Untitled Document
SYLVESTER STALLONE
Fitness’ Renaissance Man
Still punching at 58, a screen legend returns to his boxing and training roots
with a reality television show and a new line of supplements By Michael Berg
In the peculiar world of Hollywood, typecast represents
the ultimate irony. Actors and actresses long for a role that will be embraced,
a character that resonates
with the public and transcends the realm of fiction and becomes a living, breathing
part of the culture. Then, when such an eminence is achieved, that same performer
shuns the attention, longing to be seen outside that light. ° Yet for the
man who created one of the most revered movie personas in history — a celluloid
hero who arguably spearheaded the massive fitness revolution of the ’80s — such
is not the case.
In fact, Sylvester Stallone has unabashedly returned to the mantle of his greatest
cinematic creation five times, and now, on the precipice of a sixth Rocky film,
he’s revisiting the spheres where his star shines brightest: boxing and
fitness.
With The Contender, an American reality TV series that chronicles aspiring pugilists
as they vie for a $1 million payday, and InStone Nutrition, a line of supplements
bearing his name and likeness, Stallone, now 58, returns to his roots, ready
to once again inspire millions to follow in his muscular footsteps. To him, Rocky
is not an albatross but a remarkable icon that even he can appreciate.
The Rocky Factor
For the past 20-plus years, Stallone has continued to make films in the action
genre, with hits such as First Blood, Demolition Man, Cliffhanger, Tango & Cash
and his most recent box-office success, Driven.
While he also made some unfortunate forays into comedy — let’s not
forget Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot — Stallone never turned his back on the
hard-nosed, softhearted brawler from Philly. After 1976’s Rocky earned
a Best Picture Oscar, a one-in-a-million-shot if there ever was one, he returned
to the franchise in 1979, 1982, 1985 and 1990.
Speaking from his Los Angeles home, Stallone is quick to acknowledge the reach
of Balboa. Fans worship at the altar of Rocky as an entity that pushed them into
the gym and changed their lives, and that suits the man who brought him into
existence just fine.
“
It’s not me, it’s more of a…Rocky philosophy that some of them
have been affected by,” he says, trying to put words to the phenomenon. “For
instance, I went to the opening game of the Philadelphia Eagles’ new stadium
this past year. I came out for a moment just to wave to the crowd. When the entire
stadium erupted, I realised they weren’t erupting for Sylvester Stallone.
Perish that thought. It’s Rocky. [They see Rocky] as representative of
their city. ‘We don’t give up. We put our head down and keep punching.’ That’s
what I think I symbolise to people.”
Co-producer of The Contender, Survivor’s Mark Burnett certainly hopes to
capture that Rocky mojo. He called Sly to bring him on board for the show, “I
asked Burnett, ‘Are you sure you don’t want someone who’s more
of a boxing celebrity?’” Stallone recalls. “And he said, ‘No,
what we’re trying to do is bring entertainment value, yes, but also tap
into something that you’ll be identified with for all your days.’”
Sly was intrigued by the prospect of creating a real-life Rocky scenario for
one lucky fighter. He’ll serve as a mentor who circulates among the athletes,
while experts such as Sugar Ray Leonard work with the 16 contestants on the physical
aspects of the sport. “This provides an interesting venue to take fiction
and employ it in the world of reality,” he says. “In other words,
it gives a chance to people who have perhaps never had a break or have let opportunity
slip through their fingers. This is about more than boxing; it’s a kind
of fantasy come true.”
Walking The Walk
Concurrently, Stallone has immersed himself in a decidedly different project — launching
a supplement company, InStone Nutrition. “InStone has been something I’ve
thought about for 7–8 years,” he says. “I’ve experimented
so much with my body, training and diet-wise, coming up with different looks
for movies. For instance, in Cliffhanger I had to develop more leg and shoulder
power; in Rocky 3 I got down to 2.8% bodyfat; and of course Cop Land, where I
lost all that definition and gained 40 pounds.”
One key in turning his vision into reality was a hands-on approach. “I
wanted to stand behind the product by saying, ‘I am the guinea pig,’” he
explains. “This isn’t something that I’m just putting my name
on. I think that would be quite a disappointment to people. I use the products,
and I can safely say, everything is extraordinary. Each of these products is
the best in the market in its particular niche.”
