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MIKE
KATZ: Bodybuilding's Quiet
Man Speaks
Earlier
this year I had the chance to speak with legendary Mr. America and
Mr. Universe Mike Katz by phone. In contrast to the seemingly introverted
and passive figure he was portrayed as in "Pumping Iron",
I found Mike to be a gregarious and competitive-minded man, but
no less the gentleman than his screen persona.
Iron
Age: Thank you for taking the time out to do this interview.
Mike Katz:
It's my pleasure.
IA:
Well, why don't we start at the beginning? Can you tell me your
stats?
MK: I was
born 11/14/44. I have a son and a daughter. Michael just turned
32. Michele is 30.
IA:
I understand she has a child.
MK: They
both do now. Michael's daughter is Lindsay and Michele has Kylie.
IA:
How do you like grandfatherhood?
MK: It's
wonderful. All the great things anyone ever said about having grandchildren
is an understatement. You can't know until you become a grandparent.
It's different for me from being a parent because I was involved
in trying to conquer the world as a young man- trying to get an
education, playing pro football, wanting to be a great bodybuilder.
The kids were important and, when push came to shove, they always
came first, but there are so many other things when you're trying
to earn a living and maintain a house and save for their college,
not to mention trying to satisfy your own competitive desires. But
now as a grandparent I can just sit back and notice my grandchildren's
eyelashes and the dimples on their fingers.
When I talk
to young guys who are fathers I sometimes tell them, "Don't
wait to be grandfathers to be fathers." I don't know if that's
been said by others before but there's a lot of wisdom in that advice.
I sometimes wish the clock could have stopped when I was raising
my own kids. But I think a lot of grandparents feel that way.
IA:
I know you may not have had the chance to visit Iron Age but basically
it's a tribute site to bodybuilding from the 60's through the 80's,
which was your period. And it was you and your contemporaries that
motivated me as a young man to pick up a barbell and try to build
my muscles. But after the 80's I noticed a change in the sport which
turned me off to it for a while. It seems that the spirit of it
was changing. It became cynical in many ways. One thing that appealed
to me about bodybuilding from your era was the camaraderie. But
that's been replaced by individual egos and backbiting.
MK: Well,
you know what happened, money came in. The same thing applies to
the 'golden age' of football because before you had money all you
really had was each other. But in football they had the acceptance
of the public so if you weren't making much money you could at least
hear 30,000 fans screaming for you. But with bodybuilding, all we
had was ourselves, supporting each other and sticking up for each
other and justifying what we were doing. Then at times we'd have
to defend ourselves against being called 'gay' or 'narcissistic'
or 'musclebound' or any of the other stereotypes that the public
labelled us with. But football or baseball players at least didn't
have to deal with that. So we had to stick together and there was,
as you said, a camaraderie even though we were competing against
each other. And we did respect each other and socialize and even
help each other, even if we were competing the following day.
IA:
That was pretty well depicted in the old magazines and in Pumping
Iron as well. I used to train at Steve Michalik's gym on Long Island
and I remember how it seemed like everyone there was one big spotter
for each other. We'd all jump back and forth helping each other
train.
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Mike, "Coach"
and Joe Ugolik circa 1973 (George Butler photo from the book
"Pumping Iron")
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MK: Exactly.
IA:
But it seems now there are many more individualists.
MK: Well,
the thing that's interesting is that when I listen to older guys
like myself I wonder if they aren't living in the past. It's as
if their time was the most special time and no one else can share
what they had. But what I'd like to say is that I'm not a dinosaur.
I'm older; yes, and I don't compete; that's correct. But I'm very
much involved in the sport and I'm very much involved in helping
certain athletes make health judgments, financial judgments, sportsmanship
judgments. The wisdom that I've got and the mistakes I've made,
as well as the things I've done right, all go into this. And I tell
them that our "Golden Age" was wonderful and I would never
want to compete in any other age of bodybuilding. But the point
is that this wasn't the only period of value because there were
guys like Bill Pearl before me and guys like Coleman who have competed
after me. So the question is, "What can we take from each generation?"
From Grimek and Reeves and Pearl to Arnold and myself and Louie
and then Haney and then on the the Yates and Coleman eras, I think
everybody can learn something from everyone else. They can learn
some good stuff from us and we can learn from them.
