torch on September 4,2010 | 02:28 PM

To whom it may concern:
What city and state is the Charles Atlas museum located?
Is there one in New York?

David Segarra
Brooklyn,N.Y.

Posted by david segarra on July 14,2010 | 02:13 PM

actually charles atlas did use weights when bob hoffman went to court over this against atlas john grimek said someone caught charles atlas using weights.. i did see this in some where youll have to find it...

Posted by tblake on July 1,2010 | 10:55 AM

Charles Atlas is a true legend of physical culture.
http://www.musclememorabilia.blogspot.com/

Posted by William Moore on June 20,2010 | 12:55 AM

I am a 19 year old male.

I tried weight training in the past, but I never saw good results, most of my friends that I trained with seemed to make great gains.

I have grown up with severe asthma, despite this I played soccer for years and ran with my dad (a marathon runner) unfortunately Asthma has just kept me away from running.

I decided I wanted a great body, I wanted to look in the mirror and like what I saw, I wanted to be proud of myself.

After months of frustration, I gave up... Looking back I think my friends were making me use too much weight, I am lucky I didn't get injured.

I found the Charles Atlas course 4 months ago while researching marketing things for a class.

Since I started the course I have gained about 15 pounds of muscle (gone from 155 to 170) a lot of this can be said to be "noob gains" but still, it has been impressive.

I am still training with the course and hope to gain a great body in the future, say what you want but this course works, all of my weightlifting friends are impressed by my build too, most started adding charles atlas push up (dips) to their routines.

The quotations about charles atlas using weights three times a week or whatever are false, no one has ever been able to trace that to a credible source.

I now do 150 to 200 "Charles atlas push ups" a day (sets of 25) If anything, at least I am healthy now.

Posted by Nils Evensen on May 23,2010 | 03:13 AM

A few points should be made. The exercises that Atlas used and that he called dynamic tension were already being used for hundreds of years by practioners of Asian martial arts. Bruce Lee commented that such exercise were not without value but were limited.
There are no Olympic level power lifters that only do dynamic tension in training and only lift weights in competition. That is because lifting weights is superior.
If someone only does dynamic tension their muscles will get strong but their tendons and joints will be weak as no true load has been placed on them. This can lead to a serious injury when someone only trained in dynamic tension picks up a real weight.
As for the comment about seeing a lion at a zoo stretching. Lions don't use dynamic tension and stretching doesn't make them strong. This comment is most most likely simple sales puffing.
Dynamic tension has it's place and there are values to the use of it.

Posted by J. Jenkins on March 24,2010 | 10:29 AM

In 1940 at the NY Worlds Fair "Superman Comics' held a 'Super Boy & Super Girl' contest

I won the boys section and Maureen Reynolds wons the girls.

You can check this out by putting my name'Bill Aronis' in 'Search' then proceed from there.

There are several pics of the event

The reason I am holding my trophy at the top is it was broken when they gave it to me. I still have it.

Charles Atlas disapointed me, I was 15 at the time and he asked me to come down to his office in Manhattan later.

It turned out he wanted to sell me his course, what a disapointment.

The great depression was still on where was a 15 year old to get that kind of money.

Bill Aronis

PS I have to admit it was Atlas who actualy picked me not the other judges

Posted by William Aronis on March 8,2010 | 10:30 PM

The Charles Atlas course is timeless. It works as well today as it did years ago. It obviously works or it would not still be around.

Remember, there is a whole industry the size of the gdp of serveral small countries out there telling you Atlas and similar courses that use bodyweigtht, self resistance, etc and don't require gym memberships and acess to weights and equipment won't work.

So, who has the vested interest, the industry that tells you Atlas doesn't work, or the happy Atlas customers?

Posted by Ryan on January 25,2010 | 12:42 AM

Wicked Willie knows... Charlie tested his strength 3x per week... So he lifted weights...

Posted by Dave Hartnett on September 11,2009 | 03:01 PM

Fantastic article.

My son is eight tomorrow and slightly frail looking.

He is determined to grow muscles and uses a tiny weights set I bought him (anything heavier would not be healthy for him).

I have just told him about dynamic tension (definetely safer) and about the Charles Atlas story - The man is a great role model even today.

Posted by Ralph Reed on August 21,2009 | 05:23 AM

My husband is an avid weightlifter for 25 years, and was gifted (not sure if original) Charles Atlas work out The Dynmaic Tension Course.

