contest. Pearl was born in
Prineville, Oregon on October 31, 1930. He grew up in Yakima, Washington, where his dad owned a restaurant. “We all helped out; it was kind of a family affair. Every day after school I'd lug 100-pound bags of grain and beans over and over, and that eventually built up my endurance,” he remembered. While enlisted in the
United States Navy, stationed at
San Diego Naval Air Station, he worked out at Leo Stern's Gym (which closed in 2024). Leo Stern, himself a champion bodybuilder, coached Pearl in his training and encouraged him to compete. In 1952, he competed in two local contests (3rd place in the Mr San Diego contest, followed by winning his first contest, Mr Oceanside). In 1953, he competed in 4 higher-level contests, and won them all. This included being crowned ‘Mr America’ and ‘Mr Universe’. Pearl competed six times in two years, but then only competed twice in 1956, and then only once in the years 1961, 1967, and 1971. In all, he only competed in 11 contests, winning the overall in 9 of them. Of all the professional contests between 1956 and 1971, only
Jack Delinger defeated Pearl (1956 NABBA Pro Mr Universe). During that 18-year span, no bodybuilder was more successful. Even with his final Mr Universe win (at age 41), Pearl defeated
Frank Zane,
Reg Park,
Dave Draper, and
Sergio Oliva. Though he was arguably the world's best bodybuilder in the mid-'60s, Pearl never competed in IFBB
Mr. Olympia (which has been held annually beginning in 1965) but did the NABBA Pro Mr. Universe instead. “I didn’t compete in the Olympia because I considered it a Mickey Mouse affair,” he said of the earliest Olympia contests. Pearl mentioned the benefits of vegetarian bodybuilding in his book
Getting Stronger: Weight Training for Sports, published in 2005. == Later career ==