The point
is that I'm happy about when I competed and feel very fulfilled
about what I've done and whatever young guys today can learn from
me I want to give them. I don't want to be angry and old and grumpy
and think that my generation of bodybuilders is the only one should
be admired. We can all learn how to be better people from each other.
Bill Pearl is still out there and active and I admire him tremendously.
He's promoting bodybuilding in a very positive way and, obviously,
Arnold's doing his thing and I'm doing my thing and we're all working
toward the imporvement and success of the sport.
IA:
I'm really glad you said all of that because I state on the website
that, while I do have my own personal preference for that era, it
was not the only one and good has come out of each.
MK: Yeah.
Because all you would really do is anger the hell out of Bill Pearl,
who needs to be respected for what he's done, and our generation,
and the Yates and Haneys and Colemans and Cutlers- the new age guys.
What I'm trying to do, as part of my generation, is help guide some
of the guys today in regards to their health and finances so they
don't end up broke and sick. It's like in boxing when you hear the
story about the punch drunk guy who can't function anymore and lost
his life savings. I'm trying to show guys how to get a financial
cushion and invest their money properly, like Kevin Levrone who
owns his own World Gym in Maryland and who is doing very well with
his music. So he's kind of spread out, not just relying on bodybuilding.
It's interesting how most of the great, great bodybuilders have
got more than just bodybuilding. I know Yates is extremely well
off and I know Haney is doing very well. And Franco for our generation.
And Bill Pearl.
IA:
If I could, I'd like to go back into your past for a moment. We
have a few younger readers on Iron Age who are very curious about
the history of bodybuilding and so I asked them, "If you could
interview Mike Katz what would you ask him?" One response I
got was, "Who were Mike's idols growing up?"
MK: I think
probably, when I was very young, it was Steve Reeves. You know,
when you go to the Saturday matinee and your throwing popcorn and
having a good ol' time with your buddies and probably driving the
usher nuts and instead of seeing "The Three Stooges" or"
Our Gang", you all of a sudden see "Hercules" and
you're like, "Oh my God!". You're just going through puberty
and you're trying to find yourself and then, there it is. I'm sure
it was the same for guys of your generation who, at 9, 10, 11 and
12 years old first saw "Conan" with Arnold and got inspired.
So for me it was Reeves.
But after
I started buying the magazines, after I was introduced to the movie
part of it, it became John Grimek. So it was initially Reeves and
Reg Park and then Grimek from the magazines. But finally, after
I started reading about it, it was Bill Pearl. He was big and thick
and beautifully symmetrical and he never even have to pose. He had
certain poses of course, but I think he was one guy who didn't even
have to pose
IA:
Back to you now... what was it like making the transition from professional
football (as a NY Jet) to professional bodybuilding?
MK: Well,
when I started getting to the point in my career when I was going
up to Holyoke with Ed Jubinville up in Mountain Park, I was just
starting to devote all of my training to bodybuilding. Before that
I was playing with the Jets and could only bodybuild part time.
That was '68 when I was injured, which was the year before they
won the Superbowl. So my football career ended with the knee operation.
I had had
two goals when I was a kid and one of them was to be a teacher.
I was inspired by my health education teacher, Mr. Girosa. So once
I stopped playing football I became a full-time teacher and I had
a wonderful lifestyle where I would get out of school at 2:00 and
could go to the 'Y' and train there from 2:30-5:00 or 2:30-6:00
while everybody elsse was working. So I was able to make a living
and also work hard as a bodybuilder.
Before I
met Arnold I went into Weider's contests because the AAU wouldn't
let a professional compete in their so-called amateur contests,
because I was paid to play football. But this was also a time when
they wouldn't have any black Mr. America's. Sergio couldn't win
the Mr. America with them so he went to Joe and the IFBB. Everybody
that wanted to get a fair shake went to Weider. So I got to compete
in the IFBB version. The first time was in '67 and I won Best Chest.
Those shows were all at the Brooklyn Academy of Music or Town Hall
and promoted by Tom Minichiello, who was like the Jim Manion of
the day. He was a great, great guy, along with Ed Jubinville.
Anyway,
early on I was all chest. As a football player I didn't need giant
calves or 32" thighs. They wouldn't have helped me in football.
