Going back
twenty-five years to rummage through my mind can be a musty experience.
Not every thought I turn over is a precious and delicate item
of nostalgia or a rusting, rugged tool used to forge a splendid
future. Dim recollection, they are more like sagging, threadbare
spring-popping mattresses and worn out, tight-legged bell-bottoms;
often embarrassing, uncomfortable and tiresome. The 70's were
for me lusterless and without grand imagination. Not necessarily
bad years, they just happened.
What went
on in the land of bodybuilding, I'm not sure. I carried on my
merry weight lifting with internal enthusiasm and fulfillment
like a fly cast fisherman in a secret cove on his favorite lake
up north. I missed the Olympia's, the Mike Mentzer-Arnold Schwarzenegger
Battle, and the whole muscle population explosion. It's as if
I had peacefully slept.
One day amidst
those sleepy times, Artie Zeller came to my house in Playa Del
Rey for a friendly visit as he often did to break up his day.
He brought with him a very nice young man, George Butler; both
were carrying large, professional cameras. I was working on a
chandelier of beams and chain and rusted iron the size of a Volkswagen.
The torch was blazing and tools were scattered everywhere in my
workplace. I looked like well a madman; broken goggles,
shredded jeans, barefooted and generally dirty. This pleasant
scene was further enhanced by my bearing a lingering symptom of
mild acetylene poisoning; a slack, slightly paralyzed jaw. Cute.
Conversation was one-sided. I listened and uttered grunts as we
sat around that enlightening afternoon. George Butler, a smooth
gentleman, the Pumping Iron film master and me, Bomber gone bonkers.
You can't
live and die by these horrific faux pas. They are indelible and
cringing yet so outrageous as to be too good to be bad. To this
day I smile upon the event and am flattered by the visit. You
can't kill pride. And for all these years I think the good fellow
thinks I'm a nut. The story has just begun.
Pumping Iron,
the film that breathed super life into bodybuilding and set it
amongst the constellations is celebrating it's 25th anniversary
this year. The writer, producer and director, George Butler, was
at the Arnold Classic, also celebrating its twenty-fifth year
in Columbus. A gathering of the film's stars [Franco, Lou, Arnold,
Ed Corney, Mike Katz] were being interviewed for an HBO special
as part of the film's re-release this summer in conjunction with
Arnold's big show; a staggering co-incidence in the year 2000.
I wondered if I would bump into George. Now that I could speak
I could, no doubt, put my entire foot in my mouth.
Friday late
morning as a World Gym Convention breakfast was winding down I
was invited to the stage to welcome the gym owners to the seminars
that were to follow. As I approached the microphone a special
acknowledgement was made to a celebrity in the audience, Pumping
Iron's Own, George Butler. Evidence of his reverence was clear.
I slurped out a few heart-felt words... hi, nice, good, happy,
er, swell, so-long... and casually made toward the famous exit,
where George stood beaming with both hands extended. One looking
on might think we were long lost friends. And, indeed, we were.
The obvious
next thing long lost friends must do is to get to know each other.
As we were off in different directions for the day, we arranged
an appointment for a forty-five minute interview later that evening.
The interview went on for nearly two hours filling in historical
gaps only. Another will be set up soon to bring us up to date.
Upon parting George put his hand to his heart and said, "You bury
me or I'll bury you." Friends for life.
I grabbed
the down elevator to whisk me to my room. As I assumed a position
to the rear, a chorus of voices beamed my name. It was Reg Park
and his lovely wife, Marion, dressed in formal black as they headed
for the fitness show. We hugged and jabbered till we were dumped
into the lobby. It was thirty years since the three of us stood
together, their home in Johannesburg being our last rendezvous
in the spring of '69. Reg and I did shows together to promote
his gyms in Africa from Salisbury to Cape Town. Time does not
fly but it does march on.
I'm
impressed. Today, talking to a couple of hearty members at my
World Gym in Santa Cruz, I ask if they knew the name Reg Park.
They looked at me, trying to help. Jake asked if he was the guy
who came in the morning with his beagle and Ray asked if it was
a place for a picnic. Reg is a burly and active 71 year old 2x
Mr. Universe from the U.K.; a strongman icon. I'm the Blond Bomber.
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