George Steele

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George "The Animal" Steele
George Steele in 2005
George Steele in 2005
Statistics
Ring name(s) George Steele
The Animal
George "The Animal Steele
The Student
The Animal Machine
Billed height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Billed weight 288 lb (131 kg)
Born April 16, 1937 (1937-04-16) (age 71)
Detroit, Michigan
Resides Cocoa Beach, Florida
Debut 1967
Retired 1989

William James Myers (born April 16, 1937 in Detroit, Michigan), better known by his ring name George "The Animal" Steele is a former American professional wrestler and actor. Steele's career lasted from 1967 until 1989, though he made occasional wrestling appearances into the 1990s and 2000s.

Contents

Career

After gaining a bachelor of science degree from Michigan State University and a master's degree from Central Michigan University,[1] Myers became a teacher and amateur wrestling coach at Madison High School in Madison Heights, Michigan. There he would eventually become a member of the Michigan Coaches Hall of Fame.[2]

Looking to supplement his income, he got into the world of Detroit-area professional wrestling, but in order to protect his privacy, he wrestled under a mask using the name The Student. [3] Scouted by World Wide Wrestling Federation champion Bruno Sammartino, he began working in Pittsburgh in 1967 on the popular Studio Wrestling TV show broadcast on WIIC-TV Channel 11. There he dropped the mask, but still looking to hide his real name, adopted the name "George Steele". Using the last name Steele was suggested by the popular Jumping Johnny DeFazio. The name Steele was derived from Pittsburgh's nickname of the "Steel City" and the first name George was suggested by another wrestler.[4]

Working well with Sammartino, he was invited for a full run in the WWF. He told WWF TV commentator Ray Morgan that he was the nephew of Ray Steele (kayfabe) and had an extensive amateur background. He sold the story by using an array of armlocks on opponents, weakening them for his finisher, the Flying Hammerlock (Steele would lift his opponents off the mat by a hammerlocked arm). He also revealed his teaching background to interviewers that made his in-ring Neanderthal image all the more incongruous. He wrestled Sammartino to an hour-long draw at Madison Square Garden but lost the rematch. He was then relegated to a feud with Chief Jay Strongbow, and lost to Edouard Carpentier at the Garden before taking a brief hiatus to reinvent his wildman character.

Now his gimmick was fully established. A true crazy heel, he acted like a wild man in the ring, tearing up the turnbuckle with his teeth and using the stuffing as a weapon as well as sticking out his green tongue (an effect accomplished by eating green Clorets breath mints).[5] The Animal had a stooped posture and a hairless head, but a thick mat of fur on his back; wrestling broadcasters often speculated that The Animal was indeed "the missing link." At best The Animal could occasionally manage to utter a word or two during interviews with one them usually being "Duh-da-dahh."

As Steele recalled in a later shoot interview, his infamous "Duh-dahh" interview style happened by accident. Throughout his career, Steele prided himself on being able to cut eloquent and effective promos, and ranked his mic skills with the best in the business. At a WWF TV taping in the early '80s, he was cutting one of these promos when Vince McMahon cut him off, and reminded Steele that his gimmick was the "Animal", and for an animal he was "making too much sense". Incensed, Steele did a second take of nothing but garbled and incoherent syllables ("Duhh-dahh"). Steele did this deliberately, and out of pure frustration, thinking that McMahon would acquiesce and allow Steele to cut his normal, eloquent promos. Much to Steele's shock, McMahon replied, "That's exactly what I want!", and this would remain Steele's interview style for the rest of his WWF run.

Steele eventually became one of the more beloved wrestlers of the early "WrestleMania" era of the mid-1980s. He turned face during Saturday Night's Main Event when his partners in a six-man match, Nikolai Volkoff and the Iron Sheik, abandoned him to their opponents, Ricky Steamboat and the U.S. Express (Barry Windham and Mike Rotunda), leading to Steele being taken under the wing of the Express' manager, Capt. Lou Albano. His most famous feud was in 1986 against "Macho Man" Randy Savage, after Steele developed a crush on Savage's valet, Miss Elizabeth. The feud was meant to last only a couple of months (and end with Steele being disappointed), but it proved so popular with fans that it continued well into 1987. In 1988, Steele began carrying a hand puppet named "Mine" to the ring. Late in 1989 Steele retired due to Crohn's disease. Though he left the WWF without any WWF championships behind him, he left a fan favorite. A decade later Steele came out of retirement briefly (see below).

In 1994, Steele made his professional acting debut as Swedish wrestler-turned-actor, Tor Johnson, in Tim Burton's Ed Wood. The casting was particularly appropriate because for many years Steele was often mistaken for Johnson. He tells a story where, in New York, a store was selling the popular Tor Johnson mask as a George Steele mask, as George was having a popular run in wrestling at the time. [6]

In 1999 during the WWF's "Attitude Era", George Steele returned as part of The Oddities.

On January 10, 2000, George Steele appeared on an episode of WCW Monday Nitro as one of three legends Jeff Jarrett had to face that night.[7]

On June 8, 2008, Steele made an appearance at TNA Slammiversary as a groomsman in the wedding for "Black Machismo" Jay Lethal and So Cal Val, along with Koko B. Ware, Kamala, and Jake "The Snake" Roberts.

Personal life

Myers has Crohn's disease and dyslexia[8][9].

Myers is a religious man. He attends the First Baptist Church Merritt Island, and currently lives in Cocoa Beach, Florida with his wife Pat.[10]

In wrestling

  • Finishing and signature moves

Theme Music

Championships and accomplishments

  • Georgia Wrestling Alliance
  • GWA Heavyweight Championship (1 time)
Regional
  • Class of 2005
  • PWI ranked him # 267 of the 500 best singles wrestlers during the "PWI Years" in 2003.

References

External links

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.