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JOSEPH
PILATES – 1880 - 1967
Joseph
Hubertus Pilates was born on December 8, 1880 in the
German town of Monchengladbach, not far from Dusseldorf. One of
four children, he was plagued as a child by rickets, asthma and
rheumatic fever. Pilates was determined to overcome these
childhood ailments during his youth, and took on various
physical regimens including body-building, gymnastics, skiing,
and diving. By the time he reached age 14, Joseph was posing as
a model for anatomy charts. His father was a prize-winning
gymnast and his mother a naturopath - which likely influenced
the path he took in life pursuing the fields of movement and
well-being. He was greatly inspired by Eastern and Western forms
of exercise, and in particular by the ancient Greek and Roman
philosophies of attaining and maintaining physical and mental
perfection.
There
are two versions of the story of how Pilates
travelled to England in 1912. The first is that he decided to
pursue boxing; the other that he and his brother toured England
with a circus, performing as a live Greek statue act. After WWI
broke out in 1914, he was interned along with other German
nationals in a camp for enemy aliens in Lancaster, England.
There, he taught wrestling and self-defence, motivating others
to follow his fitness program and boasting that his students
would emerge stronger than they were before their internment.
It was
here that he be began devising his system of original exercises
that he later called "Contrology."
Taking springs from beds and rigging up exercise apparatuses for
the bedridden, he devised his earliest rehabilitation equipment.
Joseph Pilates was transferred to a
camp on The Isle of Man and there he became somewhat of a nurse,
working with internees suffering from wartime diseases. In 1918,
an influenza pandemic swept the world, killing millions of
people - tens of thousands in England alone. Legend has it that
none of Joe's followers succumbed to the illness, even though
camps were the hardest hit.
After the war, Joseph
Pilates returned to Germany and worked with the Hamburg
Military Police, training them in self-defence and physical
conditioning. He also began taking on personal clients during
this time. This period of his life is not well documented,
though it was a time for him of growing interest in Eastern
European holistic therapies such as holistic medicine,
meditation, modern dance, homeopathy, Trigger Point therapy, and
breath work. During this period, Pilates met the famous movement
analyst Rudolf von Laban, who is said to have incorporated some
of Joseph's theories and exercises into his own work. Mary
Wigman, a renowned German dancer and choreographer, was a
student of Pilates and incorporated his exercises in her dance
class warm-ups.
In 1925, Pilates
was asked by the government to train the new German Army, and
some accounts say that Pilates decided to emigrate to America
because he didn't like the direction Germany was heading in
politically. Other accounts say the departure from his home
country was motivated by an invitation from the American boxing
manager Nat Fleischer, and Max Schmeling, a World Title boxer
who was also a friend of Joseph. In any case, en route Joe met a
young nurse named Clara. She became his wife and shortly
thereafter, an integral partner in helping develop and teach his
method.
Instead
of performing many repetitions of each exercise, Pilates
preferred fewer, more precise movements, requiring control and
form. He designed more than 500 specific exercises. The most
frequent form, called “matwork” involves a series of
callisthenic motions performed without weight or apparatus on a
padded mat.
He believed that mental health and physical health were
essential to one another. Pilates
created what is believed to be a method of total body
conditioning that emphasizes proper alignment, centring,
concentration, control, precision, breathing and flowing
movement (The
Pilates Principles )
that results in increased flexibility, strength, muscle tone,
body awareness, energy, and improved mental concentration.
Joseph
Pilates
also designed five major pieces of unique exercise equipment
that he claimed should be used for best results. Although the
two components are often taught separately now, the method was
always meant to combine both matwork and equipment exercises. In
all forms, the “powerhouse” (abdomen, lower back and
buttocks) is supported and strengthened, enabling the rest of
the body to move freely.
New
York City and The Berkshires
When he arrived
in New York City in 1926, Joe began working in a boxers'
training gym at 939 Eighth Avenue in the same building where
several dance schools and rehearsal spaces were located. By the
early 1930's, he and Clara had taken over the gym. News of Joe's
skill at working with injuries spread by word of mouth and Pilates'
client base grew rapidly. His clientele was diverse: It included
people in New York City's high society, such as members of the
Gimbel and Guggenheim families; along with movie stars Vivien
Leigh, Sir Lawrence Olivier and Katherine Hepburn and others. He
also worked with doctors, circus performers, gymnasts,
musicians, dancers, business people, tradesmen and students.
The 30's and 40's
were the early years of American ballet and modern dance. Many
luminaries such as George Balanchine, Ted Shawn, Ruth St.
