How Lou Ferrigno stays Hulk-ripped at 62
Bodybuilder-actor Lou Ferrigno has remained true to form. Itâs been decades since he was a two-time Mr. Universe and starred as an enraged green behemoth in the âIncredible Hulkâ TV series and movies, but you wouldnât know it by the 62-year-oldâs still-spectacular proportions. Heâll appear in the latest film in the âScorpion Kingâ series set for release next year. All the while, heâs maintained a personal training business near his home in Santa Monica, raised three kids, ages 24 to 33, with his wife, Carla, become a motivational speaker, and continued his regular workouts at Goldâs Gym in Venice. To promote âHey There Muscles,â a DVD series created with his daughter Shanna (FerrignoFit.com), heâs helping lead free hourlong boot-camp-style workouts Saturdays at 9 a.m. at the west end of the Santa Monica Pier through the end of August.
It was packed today here at the pier this morning. Was that just because people came to take their picture afterward with the Hulk?
No, all of them donât know me anymore; they come because they want to be fit. Thatâs a big change in the culture. Back when I came here in 1976 and was on the beach with Arnold [Schwarzenegger] one day doing some calf work, hardly anyone else was working out on the beach. In the â70s, nobody in the world felt exercise was necessary. In early 1980, when we went to the Philippines, [President] Ferdinand Marcos wanted to work out with me, but we couldnât find a gym. ... Today, everythingâs changed. People realize how important exercise is for their health. Itâs as important as diet â maybe more.
Millions of people today run, bike, do the elliptical and yoga, but donât strength train. Is that a mistake?
Yes â you need a combination. You donât have to look like the Hulk, but you do need to weight train. After the age of 35 your muscle atrophies, and the only way to stop that is resistance training, which also helps stop osteoporosis. All hard exercise can do it â dumbbells, stretch bands, even intense cardio. Example: My grandfather was a bricklayer, he and his two brothers did hard work for a living â lifting bricks, laying cement â and lived into their 80s.
Your biceps are as big as my thigh. Whatâs your workout like?
I train exactly as I have for 50 years, but with not as much weight. Iâll train about five days a week, an hour weights and 20 minutes cardio â elliptical, Lifecycle, Stairmaster. Iâll do 50-60-pound curls, and bench 200-225 pounds â whereas I used to bench 600.
Besides lifting heavy, what are some general rules for training and health?
Technique, consistency, good sleep and good diet are the four secrets to overall health. Always lift barbells and dumbbells with correct form. Otherwise, youâll get hurt. Put the time and effort into doing it right â donât rush it in five minutes. Check instructional videos on the Internet or pay a trainer. Then, do eight to 10 reps of each exercise, making sure youâre exhausted by the 10th one. That elicits the most hormonal response and will build the most strength. Be careful, though; donât force the last rep to the point where you lose form. And when the 10th one gets too easy, increase the weight. Women can go up to 15 reps.
As for diet, try to eat as natural as possible. I stay away from refined sugar, sweets, and extreme amounts of butter, cream, and heavy dressing.
You definitely donât look 62. Is it the Italian skin?
That could be part of it. But I think the whole key is that I have been weight training and working out for the last 50 years. I donât smoke, donât drink. My blood pressure is low â 110 over 60. My resting pulse is 58-60. I take no medication â just a multivitamin pack and vitamin D. OK, Iâve had both knees and hips replaced â itâs in the family. So Iâm not perfect.