Making appearances for The Contender and promoting InStone, Sly is holding steady
at a chiselled 196 pounds, 4%–7% bodyfat. Through the years, he’s
learned an important lesson about diet and training: keep it simple. “I
follow a high-protein diet: anything with a face, that’s what I eat, with
something green next to it,” he says. “Over the years, my biggest
flaw was overtraining. In the gym six days a week, doing more sit-ups at night…my
body was in a constant state of breakdown. Now I focus on a variety of exercises,
working out three times a week for 90 minutes per session. I really feel good — much
stronger than I’ve ever felt, actually. Something’s working.”
That something will be revealed in depth in the coming months, as he takes the
lessons he’s learned over the years and puts them to paper. “It’ll
be a retrospective of how I’ve trained,” he says of a book he has
in the works. “From the first time I changed my body for a role, going
from 162 to around 200 to play the gang bully in [1974’s] Lords of Flatbush,
to Rocky, how all that was done — what worked, what didn’t, the trials
and tribulations. Hopefully the end result of my experimentation is that I make
it easier for other people to transform themselves.”
One More Round
While Stallone pursues his off screen projects, looming on the horizon may be
one final step into the ring for Rocky Balboa. The script has been written, but
after some wrangling with MGM Studios, the project has yet to receive a green
light. “It’s being postponed for all the wrong reasons,” Sly
says. “Hopefully it will prevail.”
Stallone sees elements of Rocky 6 playing out in the real-life fight to bring
it to the big screen. “Rocky 6 is a story that deals with scepticism,” he
explains. “When we reach a certain age, society says, ‘You’ve
had your moment.’ But a lot of people aren’t ready to move on. They
want to try something they’ve never done before or go back to something
they haven’t finished.”
Sly pauses, perhaps reflecting on how the evolution of Rocky, in many ways mirrors
his own growth as an actor and individual. “You may not have the speed,
but you still want to run the race. Think of George Foreman winning the heavyweight
title [at 45], or John Glenn going into space [at 77]…your pursuits are
what keep you vital. Society may say step aside and let youth be served. I say
they’ve got to move you out of the way first.” M&F
SLY WORKOUT
A sample “pull” day from Stallone’s programME, provided
by
his personal trainer, Gunnar Peterson:
Angled Weighted Pull-Up (3–4 sets, 6–12 reps) After
a warm-up set with bodyweight, Sly dons a weighted vest; he alternates pulling
his chin first toward his right
hand, then his left.
Unilateral Low-Cable Row (3–4 sets, 14–16 reps) Sly
uses a special machine with two weight stacks side-by-side and holds a D-handle
in each hand.
He does 10 reps together, then alternates for 4–6 more reps.
Plate-Loaded Machine Shrug (3 sets, 6–12 reps) Sly works up to 400-plus
pounds.
T-Bar Row (3 sets, 10–12 reps) Done with one end of a barbell placed in
a corner, Sly reps one arm at a time.
Squat-Jump Pull-Up (3 sets, 8 reps) Using a pull-up bar that’s
at least 8 feet high, Sly does bodyweight squats, jumping from the floor on the
upward
push and grasping the bar. He does a pull-up, drops back to the floor into another
squat and continues for reps.
Uneven Standing Barbell Curl (3 sets, 8–12 reps) Sly holds the barbell
with one hand in the centre, one nearer one side, so one arm is taking on more
of the load. To work each side evenly, he switches grip position mid-set.
Strive Curl Machine (3 sets, 12–18 reps per set) Sly adjusts
the “Strive” cam
three times per set for different stimuli on his bi’s, completing 4–6
reps per setting.
Dumbbell Hammer Curl (3 sets, 18–30 reps) Sly starts by
lifting both dumbbells
for 8–10 reps, then finishes with rapid, alternating reps for 10–20
more.
Standing Calf-Machine Shrug (3 sets, 6–12 reps) With feet planted and body
rigid, Sly shrugs to raise the shoulder pads.
Sly does weighted ab training between exercises and finishes with forearm moves.
THE CONTENDER
Producers: Mark Burnett Productions, Inc., and DreamWorks Television
Premise: 16 amateur boxing hopefuls live and train together as they vie for
a $1 million purse, earned by winning a season-finale bout in Las Vegas. Each
show
climaxes with a boxing match; the winner moves on, and the loser goes home.
Sly’s Role: Along with Sugar Ray Leonard, Stallone will serve as a mentor
and confidant to the competitors.
The Aftermath: Burnett and Stallone hope to use the show as a springboard to
clean up the downtrodden sport of boxing. “We’d like to form a new
sanctioning body,” Stallone explains. “We’d also like to inject
some personality, a behind-the-scenes look at the fighters so the audience can
become more emotionally attached to the athletes than they are today.”
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