Dennis, Martha Graham, Hanya Holm, plus many other lesser-known
dancers studied with and sent injured dancers to "Uncle
Joe," to be "fixed." "Contrology"
became an intrinsic part of many dancers' training and
rehabilitation. A number of first generation Pilates teachers
would be among these dancers including Romana
Kryzanowska, Carola Trier, Eve Gentry, Ron Fletcher,
Kathleen Stanford Grant, Bruce King, and Lolita San Miguel. The
majority of aspiring teachers would work in the gym in exchange
for exercise sessions. Hannah Sakmirda was Joe and Clara's
regular assistant. Other first generation teachers include
Jerome Andrews, Bob Seed, Nadja Cory and Mary Bowen. The Pilates'
dearest students and assistants were their nieces, Mary Pilates
and Irene Zeuner Zelonka.
Every summer
between 1939 and 1951, Joe and Clara spent their weekends and
several weeks at a stretch relaxing and teaching at Jacob's
Pillow, a well-known dance camp in the Berkshire Mountains.
Pilates
wrote two books: Your Health, in 1934; and Return to
Life, in 1945 - a refined treatise of his philosophy. In that
book he writes with passion that if his method were universally
adopted and taught in our educational institutions, every facet
of life - from individual to universal - would improve. "Contrology,"
could no less than eliminate human suffering and reduce our need
to hospitals, sanatoriums, lunatic asylums, even prisons.
Pilates
worked very hard to promote his work. He conducted
lecture-demonstrations for medical professionals. He taught at
Armed Forces bases in the New York area, created exercise
pamphlets, and sold his equipment on Saturdays at Macy's.
His good friend Dr.
Henry Jordan, Chief of Orthopaedics at Lenox Hill Hospital, was
a strong advocate of Pilates work.
Dr. Jordan referred many of his patients to Pilates,
and took Carola Trier under his wing. Some of Dr. Jordan's
students became prominent orthopaedists as well, and they also
referred patients to Pilates.
The 50's however,
are marked to Joe's unsuccessful efforts to see his work
embraced by mainstream medical and educational systems. The fact
that the medical community could not see past what Pilates
considered its passive definitions of normal health, narrow
vision for preventive medicine, and abysmal standards for proper
physical conditioning, left him deeply embittered.
The
Pilates Diaspora
In spite of
these rejections, the method was quietly taking root in several
Manhattan institutions including New York University, High
School of Performing Arts, Dan Theatre of Harlem, 92nd St. NY
and Clark Centre for the Performing Arts. By the mid 60's, the Pilates
Method had begun to spread beyond
New York; Jerome Andrews moved to Paris, Eve Gentry to New
Mexico, Ron Fletcher to California. This first generation
continued practicing and teaching the Pilates'
philosophy and techniques.
In January 1966,
there was a fire at 939 Eighth Avenue. Joe attempted to salvage
what he could and fell through the burnt-out floorboards,
hanging by his hands from a beam until he was rescued by the
fire-fighters. Some believe this incident may have led to his
death in October 1967 at the age of 87. Clara, regarded by many
as the more superb and perhaps more approachable teacher,
continued to teach, and ran the studio for several years until
her retirement around 1970. She passed away in 1976.
Medical
Acceptance and Wider Appeal
In 1983, at St.
Francis Hospital, in San Francisco, California, Dr. James
Garrick, Director of Orthopaedics, created one of the first
dance-medicine clinics. Garrick made a name for himself
recognizing the value of Pilates
training, and he hired Ron Fletcher to help him set up the first
medical-based Pilates program.
By 1995, marketing,
growing media interest, group mat classes, mind-body health club
programming, and curiosity within the medical community were
propelling the method forward. The word "Pilates"
appeared in the Webster's Dictionary - another indication
of the method's acceptance into mainstream culture. An historic
turning point came with the trademark class-action lawsuit, that
began in January 1996 and ended in October 2000: The judgment
cancelled the Pilates trademark.
The court ruled that Pilates is a
generic designation for a method of exercise; that the word Pilates
has become ubiquitously associated with this special type of
exercise utilizing unique apparatus, a series of controlled
exercises, and principles that can't be owned or called by
another name.
The
New Pilates Millennium
Since the
ruling, there has been an explosion in interest in mind-body
disciplines and intelligent exercise options which have finally
catapulted Joseph Pilates' vision
into a global phenomenon, known simply as "Pilates,"
with a plethora of studios and health club openings, training
programs, products and equipment, celebrity endorsements, and
newspaper and magazine articles about Pilates.
There is mention of it in radio, television, and movies. Pilates
is taught in most major countries around the world, and now
counts more than twelve million practitioners.
Joe knew his work
was
"50
years ahead of (his) time."
His intuitive
understanding of the body and
innovative
equipment design
are simply
components of his greater vision of a universal paradigm
for healthy living.
Resourses
Your
Health, 1934
Return To Life, 1945
Newspaper Articles
Pilates, Inc. V Current Concepts, Inc., 120 F. Supp.2d 286, 57
U.S.P.Q.2d 1174 (S.D.N.Y.2000)
Personal stories from First Generation Pilates teachers and
family members of Joseph and Clara Pilates.
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