What a wonder read and treasure for our family.

Posted by JACKIE HILL on August 19,2009 | 10:18 AM

No commentary on Mr. Atlas is complete, I feel, without including Richard O'Brien's tongue-in-cheek ode to the man and the fit specimens he bequeathed to the world.

"A weakling weighing 98 pounds / Got sand in his face when kicked to the ground. / His girl split on him, so then in the gym / The sweat from his pores as he worked for his cause / Made him glisten and gleam / And with massage and steam / He was thin and quite lean / He was in good shape, but the wrong shape! / He ate nutritious high-protein, and swallowed raw eggs / Tried to build up his shoulders, his chest, arms and legs / Then a magazine advert with a new muscle plan / Said "In just seven days I can make you a man!" / He'd done press-ups, and chin-ups, cleaned & jerked, done the snatch / He thought Dynamic Tension just must be a catch / So he re-read the advert to see how it ran / It said "In just seven days I can make you a man!"

Posted by SeeingI on August 10,2009 | 02:08 PM

Under examination by the FTC Atlas admitted using weights to 'warm up' before his isometric exercises. How did his little warm up go? About three to five sets with heavy weights per body area.

Of course three sets of squats at 400 lbs doesn't do anything much except prepare you for the *real* exercise: sitting there tensing your leg for a minute.

Posted by AJ Slater on August 10,2009 | 01:37 PM

Loved this article about Charles Atlas! When I was growing up, he had advertisements in the back of comic books and magazines. The article took me back briefly to that time in my life.

Posted by Marla P. WIse on August 9,2009 | 06:35 PM

Charles Atlas lived in Point Lookout on Long Island when I was there as a young kid. Of course he looked ancient to me on the beach, but he definitely had a nice body!

Posted by Jim Rome on August 6,2009 | 08:23 PM

I'm pleased to see that the two mistakes in Jonathan Black's article have been corrected on this website. The authors of Yours in Perfect Manhood are Charles Gaines and George Butler, not Chris Gaines and George Butler. Also, Atlas's nickname was Angie, not Augie, as noted in the article. I reveal Atlas's parents' names in my book about Atlas's first prize-winning pupil, Tony Sansone - American Adonis, Tony Sansone, the First Male Physique Icon, published by Universe, 2004.

Posted by john massey on August 6,2009 | 10:42 AM

I am unable to find the course on 'Dynamic Tension' which the ariticle says sells on the internet for $49.95.

I would like to get it, but can't seem to navigate to it.

Could you please send me the web page where it may be purchased?

Thanks!

Bill Gumbiner

Posted by Bill Gumbiner on August 5,2009 | 10:53 PM

The CHarles Atlas story is one of a true American Icon. He transformed the way Americans do business through direct mail, and offering an alternative to weights. The company has been in existence for over 80 years, and teaches not only fitness, but a way of life. Mr. Atlas would be pleased how the company has entered the 21st Century.

Posted by Fred Boas on August 4,2009 | 12:13 PM

In 1957 I was 13 year old...I had asthma...I was going to school many times with a note from my mom to the teacher ...sorry he is late if was very sick last nite...not only one time...I could not live being a victim a person sorry for himself..The comic book finaly start coming to the village in Uruguay because the train was arriving....Charles Atlas got my attention...I just wanted to be like him....I could not send for his course...I start making my own barbell,because I saw a short in the Church Saloon of a Mr.Universe 1957...I was crazy about...But the initial motivation was Charles Atlas...Where I was leaving until I was 14 you can only maybe compare to the very old Cowboy muvies...At 15 I was lucky that my father send to the capital Montevideo to a private catholic school...I took my barbell there the priest like my discipline and let me use them...I did send them for Atlas course...never got it..never knew why...but that inspiration,before a new or bodybuilder like my dear friend Armand Tanny it was Atlas...God bless his soul,,,I become in 1968 Mr.Uruguay came to America to the Mr.Universe in Miami...y the rest is history...Thank you Atlas because i don t belong to the steroid fake champions...Thank for a pure phisical culturist!!!Mario da Silva

Posted by MARio Da Silva on August 1,2009 | 11:21 PM

Check out this website and you can see the actual information on the FTC finding of fact. Atlas never worked out with weights.
http://www.charlesatlas.com/ftc.html
The people that say this are just saying it to hurt Atlas's great reputation. You can also see someone using weights compared to Atlas's body and see that he didn't use weights.

