Les Mills, NZ Olympian and gym pioneer, dies at 91

COMMONWEALTH GAMES 1990
New Zealand Olympian and gym pioneer Les Mills (L) has died. -AAP Image

Les Mills, the New Zealand Olympian who opened an Auckland gym in 1968 that grew into an international group-fitness brand, has died ‌aged 91.

Mills, a four-times Olympic athlete and former Auckland mayor, and ‌his wife, Colleen, founded the first Les Mills gym on Victoria Street in central Auckland ‌after a sporting career in which Mills represented New Zealand in shot put and discus.

More than five decades later, Les Mills workouts - a bar-bell based weight training class designed to tone and strengthened using moderate weights and high repetitions - are used by clubs around the world.

The business, now run by later generations of the Mills family, became internationally known for choreographed group-exercise ‌classes set to ‌music.

Mills' son, ⁠Phillip, joined the business full-time in 1980 and his partner, ​Jackie, helped develop the music-driven group-fitness model that became central to its global expansion.

Phillip Mills said in a statement on Monday that his father had achieved a huge amount in his life but the common thread was he always wanted to help others.

"Dad was immensely strong, driven, and always ⁠cared deeply for the less advantaged. He left ‌a ​lasting impression on everyone he met, and his spirit lives on in gym workouts around the ​world, continuing to ‌help people fall in love with fitness," he said.

Mills was born Leslie Roy Mills ​in Auckland in 1934. He competed at four Olympic Games from 1960 to 1972 and won five Commonwealth Games medals, including discus gold at the 1966 British ​Empire ​and Commonwealth Games in Kingston, Jamaica.

He ​later moved into local politics and served ‌as mayor of Auckland from 1990 to 1998.

He also remained active in sport as a coach, helping guide New Zealand discus thrower Beatrice Faumuina to the world title in 1997 and Commonwealth Games gold in 1998.

Mills was appointed a Member of the Order of ​the British Empire in 1973 for services to sport and a Companion of the ​New Zealand Order of Merit ⁠in 2002 for services to local government and sport.