So, my natural bodyparts that came easy grew bigger and the parts
I didn't need for football didn't. So early on I didn't have the
proportion or symmetry but I was one of the fastest guys in the
NFL. At 265 I ran a 4.6(sec) 40. The backs weren't running that
speed. Plus I was the strongest and biggest guy on the field. But
nobody really lifted weights back then. They didn't understand what
I was doing. They thought they'd all get musclebound and slow but
here I was, getting big and strong and fast from it. Still the coaches
told them not to lift. I knew that the coaches didn't know what
they were talking about.
IA:
George Butler related to me how, when the "Pumping Iron"
crew went to visit you at your school you ran the football field
with a bunch of the student athletes trying to catch you and he
said that no one could. He was shocked how someone your size could
move so fast.
MK: (Laughing)
I remember. I can also dunk a basketball from a standing position.
At 6'1" and 260-270 I could dunk a basketball with two hands.
I did some pretty unprecedented things. But today there are a lot
of big, talented guys who've benefitted from weight training. You'll
see 6'8" linemen today who weren't talented enough at basketball
but who are incredible athletes on the football field. Back then
a 200 pound athlete was considered big.
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Mike circa
1970
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IA:
It's like in boxing where you had Rocky Marciano who was the heavyweight
champ in the 50's at 5'10" and 185 lbs. Even Joe Frazier, only
30 years ago, was something like 5'11" and 200 pounds. But
today you've got Lennox Lewis who's 6'5" and 250 lbs.
MK: Exactly.
IA:
Let's talk about your chest a little. On the Iron Age website we've
ranted your chest as being among the best of all time even
to this day. Your ribcage is unbelievable. Is this a product of
your training or is it your special brand of genetics?
MK: I think
it's a combination of both. I think my xyphoid process, the tip
of my sternum, is very high, compared to most people's. So I think
the skeletal genetics create the potential. It's like Platz's thighs.
Why doesn't everybody have thighs like his if they're all doing
the same exercises? Or Schwarzenegger's arms. I still think that
he has the best arms of all time. He just has that certain bicep
and roundness to his tricep that's one of a kind. So I think I'm
just fortunate, skeletally, to have a my structure, along with a
lot of pullovers and learning to control my diaphragm.
Arnold would
always make fun of me because he thought I was holding my breath.
He had this little Volkswagen and no money, except what Weider paid
him and he had this little third floor walkup in Santa Monica with
Franco. So he's tell me to wait in his car while he went in so I'd
fall asleep. Then he'd come out to check on me to see if my chest
deflated when Iwas sleeping. But it wasn't and that's how he knew
that I wasn't holding my breath. That was his little trick.
IA:
(Laughing) That's a great story! Speaking of Arnold; what was it
like training with him? I know you guys would hook up when you were
in L.A.
MK: Well,
I'd stay with my aunt Vivi. She was my mom's sister and a nurse
and she and her husband lived in Brentwood. I used to go visit her
before I was really even into bodybuilding. Iloved the surf and
the hot rod card- still do. Anyway, after school would let out for
the summer Weider would invite me to come out to L.A. and so I stayed
at my aunt's house. A lot of times she'd either bring me to Arnold's
and we'd go to Gold's from there or he'd come pick me up.
So we had
a really good relationship. i'm not saying we were best friends
because he had Franco and i wan't there all year. But the little
but that I was there he took a liking to me and we just trained
together. He didn't like training legs and I did so I was perfect.
He knew he had to train legs but didn't get too excited about it.
But that was one of my strongest points. even though my legs weren't
like Platz's my legs were extremely strong and I pushed him. We
were the same height and the same weight and he loved to aggravate
me and I was a good target to be annoyed, but not come up swinging.
(Laughing) Our personalities just meshed and we became real good
friends and training partners and so I learned a lot from him. He
learned a lot from Weider and all of the great California bodybuilders
out there. So I learned from him and then brought all of the information
back to the east coast where I disseminated it to the people back
in Connecticut and New York.
IA:
Did you see 'star quality' in him at the time?
MK: Oh yeah.
It reminded me of Joe Namath. I saw that star quality in Joe back
in '67 when he and I were good friends, and we still are to this
day. So Joe had it and then Arnold comes along and I see the same
star quality on him. So, I mean, I knew it. And when people laughed
when he said he was going to become a movie star I said "Just
wait." And when people laugh now when he says he has certain
political aspirations, I wouldn't laugh too hard. Because the last
laugh's gonna be on you when it comes to him wanting to be anything.
IA:
That's basically what George Butler said.