Posted by Stephen on July 30,2009 | 03:25 PM

God Bless Nathaniel Merritt for his wonderful testimony.

Bill Gibbons
wgibbons@shaw.ca

Posted by Bill Gibbons on July 29,2009 | 08:43 PM

Charles Atlas has been the biggest inspiration in my life. His Dynamic Tension course transformed me and I went on to compete in Scottish bodybuilding contests in the 1970's as a teenager.

I even knew his son, Charles Jr, who passed away in August 2008 aged 89. God Bless them both! Bill Gibbons

Posted by Bill Gibbons on July 29,2009 | 08:41 PM

The people that claim they saw Atlas lifting weights after age seventeen, or that Atlas said he "supplemented" Dynamic Tension with weights are untruthful. Why? LOOK AT THE PHOTOS OF HIS STUDENTS THROUGH THE YEARS! Those men have VERY impressive physiques, MANY FAR MORE MUSCULAR THAN ATLAS! PLUS THOSE MEN ACHEIVED THOSE RESULTS IN A MATTER OF MONTHS WITH ATLAS' COURSE! If Dynamic Tension didn't work as advertised those men would not have such physiques! The naysayers are protecting the exercise gadget industry, a very lucrative industry indeed! It would be very bad for business if the world discovered that weights and exercise gizmos are a waste of time, money, and living space.

Between the ages of 20 and 25 I gained 70 pounds of muscle using the Atlas exercises. Mind you, I adapted them to a modern bodybuilding routine of the proper sets and reps. I became very powerful, able to lift small cars and walk with them like wheelbarrows, strictly to impress people. Today at 56 I still am faithful to the Atlas System and can wrestle down young men in their twenties and thirties with ease, holding both of their wrists in my hand and they're helpless. Everyone I know who lifted weights has lots of damage to their bodies from them. The AMA endorses the Charles Atlas system of Dynamic Tension, which is NOT isometrics by the way! Isometrics are STATIC exercises. Dynamic Tension is DYNAMIC, meaning you MOVE throughout the entire range of your muscles motions. Calling Dynamic Tension "isometrics" is another ploy by the Barbell Cartel to discredit Atlas and DT.

ATLAS TOLD THE TRUTH AND LIVED THE TRUTH. Use your own brain and eyes. Look at the photos of Atlas and his students at this site:

http://www.sandowplus.co.uk/Competition/Atlas/atlasindex.htm#ehs

Unless one is involved in weightlifting competitions, no one else needs them. Period. Sign up with Atlas today!

Nathaniel J. Merritt
Author of Jehovah Unmasked! and I Was A Teenage Jehovah's Witness.

Posted by Nathaniel J. Merritt on July 28,2009 | 12:53 AM

Charles Atlas (Angelo Siciliano) did in fact train with weights and this was confirmed during his courtroom proceedings with/against Bob Hoffman. When questioned as to whether or not he trained with weights, he was purported to reply that he only used barbells "to test his strength." He was then asked how often he tested his strength, to which he replied "Three times a week for about an hour each time."

The Dynamic Tension course was much easier to package and mail and didn't require the outlay of additional money for barbells or dumbbells. Absolute truth was not a required component in the physical training courses of that era.

Posted by William "Wicked Willie" Peel on July 28,2009 | 03:23 PM

Atlas didn't write the Atlas course, and the majority of the exercises were plagiarized from other sources. Certainly Atlas did not create them after watching animals at the zoo. That is a complete myth and why people find the need to keep promulgating this mythology is beyond me. I guess the truth doesn't really matter.

Posted by Scott on July 27,2009 | 01:19 PM

Thank you for the tribute to Charles Atlas. He is one of my heros! I took his course at age 14 in 1954 and the pictures show good results. Later I progressed to weight training and found my life's work as a gym and health food entrepreneur, promoter of bodybuilding and lifting contests and writer. I now produce a magazine for fitness/health historians and collectors of "iron sport" memorabilia. Without Charles Atlas, I might not have found this rewarding career.

Posted by Mike BonDurant on July 24,2009 | 10:31 PM

Charles Atlas was found to never work out with weights according to the Federal Trade Commission. I think enough said. Charles Atlas inspired me to do so many things! I am so happy I found this article! I was also happy to find their website www.charlesatlas.com!
Thanks Charles Atlas for the tribute you have made to the human race in that you made it the norm for people to get fit! Boy does this country need it now!

Posted by William on July 24,2009 | 10:01 AM



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