Scott Ostler

Jack LaLanne at 95

He exercised his personal demons

Scott Ostler, Chronicle Staff Writer

Thursday, October 8, 2009

 

Jack LaLanne and wife Elaine go through the crowd at his ...Fitness pioneer Jack Lalanne, who turned 95 in late Septe...


Bad food and sloth ooze over our planet like hot fudge mixed with giblet gravy.

Fast food speeds us to our doublewide coffins, and we gave up exercise when

watches started winding themselves. But the battle to deliver mankind from its

bad habits rages. Leading the charge, as he has for 80 years, is the Bay Area's

gift to world health, Jack LaLanne.

  

He's 95, in fabulous shape although no longer the slab of muscle who inspired a

nation via his daily exercise TV program. The brain is still cooking, and that's

always been LaLanne's most effective tool. Jack's wife, Elaine, says she fell in

love with him a half century ago not for his muscles.  "I was not interested in his

body," says Elaine LaLanne, also in super shape at 84. "I was attracted to his

mind. I thought, 'He's got a brain. He's got a brain.' "  "And he's sittin' on it,"

LaLanne whispers, squeezing the biceps of an interviewer, who suddenly regrets

skipping his morning push-ups.

The LaLannes were in town Wednesday for a party in honor of Jack's 95th

birthday, at John's Grill, where the Jack LaLanne Salad never goes off the

menu. Teaming with wife   They're a team, Jack and Elaine. When the subject

of doughnuts comes up, Elaine says, "Jack, tell him what the healthiest part

of the doughnut is."   "The hole!" LaLanne says.

  

When the interviewer mentions that he watched LaLanne's TV show in the

'50s, because his mom tuned in daily, LaLanne gives the interviewer's

biceps another firm squeeze and confides, "I spent a lot of time on the

floor with your mother."   But seriously, folks. Beneath the jokes and

whimsy is a man as serious as a heart attack mixed with a stroke.

He'll make you smile, but he'll also grab you by the arm, and by the head

and the heart, and lead you to a better life.   LaLanne has made a fortune,

but he won't retire. He carries on his crusade with the zeal of a man whose

jumpsuit is on fire.   "If you believe something, live it!" LaLanne barks.

  

He recently wrapped up a tour promoting his 11th book, "Live Young

Forever: 12 Steps to Optimum Health, Fitness & Longevity." One reason to

trust what the man preaches: He has seen the dark side. A reformed sugarholic

  

LaLanne at 15 was "a miserable goddamn kid. It was like hell." He was a

sugarholic, gorging on sweets then barfing to make room for more. He was

constantly sick, underweight, had zero energy, headaches so bad he would

bang his head against a wall. He had an explosive temper, severe depression

and a head full of demons when he dropped out of Berkeley High.

Then a neighbor gave Jack and his mother tickets to a lecture by clean-eating

advocate Paul Bragg. Boom! Jack LaLanne was born.   Says LaLanne,

"Bragg said, 'My dear friends, it matters not what your physical condition is.

If you obey nature's laws, you will be born again.' I went home and prayed,

'Dear God, give me the willpower to refrain from those foods that are killing me.' "

Soon LaLanne was healthy beyond his dreams. He became a football star, a

wrestling champ and a babe magnet. At 22, he opened a gym in downtown

Oakland, and when business didn't boom - maybe because in 1936 nobody knew

what the hell a gym was - he told himself, "Jack, people are not coming to

you. You gotta go to them!"

He trained cops and firefighters, he recruited at high schools, and in

1951, he began hosting a daily exercise show on KGO (Channel 7) - where he

met Elaine - that became a network smash, running until 1985.

  

Using his personality and pep - with his muscles serving as his background

singers - he bullied a nation into rethinking its nonapproach to nutrition

and exercise. He invented and pioneered the fitness industry.

  

"My whole life," LaLanne says, "is, 'How can I help people like that man

(Bragg) helped me?' "   Now Jack and Elaine sell their juicers on infomercials,

the book is out, and he's still preaching the gospel. The seeming futility of shaping up

the world does not daunt him.   "I never think about that," LaLanne says.

"I think about things that I can improve." Still working out

One thing he can always improve is himself. LaLanne works out two hours a

day, mostly swimming and lifting weights, at the LaLanne mansion on the

Central Coast.   "I work at living," he says, leaning close and squeezing an arm.

"Most people work at dying. Dying's easy."   One of LaLanne's most effective

sales devices has been his amazing feats of strength. When Arnold Schwarzenegger

came to America in 1968 and became an instant sensation on the Southern

California muscle scene, LaLanne challenged the kid to a duel at Muscle Beach.

The Austrian Oak was 21; the Oakland Oak was 54.

  

"I beat him in chin-ups and push-ups," LaLanne says. "He said, 'That Jack

LaLanne's an animal! I was sore for four days. I couldn't lift my arms!' "

At age 70, handcuffed, LaLanne towed 70 loaded boats 1.5 miles in Long

Beach Harbor. Now LaLanne's most outrageous publicity stunt is kicking

life's butt on a daily basis.   "What feat are you going to do this year?" Elaine asks,

lobbing another softball to her slugger hubby.  "I'm going to tow Elaine across the bathtub!"

Coming Friday   In Datebook: Legendary fitness guru Jack LaLanne gives a Chronicle

reporter a real workout.LaLanne's innovations   Jack LaLanne invented fitness.

His innovations include:   The gym/spa: In 1936, he opened the Jack LaLanne

Physical Culture Studio at 409 15th St. in Oakland, the first modern gym.

He eventually sold his chain of studios to Bally.

Mind-body fusion: Now it's a popular concept. "You can't separate the mind

and body," he says.   Exercise machines: The kind with cables, pulleys and weight

selectors. LaLanne didn't patent them, but he invented them, including the first

leg-extension machine.   Muscles on women: Before LaLanne's TV show,

a woman's only workout was behind a vacuum cleaner.

Muscles on athletes: LaLanne helped dispel the "muscle-bound" myth. He was

a fine athlete and a 4-handicap golfer.   Exercise videos: His TV show was the

first workout video, live.   Varying workout routines: It's what some now call

"muscle confusion." LaLanne changes his workout routine every 30 days.

And he'll do a particular lift slow today, fast tomorrow.

Yoga: He has never called it that, but from the beginning he preached the

importance of stretching.   - Scott Ostler