Looking back at physical culture
The "Early Years" of
Bodybuilding are considered to be the period between 1880 and 1930.
Bodybuilding (the art of displaying the muscles of the physical body)
did not really exist prior to the late 19th
century, when it was promoted by a man from Prussia named Eugen Sandow,
who is now generally referred to as "The Father of Modern Bodybuilding".
He is credited as being a pioneer of the sport because he allowed an
audience to enjoy viewing his physique in "muscle display performances".
Although audiences thrilled seeing a well developed physique, those
men simply displayed their bodies as part of strength demonstrations or
wrestling matches. Sandow had a stage show built around these displays
through his manager, Florenz Ziegfeld.
He became so successful at it, he later created several businesses
around his fame and was among the first to market products branded with
his name alone. As he became more popular, he was credited with
inventing and selling the first exercise equipment for the masses
(machined dumbbells, spring pulleys and tension bands).
Sandow was a strong advocate of "the Grecian Ideal" (this was a
standard where a mathematical "ideal" was set up and the "perfect
physique" was close to the proportions of ancient Greek and Roman
statues from classical times).
This is how Sandow built his own physique and in the early years, men
were judged by how closely they matched these "ideal" proportions.
Sandow organised the first bodybuilding contest on 14 September 1901
called the "Great Competition" and held in the Royal Albert Hall,
London, UK.
Judged by himself, Sir Charles Lawes, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle the
contest was a huge success and was sold out and hundreds of physical
culture enthusiasts were turned away. The trophy presented to the winner
was a bronze statue of Sandow himself sculpted by Frederick Pomeroy.
The
winner was William L. Murray of Nottingham, England. The most
prestigious bodybuilding contest today is the Mr. Olympia, and since
1977, the winner has been presented with the same bronze statue of
Sandow he himself presented to the winner at the first contest.
On 16 January, 1904, the first large-scale bodybuilding competition
in America took place at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The
winner was Al Treloar and he was declared "The Most Perfectly Developed
Man in the World". Treloar won a $1,000 cash prize, a substantial sum at
that time.
Two weeks later, Thomas Edison made a film of Al Treloar's posing
routine. Edison also made two films of Sandow a few years before, making
him the man who made the first three motion pictures featuring a
bodybuilder.
In the early 20th century, Bernarr Macfadden and Charles Atlas,
continued to promote bodybuilding across the world. Alois P. Swoboda was
an early pioneer in America and the man who Charles Atlas credited with
his success in his statement: "Everything that I know I learned from A.
P. (Alois) Swoboda."
Other important bodybuilders in the early history of bodybuilding
prior to 1930 include: Earle Liederman (writer of some of the earliest
bodybuilding instruction books), Seigmund Breitbart (famous Jewish
bodybuilder), Georg Hackenschmidt, George F. Jowett, Maxick (a pioneer
in the art of posing), Monte Saldo, Launceston Elliot, Sig Klein, Sgt.
Alfred Moss, Joe Nordquist, Lionel Strongfort (Strongfortism), Gustav
Fristensky (the Czech champion), and Alan C. Mead, who became an
impressive muscle champion despite the fact that he lost a leg in the
Great War.
The "Golden Age"
The period of around 1940 to 1970 is often referred to as the "Golden
Age" of bodybuilding because of changes in the aesthetic for more mass,
as well as muscular symmetry and definition, which characterised the
"early years".
This was due in large part to the advent of World War II, which
inspired many young men to be bigger, stronger and more aggressive in
their attitudes. This was accomplished by improved training techniques,
better nutrition and more effective equipment. Several important
publications came into being, as well, and new contests emerged as the
popularity of the sport grew.
This period of bodybuilding was typified at Muscle Beach in Venice,
California. Famous names in bodybuilding from this period included Steve
Reeves (notable in his day for portraying Hercules and other
sword-and-sandals heroes), Reg Park, John Grimek, Larry Scott, Bill
Pearl, and Irvin "Zabo" Koszewski.
The rise in popularity of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) added a
bodybuilding competition to their existing weightlifting contest in 1939
- and the following year this competition was named AAU Mr. America.
