HARTFORD, Conn. – Murray Lender, who helped turn his father’s small Connecticut bakery into a national company credited for introducing bagels to many Americans, has died in Florida. He was 81.

Lender, perhaps best known from promoting Lender’s Bagels in TV commercials, died Wednesday at a hospital in Miami from complications from a fall he suffered at his home 10 weeks ago, his wife, Gillie Lender, said Thursday. The couple, who were married more than nine years, lived in Aventura, Fla., and also kept a home in Connecticut.

“He was courageous, strong and an example to everyone to show how one should go through life with a vision, ambition, a goal and with success,” Gillie Lender said.

Lender’s father, Harry Lender, immigrated to the United States from Lublin, Poland, in 1927 and opened what would become Lender’s Bagels that year in an 800-square-foot bakery in New Haven. Two years later, he had his wife and two sons, Hymen and Samuel, brought over from Poland to join him, according to a history of Lender’s Bagels on the company’s website.

Murray Lender was born in 1930, and four years later Harry Lender bought a 1,200-square-foot bakery as the business prospered. Hymen, Samuel, Harry and a younger brother, Marvin, all went on to work for the family business. Murray would serve as the company’s chief executive and Marvin as president.

The Lenders say they were the first to begin selling bagels in packages to supermarkets in 1955. In 1960, two years after Harry Lender died, the Lenders say they started freezing their bagels so they could ship them outside of New Haven without worrying about them becoming stale — the first company to do so. The frozen bagel would make its way to households across the country that had never had them.

Advertisement

The Lenders sold the family business to Kraft Foods in 1984. Pinnacle Foods Group LLC has owned Lender’s Bagels since 2003.

Murray Lender remained the company spokesman after the sale to Kraft, making commercials and appearing on talk shows.

“The frozen bagel is convenient, which is important to today’s on-the-go consumers,” he said in 1986.

Lender shrugged off criticism by some bagel connoisseurs that Lender’s Bagels didn’t taste so great.

“Taste is a very subjective matter,” he said. “It’s clear and simple: We make 2¾ million bagels a day. Obviously an awful lot of people are happy with it.”

A passionate devotee of the frozen food concept, he was chairman of the National Frozen Food Association and pioneered the first National Frozen Food Month in March 1984, a promotional effort involving manufacturers across the industry.

A stroke 13 years ago left Murray Lender unable to talk, but that didn’t dim his enthusiasm for life, his wife said.

 


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.