MK: You
know, the only thing that could happen, which is unfair, is that
everyone has an imperfect life. Nobody's perfect. And it just seems
today that at times people want to dig up the past and find these
imperfections or indiscretions that everybody's got. You could find
something on everybody. We'd have nobody left to run the government
if you wanted to dig deep enough.
At this point I
asked Mike about the infamous "T-shirt" scene from "Pumping
Iron". At his request I am keeping this part of the interview
off the record. Mike told me that there will be a "time and
place" for him to discuss this matter in detail. Hopefully
it will be for Iron Age.
IA:
Let's bring this conversation up to date. I know you're busy these
days as an IFBB judge and a promoter of NPC shows, so you have a
breadth of bodybuilding knowledge spanning several generations.
What are some of the positive changes you've seen in bodybuilding
since your days competing and who are the guys you see as being
really positive leaders in the sport?
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Myself, Mike
and Franco Columbu at "A Night of Iron" at the Whitney
Museum in NYC.
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MK: Well,
I think by virtue of the fact that bodybuilding is so much more
popular today, there are so many more gyms and health clubs. It
enables people in general to get off the street and get healthy.
Today you don't have to face the stigma we had to when it came to
wanting to have a nice body. So now that more people are lifting
weights there are more competitors in bodybuilding shows. There
are also more drug-free 'alternative' bodybuilding shows. People
are much more concerned about nutrition and supplements. You've
got to look to Weider. Even as he's gotten older he's still working,
with his brother Ben, to promote fitness and bodybuilding throughout
the world. They're helping to educate the public about bodybuilding.
I think
Jim Manion is doing a great job with the NPC. I think he's really
been successful at spreading the word of bodybuilding throughout
the U.S. We also have guys like Bill Pearl who's still running around
promoting the heck out of the sport at nearly 70 years old, like
he's a young man.
As for the
new guys, I know that Kevin Levrone did a wonderful job with the
Special Olympics. When the World Games came to New Haven thanks
toTim Shriver, Arnold's brother-in-law, Arnold came and I got Kevin
Levrone to come and participate and he was wonderful. Lee Haney
does a wonderful job doing charity work. He's very religious family
man and a great representitive of the sport.
IA:
How about on an athletic level? Who from the new crop really impresses
you?
MK: To me
Cutler is like the Bill Pearl of today. He doesn't even have to
pose. In fact, I think he looks even better relaxed. And I saw that
years ago when he was just starting out. I saw his bone structure
and I knew he was just special. And this is not to take anything
away from Coleman. Coleman has been great in his time and Yates
before him. But Cutler is like Haney, only freakier almost
unbelievable. I mean, with Haney, he had bodyparts that were believable.
But Cutler, he's got the genetics of a Haney or even a Flex Wheeler,
but just a monster. A monster that's still beautiful. Not that monsters
are ugly. I mean, Yates' back was beautiful. It was to him like
my chest was. And Coleman is just a genetic marvel. But, and this
is just one man's opinion, but I don't think either one has the
overall beauty to their physique of a Cutler. There's this huge
amount of mass with these sweeping lines... When I emceed the Southern
States show in Florida he guest posed at over 300 lbs. and he still
had serratus, still had those lines.
IA:
So, Mike, why don't we let you plug your upcoming shows.
MK: My partner,
Jerry Mastrangelo, and I are going to run the Connecticut and we're
going to run a "Northern States" a la Peter Potter's "Southern
States." I had invented the title "Northeastern"
years ago and then we stopped it for a year and then somebody took
the name. So I think we're going to run the show with the Mantenari's
from Gold's Gym. We've promoted successfully with them in the past.
So it will be a Gold's-World production. We call it Connecticut
Productions and that should be sometime in May or June of this year.
It will be an open contest whereas the Connecticut will be a closed
contest.
IA:
How can we purchase tickets to either show?
MK: You
can get them at either our World in Branford or the Manteneri Gold's
in New Haven. We are also going to run the 2004 and 2005 Jr. USA
in New Haven in April of those years.
IA:
I want to thank you very much for your time Mike.
MK: Thank
you Shawn. It's guys like you who keep the whole thing alive.
When you're in beautiful Connecticut be sure to drop
by either of Mike Katz's Gold's Gyms. There's one in Hamden and
one in Branford. Both are listed in the Iron
Age Gym Locator. To inquire about Connecticut Productions
shows call World Gym Fitness Center Branford at (203) 488-8804.
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