Freddie Blassie(1918-2003)
- Actor
Fred Blassie was born and raised in the St. Louis, Missouri, area.
Accounts about his early athletic career do not quite agree, but he
first tried to make his mark as a boxer, despite warnings that his arms
were too short. After being pounded by a longer-limbed opponent, he
switched to professional wrestling. His career began in earnest after
his service in the United States Navy during World War II. Blassie
wrestled as a dark-haired good guy until he found out that the "heels"
(bad guys) got better pay. He bleached his hair and quickly became a
heel's heel, outraging crowds by gleefully breaking every rule in the
book. His penchant for biting opponents earned him the nickname "The
Vampire". One poll ranked him as the most hated wrestler in the United
States. Between matches, he gave loud and boastful interviews, making
him a favorite of talk shows and reportedly influencing a fellow
egomaniac then known as Cassius Clay. Blassie originally wrestled
mainly in the Southeast and West Coast, winning many titles in both. In
the late 1960s, he moved to the East Coast and the World-Wide Wrestling
Federation (WWWF, later the World Wresting Federation (WWF) and now
World Wrestling Entertainment WWE)). Managed by "Loud" Lou Albano, Blassie
continued his winning ways, but never won the WWWF's championship. In
1973, knee problems largely forced Blassie to stop wrestling
personally, though he occasionally donned the tights to tag-team with
one of his heels, as he did in Madison Square Garden in June 1974,
teaming with the hulking Nikolai Volkoff to face then-champ Bruno
Sammartino and Chief Jay Strongbow in a tag team match (Blassie was
forced to submit for the final fall by a Bruno bearhug, and the fans
almost tore the Garden's roof off). He started a second career as a
manager in the WWWF. He, Albano, and "The Grand Wizard of Wrestling"
(Ernie Roth) formed the WWWF's "Evil Trinity" of heel managers. Blassie
was a regular on the WWWF's "All-Star Wrestling" and "Championship
Wrestling" weekly TV shows that were videotaped at small arenas in
Pennsylvania and aired throughout the Northeast. He continued to
outrage crowds by distracting referees so that his men could cheat and
by getting in his own cheap shots when the refs weren't looking.
Occasionally, he would get too close to the action and get beaten up
himself, much to the crowd's delight. Still a motormouth, he gave
interviews in which he bragged about himself and his protégés and
denounced anybody he didn't like as a "pencil necked geek". His heels
were always a bit more exotic and meaner than most. Around 1980, he
adopted a new moniker: "Ayatollah Blassie." Blassie retired from
wrestling in 1986, turning over his stable of heels to another manager
called Slick. By this time, Blassie has acquired a cult following,
leading to appearances in several feature films. Since his retirement,
he has occasionally worked as a "goodwill ambassador" (!) for the
WWF.