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Wrestling Giant's Daughter Wants Father Remembered
411 Wrestling

Posted on 10/01/2002 10:48:02 AM PDT by adam stevens

Wrestling Giant's Daughter Wants Father Remembered

SEATTLE (Reuters) - It would be hard to forget Andre the Giant, whose freakish size belied surprising grace and agility and made him one of the most popular professional wrestlers of all time, even now, nearly a decade after his death.

Andre the Giant, nicknamed "The Eighth Wonder of the World," was billed as 7-foot-5 and 520 pounds with a sprawling 71-inch chest and 16-inch hands that made beer cans look like thimbles.

Yet to his only child, watching today's beefcakes strut for screeching fans at a raucous World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. news conference last week, the man who was one of the foremost worldwide attractions in professional wrestling in the 1970s and 1980s seemed less than an afterthought.

"It seems like they don't honor him. It's almost like he's forgotten," said Robin Christensen, 23-year-old daughter of Andre Roussimoff, born in France in 1946 with overactive growth hormones that would ultimately lead to his death in January 1993 at age 46 after a lifetime with the medical condition known as acromegaly.

Nearly 6 feet tall herself and bearing a striking resemblance to her father, Christensen hopes WWE will mark the 10th anniversary of his death when it brings its signature WrestleMania event next March to Seattle, where she lives.

During his career, Andre the Giant was one of the top attractions in professional wrestling -- a spectacle of matches with predetermined finishes that blends athletics with outlandish showmanship.

Andre wrestled frequently for the World Wrestling Federation, as WWE was known until earlier this year, but also was a wrestling star abroad, particularly in Japan. He also appeared in several films and television shows, most notably a key role in director Rob Reiner's 1987 hit "The Princess Bride."

'WE HONOR ANDRE'S MEMORY'

WWE Chairman Vince McMahon, the world's most-famous wrestling impresario, gave few details about the program for WrestleMania -- an annual pay-per-view extravaganza that is the biggest day of the year for professional wrestling in the United States. But McMahon spoke fondly of Andre the Giant.

"We honor Andre's memory almost every day. Hardly a day goes past where we don't think and/or talk about Andre, but nothing specific (was planned) for WrestleMania," McMahon told Reuters after the presentation.

McMahon promised to pack 50,000 fans into Seattle's Safeco Field and "blow the roof off" at WrestleMania, which dates to 1985. WrestleMania came of age in 1987, when Hulk Hogan pinned Andre the Giant, symbolically taking over as wrestling's biggest star, in front of an announced crowd of 93,000 people at the Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan.

But handouts detailing the history of WrestleMania focus on attendance and box office receipts, failing to mention any specific wrestlers until the 1995 event.

A stylized version of Andre the Giant's imposing visage is still seen in cities around the world, stenciled across street signs and sidewalks by artist Shepard Fairey beginning in the 1990s, or by followers he inspired.

But while Fairey's work helped rekindle interest in the mountainous wrestler, which his daughter appreciates, Christensen is less enthralled by Fairey's sales of prints including his Giant stencils.

'HE NEEDS TO PAY ROYALTIES'

"I can't get into it because there are legal procedures," Christensen said. "But he needs to pay royalties."

In a similar case involving sales of T-shirts bearing the likenesses of the Three Stooges comedy troupe, the U.S. Supreme Court ( news - web sites) ruled last January that a portrait artist must pay the Stooges' heirs $75,000 in profits plus $150,000 in legal fees.

Christensen enjoys watching the current crop of WWE wrestlers, and she stood and screamed with the young crowd when her favorites were introduced in Seattle, bathed in flashing lights and pulsating music.

"They're unbelievable guys," she said with a grin.

The largest of the current WWE behemoths, "Big Show" Paul Wight, is listed at 7-foot-2 and 500 pounds.

Christensen had no doubts about who would win a match between Andre the Giant and Big Show.

"Oh, I know my dad could take him," she said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: andrewthegiant; wwe
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To: Sir Gawain
I say stick Brock on Saddam, ARafat, and Ossamma!
101 posted on 10/02/2002 8:52:30 AM PDT by adam stevens
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To: VOA
Oh, yes indeed, Mary Hart played a better-looking Ed McMahon to Danny Williams in his noontime show "Dannysday". And yes, Danny Williams played a role on the "Foreman Scotty" children's show at 4:00 pm on channel 4 as 3-D Danny (Dan D Dynamo), the spaceship captain who got into all kinds of adventures and time travels. (Remember those evil, sinister, dog-man robots?) And they worked it all into a 30-minute kiddie show where they had birthday parties and stuff for kids! I just found out lately that 3-D's sidekick "Cannonball" was played by Bob Barry!

