Dan Lurie
Dan Lurie (April 1, 1923 - November 6, 2013) was a founding father of bodybuilding, television star, entrepreneur, world record holder for amazing feats of strength and a physical fitness pioneer that won the Mr. America title of "America's Most Muscular Man" four times by 1949[1] and made history arm wrestling U.S. President Ronald Reagan on the Oval Office desk of the White House.
Biography
Lurie was born in Brooklyn, New York and later moved to Long Island where he lived until age 90. A world-class bodybuilder in the 1940s, Lurie won numerous titles in the Mr. America competitions.[1] In 1948, he established the International Federation of Body Builders and later went on to create The World Body Building Guild.[2][3] In the 1950s he went on to star as "Sealtest Dan The Muscle Man" in a long running CBS TV series called The Sealtest Big Top.
Throughout his career, Lurie had a long-standing and well known rivalry with his former business partner, Joe Weider. As a magazine publisher, bodybuilding trainer and contest promoter, Lurie also had well publicized relationships with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Lou Ferrigno. These relationships both ended in litigation; the details of which were controversially detailed in Lurie's 2009 book "Heart Of Steel", the foreword of which is written by Regis Philbin. Throughout his colorful career, Lurie honored and befriended many Hollywood stars such as Mae West, Steve Reeves and Clint Eastwood. During his tenure in the Fitness game from the 1940s through the year 2000, Lurie owned and operated numerous Dan Lurie Gyms and Health Clubs in New York and Miami Beach, that attracted celebrities and bodybuilders alike. Sylvester Stallone notoriously trained at one of them.[4][5]
Lurie manufactured his own line of weights, exercise equipment and nutritional supplements which he sold via catalog and through the flagship chain of stores he owned and operated in New York called Dan Lurie's Sports World. Additionally, Lurie was known for creating and publishing several successful international magazine titles that included Muscle Training Illustrated, Wrestling Training Illustrated, World Karate, World Champion Boxing and Hot Rock.[4][6]
Lurie was still active well into his 80's when he came out of semi-retirement to promote new bodybuilding events and products. At age 90 he continued to make plans to create and promote bodybuilding shows and travel to schools, universities and conventions to speak out in regard to the dangers of drugs and steroids in sports as he had done for years before. Lurie was a staunch promoter of clean athletics and natural bodybuilding and claims to have never used performance enhancement drugs. He was famous for his trademark slogan "Health Is Your Greatest Wealth".[7]
Television career
Lurie appeared on the Sealtest Big Top Circus Variety Show on CBS. This was the first color television program in the USA. He played "Sealtest Dan, The Muscle Man". Ed McMahon played a clown. Lurie also appeared as "The Mighty Rewop" in the popular children's TV series Captain Video.
Hall Of Fame
On April 29, 2007, Lurie was inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.[8]
Strength and endurance records
- 1225 parallel dips in 90 minutes [9]
- A one-handed overhead bent press with 285 lb bodyweight 168 lb [9]
- Leg press with 1230 lb [9]
- Back lift of 1810 lb [9]
References
- 1 2 "Popular Science Vol. 154, No. 3". Bonnier Corporation. March 1949: 63. ISSN 0161-7370.
- ↑ http://legendarystrength.com/dan-lurie/
- ↑ "The Passing of A Bodybuilding Pioneer". Muscular Development.
- 1 2 "Dan Lurie, 90, Star and Promoter of Bodybuilding, Dies". New York Times.
- ↑ "Dan Lurie". Bodybudilding.com.
- ↑ "Dan Lurie Founding Father Of Bodybuilding". Orlando Weekly.
- ↑ http://www.naturalchampion.net/articles/article/2412079/75839.htm
- ↑ "Awards". The National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved May 2010. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - 1 2 3 4 "Dan Lurie". MUSCLE TRAINING Illustrated. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
External links
- Dan Lurie's Official Website
- Dan Lurie at the Internet Movie Database
- Muscular Development article by Joe Pietaro, July 2009