Bodybuilding pioneer Armand Tanny was a fixture at original Muscle Beach
Published 5:00 am Thursday, April 9, 2009
Armand Tanny, a pioneering figure in bodybuilding who won national titles in 1949 and 1950 and was a popular figure on the original Muscle Beach in Santa Monica, Calif., during its heyday in the 1940s, has died. He was 90.
Tanny, the younger brother of gym pioneer Vic Tanny, died Saturday of natural causes in a nursing facility in the Los Angeles area, according to his daughter, Mandy Tanny.
Originally a weightlifter, Tanny won the Mr. 1949, the 1949 Pro Mr. America and the 1950 Pro Mr. USA titles in bodybuilding. A competitor in the days before steroids, he credited his wins to diet and hard work. He was a firm believer in the benefits of raw foods.
During the 1950s, he was one of the original nine bodybuilders from Muscle Beach who were part of Mae West’s traveling nightclub act.
According to the book “Remembering Muscle Beach,” by Harold Zinkin with Bonnie Hearn-Hill (Angel City Press, 1999), the nine were known as Mae’s Muscle Beach Men.
Also in the group were prominent bodybuilders Joe Gold, George Eiferman, Richard DuBois, Harry Schwartz, Dom Juliano, Lester “Shifty” Schaefer, Irvin “Zabo” Koszewski and Chuck Krauser.
According to Hearn-Hill, Tanny organized a strike with Gold when West cut their salaries in half from $250 a week to boost the take at a New York club.
“Armand and Joe were ready to board the plane,” Hearn-Hill told the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday. “Mae quickly caved in, and they got their full salaries.”
Tanny, who was born March 5, 1919, in Rochester, N.Y., turned to professional wrestling in the 1950s.
But for much of his life, the quiet and studious Tanny made his living writing about physical fitness and bodybuilding for his friend Joe Weider’s publications, including Muscle Power magazine.
When he wasn’t at the beach with bodybuilding pals such as Steve Reeves, Tanny was at the Santa Monica gym started by his brother Vic, a pioneer in the creation of the modern health club.
Vic died in 1985.