Plus Danny had the DJ gig on WKY radio playing motown tunes and stuff in the morning. Marrying into the Gaylord family did well for ol' Danny, didn't it?

He was at his very fun-loving best, though, IMO, as the host and co-announcer of "Championship Wrestling".

Oh, yeah, one other thing: Freestyle wrestling is the sport/martial art called "wrestling", the theatric art of Pro wrestling is "Rassling", or "Rasslin'", which in Danny Hodge's case was an example of a hooligan sport played by a gentleman.

102 posted on 10/02/2002 9:09:57 AM PDT by OKSooner
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To: VOA
And yes, it was a simpler time of virtue and grace.
103 posted on 10/02/2002 9:13:36 AM PDT by OKSooner
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To: OKSooner
Plus Danny had the DJ gig on WKY radio playing motown tunes and stuff in the morning.

Ah yes. That was a great time. I'll never forget my folks springing the bucks for a
technologically advanced combination cassette recorder and AM-FM receiver.
I spent plenty of time tuned into that great mix of rock/MoTown on WKY with
Danny Williams, Ron Kaye and the other cool DJs of the day.

And occassionally being able to (at night) pick up John "Records" Lansdecker (sp?)
doing his DJ gig at WLS in Chicago. I might as well have been picking up
chatter from another planet!

Marrying into the Gaylord family did well for ol' Danny, didn't it?
In retrospect I did think of Danny Williams as a bit "too hip for the room"
given the conservative flavor of Oklahoma. Marrying into the Gaylords does explain
how he got his gig!
But in many ways I liked Williams...he was hip enough to give me a bit of
a subversive buzz even while being what would be called a fly-over country redneck conservative
by anyone else on the coasts!
In some ways he gave us Okies a media star that had the comic edge of say, a Richard Belzer,
without being a social anarchist from Hollywood.
104 posted on 10/02/2002 9:30:38 AM PDT by VOA
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To: VOA
Yeah, Danny Williams was a cool guy in his own right who only occasionally got into trouble with his bosses @ Gaylord broadcasting. He still works, doing an oldies show on (believe it or not) KOMA radio. Talk about a blast from the past.
105 posted on 10/02/2002 9:44:29 AM PDT by OKSooner
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To: adam stevens
Nearly 6 feet tall herself and bearing a striking resemblance to her father,

I guess that means she has a great personality.

106 posted on 10/03/2002 11:32:05 AM PDT by Blood of Tyrants
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To: adam stevens; VOA
After all that nostalgia, I got to looking around and LOOK WHAT I FOUND by doing a google search:

http://www.wrestlingmuseum.com/pages/bios/halloffame/hodgebio.html Also this:

http://www.dddynamo.com/

VOA, this will be of more interest to you - the dddynamo.com page has some pictures and stuff of an aged Danny Williams and a very well-preserved Danny Hodge with some character called "The Godfather".

107 posted on 10/05/2002 3:55:57 PM PDT by OKSooner
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To: OKSooner
thanks for the links...nice to take a bit of a nostalgia trip, as well as seeing
how some of the local stars of my youth still have a gig.
I noticed Ronnie Kay is over at KOMA as well. I got a "brush with fame" when I ran into
him at the Sears auto shop at Shepard Mall while getting a new battery for my Opel GT.
Mr. Kay had a very nice car in for some work and we exchanged a few pleasantries
while waiting for our cars; he seemed like at least a decent sort.
I like Kay as a DJ at WKY, almost as much as Williams. I guess I just
liked Williams "edgier" personna.
108 posted on 10/06/2002 1:20:30 PM PDT by VOA
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To: JoeSixPack1
Back when I was on active duty as a First Sergeant I was doing room inspections and one of my troops had a poster of ole George The Animal on his wall.

Asked him why and he responded that he knew him quite well as George had been his wood shop teacher in high school.
109 posted on 10/06/2002 1:53:24 PM PDT by FRMAG
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Comment #110 Removed by Moderator

To: Hatteras
George the Animal Steel worked a very small independent event in Mt. Airy, NC within the last year.

He was no different than he was years ago.

I hate he's lowerd to the indie circuit. He was more entertaining than what is on TV now.
111 posted on 10/06/2002 2:11:23 PM PDT by hergus
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