Fitness guru Richard Simmons, known for his positive outlook and bestselling exercise videotapes, has died at age 76.
“The World lost an Angel today,” Thomas Estey, a representative for Simmons, said in an emailed statement to HuffPost.
Authorities responded to a 911 call from Simmons’ home and arrived there on Saturday morning, a spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department told The Hollywood Reporter. “An investigation is still being conducted,” the spokesperson said.
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In his career, Simmons sold more than 20 million fitness VHS tapes and DVDs, including the iconic “Sweatin’ to the Oldies” series. His series was famous for featuring so-called “real people” over athletic models, promoting the idea that exercise was for everyone. In 2010, he claimed that he helped his followers lose 12 million pounds.
He continued to teach regular classes at his Los Angeles-based studio, Slimmons, despite his heightened fame, until he abruptly stopped in 2014.
Simmons then notably retreated from the public eye after making a public appearance that same year.
A lengthy New York Daily News report in March 2016 suggested that Simmons was being controlled and “held against his will” by his live-in housekeeper, Teresa Reveles. The fitness expert refuted the claims in the Daily News report, telling “Today” via telephone that “no one was holding me in my house as a hostage” and that he opted “to be a little bit of a loner for a while” while recovering from knee injuries.
The popular podcast “Missing Richard Simmons,” released by Dan Taberski in February 2017, once again put the spotlight on the reclusive star and his wellness. The Los Angeles Police Department visited Simmons’ home due to the renewed frenzy, reporting that he was “perfectly fine.” Some criticized the podcast for invading Simmons’ privacy and creating an unfair expectation that the fitness legend owed the public an explanation of his whereabouts.
Simmons later sent a message to fans after a brief hospitalization for “severe indigestion” in April 2017, thanking them for their concern.
As interest in home workouts soaring during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Simmons’ team began sharing workouts from his archive on a YouTube page.
Last year, a representative for Simmons gave his fans an update, telling Entertainment Tonight that the fitness guru was doing “very well” and was his “jovial self.”
In March, he took to social media to clarify a previous post he made on X, formerly Twitter, that stated he was “dying.”
He apologized in a follow-up tweet to assure his followers he was “not dying,” but that his message was intended to stress that people “should embrace every day that we have.”
Simmons revealed several days later that he had been diagnosed with skin cancer, and that the cancer cells were successfully removed.
Simmons was born Milton Teagle Simmons in New Orleans, Louisiana, on July 12, 1948, to two entertainer parents.
He wrote in his 1999 autobiography, “Still Hungry — After All These Years,” that his mother was often on the road and his father would punish young Milton by acting as though he weren’t there. According to a 1981 People article, he felt overshadowed by his older brother, and began overeating in reaction to the feelings.
He credited the start of his fitness journey to a note he received while an art student in Italy that read, “Fat people die young. Please don’t die. Anonymous.” He later began his fitness empire in 1975 with a salad bar, Ruffage, and workout studio, The Anatomy Asylum, which was later renamed Slimmons. As a fitness icon, Simmons put his name on 12 books, 17 DVDs and 37 videotapes, according to his Wikipedia page.
Through the years, Simmons became a fixture in entertainment. A frequent guest for late-night hosts David Letterman and Jay Leno, he also hosted his own show, “The Richard Simmons Show,” from 1980 to 1984, and had a recurring role on “General Hospital,” appearing as himself.
Beyond his peak fame in the ’80s and ’90s, Simmons made lasting fans into the new millennium by offering both support and motivation in their journeys to health, whether in person at his weekly exercise classes, his annual weight loss cruises or by reaching out to people online and over the phone.
“It’s trust,” Richard Simmons told Entertainment Tonight in 1982, speaking about his connection to his fans. “They trust me with their lives, and I trust them with my life.” Beyond weight loss, the icon also promoted causes he believed in, once testifying before Congress in 2008 on behalf of promoting physical education for children.
Kimberley Richards contributing reporting.
(this story has not been edited by TSA Mag staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)