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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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740 Wrestling, Professional<br />

les and jumping kicks. Bronko Nagurski and “Jumping Joe” Savoldi, respectively,<br />

were famous practitioners of those techniques. Mud wrestling<br />

also dates to the 1930s; here Paul Boesch was a pioneer. But of course the<br />

biggest draws continued to be matches that left the audience (known to the<br />

wrestlers, using carnival language, as the marks) believing that the<br />

wrestling was real rather than prearranged, or that featured ethnic rivalry.<br />

Sometimes the two story lines were combined. A. J. Liebling described how<br />

this worked in the New Yorker on November 13, 1954: “A Foreign Menace,<br />

in most cases a real wrestler, would be imported. He would meet all<br />

the challengers for the title whom [reigning champion Jim] Londos had defeated<br />

in any city larger than New Haven, and beat them. After that, he and<br />

Londos would wrestle for the world’s championship in Madison Square<br />

Garden. <strong>The</strong> Foreign Menace would oppress Londos unmercifully for<br />

about forty minutes, and then Londos . . . would whirl the current Menace<br />

around his head and dash him to the mat three times, no more and no<br />

less. . . . [After] the bout, the Menace would either return to Europe or remain<br />

here to become part of the buildup for the next Menace.”<br />

During <strong>World</strong> War II, wrestlers often ended up in the service. Here<br />

some of them found employment as hand-to-hand combat instructors. Examples<br />

include Kaimon Kudo and Lou <strong>The</strong>sz. To meet the demand for<br />

wrestling on the U.S. home front, women’s wrestling became popular. Stars<br />

included Mildred Burke, Gladys Gillem, Clara Mortensen, Elvira Snodgrass,<br />

and Mae Young. <strong>The</strong> wartime audiences were about half men and<br />

about half women and school-age boys. <strong>The</strong> performers were workingclass<br />

women who viewed wrestling as a way of earning good money—up<br />

to $100 a week for a champion, as opposed to $20 a week as a secretary—<br />

while staying physically fit. Nazi newspapers picked up on this, and used<br />

the story to show how corrupt and immoral the Americans were.<br />

In 1948 five North American wrestling promoters organized the National<br />

Wrestling Alliance (NWA), the idea of which was to reduce competition<br />

between territories and thereby increase the promoters’ share of the financial<br />

pie. <strong>The</strong>re were problems, however, most notably that, in the words<br />

of the NWA champion Lou <strong>The</strong>sz, most of the promoters were “thieves, and<br />

the one quality all of them shared was suspicion of each other” (<strong>The</strong>sz 1995,<br />

107). Another problem was that every promoter wanted the world champion<br />

working for him. So there were soon nearly as many world champions<br />

as wrestlers. Nonetheless, by 1956, thirty-eight promoters belonged to the<br />

NWA, and between them they controlled professional wrestling in North<br />

America, Mexico, and Japan. This arrangement led to another scandal, as<br />

the U.S. government eventually ruled that it was an illegal restraint of trade.<br />

To many wrestling fans, the period from the early 1950s to the late<br />

1970s represents the Golden Age of Wrestling. In part, this nostalgia is

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