Author’s note: This is the third in a three-part series on the history of physique culture in Great Britain. Look for a separate profile of British physique photographer John S. Barrington on January 3.
Though many British physique magazines enjoyed only a short life, disappearing from circulation after only a decade after their founding, others continue to thrive in the United Kingdom.
British historian Rupert Smith, in a 2013 interview, said that the development of British physique photography often ran parallel to its American counterpart.
“People know a lot about American physique photography,” Rupert said. “People like Bob Mizer and Bruce of LA, but there was a parallel movement going on in Britain, with lots of photographers, a lot of them gay, photographing bodybuilders, servicemen, some of them quite legit, but some of them gay porn.”
And others still, like Muscle & Fitness, founded in Canada, even preceded Mizer’s Physique Pictorial by several years.
“Muscle & Fitness was a magazine that originally targeted only men, but has since broadened its audience to include women as well,” says Dennis Bell, president and curator of the Bob Mizer Foundation. “It includes articles on fitness training, advice columns written by experts in the physique and health fields, and diet plans for different body types.”
The publication was originally founded in 1940 as a simple newsletter, titled “Your Physique,” and the composition of Physique Pictorial – its layout and its features – echoed those of Muscle & Fitness while maintaining a voice of their own.
Canadian bodybuilder Joe Weider founded Muscle & Fitness when he was only 20 years old, and his empire would eventually expand to include Men’s Fitness, perhaps the seminal monthly publication on men’s health.
“Rupert Smith wrote a biography of John Barrington in 1997, and it really laid bare Barrington’s struggles with the law,” Bell says. “Just like Mizer, John Barrington’s works were subjected to scrutiny, seizure, censorship and scorn due to their erotic nature.”
According to the book “British Queer History: New Approaches and Perspectives,” Barrington launched his magazine “Male Model Monthly” in 1954, a full three years after Mizer’s Physique Pictorial hit newsstands and mailboxes. Barrington had been producing and selling photos of male nudes since 1948.
Just like Mizer, Barrington posed his models with Greek or Roman statuary, as a point of comparison and to add a more artistic lilt to his work. “(Barrington’s) photographs,” the authors of the book contend, “…were to remind readers, to borrow from Michelangelo … that the highest object for art is man.”
But, art being a subjective term, especially in the conservative 1950s, Barrington found himself arrested for sending obscene materials through the mail in 1952. He was never convicted for the charge, but found himself imprisoned only three years later when undercover police officers found one of his photos with underwear ‘penciled in’ on the model. When scratched off, the model appeared fully nude underneath.
Closer examinations of the male physique culture in the United Kingdom only highlight the many similarities the industry shares with its American counterpart. Bob Mizer’s own influence is heavily seen in the photos and publications of the earlier, era, especially, and vice vice versa.