Fitness guru Jack LaLanne -- who inspired television viewers to lose weight
and lift weights decades before exercise hit the mainstream -- died Sunday
afternoon of respiratory failure caused by pneumonia at age 96 at his home in
Morro Bay.
Known as the "Godfather of Fitness," perhaps no other individual in
history had a greater hand in literally reshaping a culture.
For almost 34 years, LaLanne was a television staple with the first
syndicated daily exercise show, whipping his viewers through a regimen of
jumping jacks, deep-knee bends and pushups.
In his later years, he and wife Elaine used cable outlets to tirelessly
extol the virtues of juiced vegetables -- using his patented juicer -- as a
mainstay of good nutrition and health.
"I have not only lost my husband and a great American icon, but the best
friend and most loving partner anyone could ever hope for," Elaine LaLanne,
his wife of 51 years and a frequent partner in his television appearances,
said in a statement.
As told to numerous interviewers over the years, his life story could
have been ripped from the pages of a Horatio Alger novel.
Born Francois Henri LaLanne on Sept. 26, 1914, in Oakland, his French
immigrant parents, John LaLanne and Jennie Garaig, were poor.
By his own admission, he was a miserable child prone to rages where, on
one occasion, he tried to burn his parents' house down; on another, he chased
his brother with an axe.
"I had boils, pimples and suffered from near-sightedness," he noted of
his youth in a 2005 interview. "Little girls used to beat me up."
Providence intervened when, at 15, he heard nutrition pioneer Paul Bragg
lecture on the benefits of diet and exercise.
He discovered that he was "a sugar and junk food junkie."
That realization led LaLanne on a crusade that would span decades. But
not all of those years were a smooth ride.
Shortly after opening the nation's first modern health studio on the
third floor of an aging Oakland office building in 1936, LaLanne began to take
heat from, of all directions, the medical community.
"People thought I was a charlatan and a nut," he said in a 2005
interview.
"The doctors were against me -- they said that working out with weights
would give people everything from heart attacks to hemorrhoids; that women
would look like men."
LaLanne prevailed.
By 1951, his message of diet and exercise had proved popular to the point
that he was given a television show to preach his gospel of health.
In his trademark skin-tight suit, he was nonstop in leading exercises
while spewing a steady patter of inspirational platitudes such as: "Don't
exceed the feed limit; your waistline is your lifeline; work at living and you
don't have to die tomorrow; eat right and you can't go wrong."
The show was a hit and the jumping off point for an empire that would
eventually include a couple of hundred health clubs, videos and compact discs,
books, films and even a stint as himself on "The Simpsons" animated television
show.
And no one sold Jack LaLanne better than Jack LaLanne.
For instance, in 1954, at age 40, he swam the length of the Golden Gate
Bridge underwater with 140 pounds of equipment, including two air tanks.
Twenty years later, at age 60, he swam from Alcatraz to Fisherman's Wharf
for the second time.
He was shackled, handcuffed and towing a 1,000-pound boat.
At 70, once again shackled and cuffed, he towed 70 boats with 70 people
from the Queen's Way Bridge to the Queen Mary in Long Beach Harbor. It was a
wind- and current-whipped 1.5 miles.
In the 1980s, he served on the governor's Council on Physical Fitness and
Sports with then-actor/bodybuilder and now former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger,
accepted a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and moved to Morro Bay with
Elaine.
Of this last development, he told the then-Telegram-Tribune in 1987: "If
you don't like Morro Bay, you don't like sex and money."
In 2005, the Morro Bay Chamber of Commerce presented LaLanne its Living
Treasure award, a lifetime achievement honor given to local citizens.
But LaLanne also had a couple of setbacks along the way.
In 1991, he pleaded no contest to a charge of alcohol-related reckless
driving after he was stopped by the CHP near Cuesta College and blew a legally
impaired 0.08 percent blood alcohol level. He received a fine, counseling and
probation.
Then, in 1996, 70,000 of his Juice Tiger vegetable juicers were recalled
after at least 14 people were cut on the hands, face and chest. Another
600,000 juicers weren't recalled, however.
In addition to his wife, LaLanne is survived by two sons, Dan and Jon,
and a daughter, Yvonne.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.