Around the mid-1940s most bodybuilders became disgruntled with the
AAU since they only allowed amateur competitors and they placed more
focus on the Olympic sport of weightlifting. This caused brothers Ben
and Joe Weider to form the International Federation of BodyBuilders (IFBB)
- which organized their competition IFBB Mr. America, which was open to
professional athletes.
In 1950, another organization, the National Amateur Bodybuilders
Association (NABBA) started their NABBA Mr. Universe contest in the UK.
Another major contest, Mr. Olympia was first held in 1965 - and this is
currently the most prestigious title in bodybuilding.
Initially contests were only for men, but the NABBA added Miss
Universe in 1965 and Ms. Olympia was started in 1980.
1970s onwards
In the 1970s, bodybuilding had major publicity thanks to Arnold
Schwarzenegger and the 1977 film Pumping Iron. By this time the IFBB
dominated the sport and the AAU took a back seat.
The National Physique Committee (NPC) was formed in 1981 by Jim
Manion, who had just stepped down as chairman of the AAU Physique
Committee.
The NPC has gone on to become the most successful bodybuilding
organization in the U.S., and is the amateur division of the IFBB. The
late 1980s and early 1990s saw the decline of AAU sponsored bodybuilding
contests. In 1999, the AAU voted to discontinue its bodybuilding events.
This period also saw the rise of anabolic steroids used both in
bodybuilding and many other sports. To combat this, and to be allowed to
be an IOC member, the IFBB introduced doping tests for both steroids and
other banned substances. Although doping tests occurred, the majority of
professional bodybuilders still used anabolic steroids for competition.
During the 1970's the use of anabolic steroids was openly discussed
partly due to the fact they were legal.[3] However the U.S. Congress in
the Anabolic Steroid Control Act of 1990 placed anabolic steroids into
Schedule III of the Controlled substance act (CSA).
In 1990, wrestling promoter Vince McMahon announced he was forming a
new bodybuilding organization, the World Bodybuilding Federation (WBF).
McMahon wanted to bring WWF-style showmanship and bigger prize money to
the sport of bodybuilding.
McMahon signed 13 competitors to lucrative long-term contracts,
something virtually unheard of in bodybuilding up until then. Most of
the WBF competitors jumped ship from the IFBB.
In response to the WBF's formation, IFBB president Ben Weider
blacklisted all the bodybuilders who had signed with the WBF. The IFBB
also quietly stopped testing their athletes for anabolic steroid use
since it was difficult to compete thus with a new organization which did
not test for steroids.
In 1992, Vince McMahon instituted drug testing for WBF athletes
because he and the WWF were under investigation by the federal
government for alleged involvement in anabolic steroid trafficking.
The result was that the competitors in the 1992 WBF contest looked
sub-par, according to some contemporary accounts. McMahon formally
dissolved the WBF in July, 1992.
Reasons for this probably included lack of income from the
pay-per-view broadcasts of the WBF contests, slow sales of the WBF's
magazine Bodybuilding Lifestyles (which later became WBF Magazine), and
the expense of paying multiple 6-figure contracts as well as producing
two TV shows and a monthly magazine.
However, the formation of the WBF had two positive effects for the
IFBB athletes: (1) it caused IFBB founder Joe Weider to sign many of his
top stars to contracts, and (2) it caused the IFBB to raise prize money
in its sanctioned contests. Joe Weider eventually offered to accept the
WBF bodybuilders back into the IFBB for a fine of 10% of their former
yearly WBF salary.
In the early 2000s, the IFBB was attempting to make bodybuilding an
Olympic sport. It obtained full IOC membership in 2000 and was
attempting to get approved as a demonstration event at the Olympics
which would hopefully lead to it being added as a full contest.
This did not happen. Olympic recognition for bodybuilding remains
controversial since some argue that bodybuilding is not a sport because
the actual contest does not involve athletic effort. Also, some still
have the misperception that bodybuilding necessarily involves the use of
anabolic steroids, which are prohibited in Olympic competitions.
Proponents argue that the posing routine requires skill and
preparation, and bodybuilding should therefore be considered a sport.
To be continued |