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    Gorgeous George: The Outrageous Bad-Boy Wrestler Who Created American Pop Culture

    Gorgeous George: The Outrageous Bad-Boy Wrestler Who Created American Pop Culture
    Author: John Capouya
    Publisher: HarperEntertainment
    Category: Book

    List Price: $25.95
    Buy New: $12.50
    You Save: $13.45 (52%)



    New (44) Used (19) from $10.48

    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
    Sales Rank: 260735

    Media: Hardcover
    Pages: 304
    Number Of Items: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
    Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.5 x 1.3

    ISBN: 0061173037
    Dewey Decimal Number: 796.812092
    EAN: 9780061173035
    ASIN: 0061173037

    Publication Date: September 1, 2008
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Also Available In:

      • Kindle Edition - Gorgeous George

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description

    This is the first-ever biography of the legendary wrestler Gorgeous George, filled with incredible never-before-told stories. George directly influenced the likes of Muhammad Ali, who took his bragging and boasting from George; James Brown, who began to wear sequined capes onstage after seeing George on TV; John Waters, whose films featured the outrageous drag queen Divine as an homage to George; and too many wrestlers to count. Amid these pop culture discoveries are firsthand accounts of the pro wrestling game from the 1930s to the 1960s.

    The ideal American male used to be stoic, quiet, and dignified. But for a young couple struggling to make ends meet, in the desperation born of the lingering Depression and wartime rationing, an idea was hatched that changed the face of American popular culture, an idea so bold, so over-the-top and absurd, that it was perfect. That idea transformed journeyman wrestler George Wagner from a dark-haired, clean-cut good guy to a peroxide-blond braggart who blatantly cheated every chance he got. Crowds were stunned—they had never seen anything like this before—and they came from miles around to witness it for themselves.

    Suddenly George—guided by Betty, his pistol of a wife—was a draw. With his golden tresses grown long and styled in a marcel, George went from handsome to . . . well . . . gorgeous overnight, the small, dank wrestling venues giving way to major arenas. As if the hair wasn't enough, his robes—unmanly things of silk, lace, and chiffon in pale pinks, sunny yellows, and rich mauves—were but a prelude to the act: the regal entrance, the tailcoat-clad valet spraying the mat with perfume, the haughty looks and sneers for the "peasants" who paid to watch this outrageously prissy hulk prance around the ring. How they loved to see his glorious mane mussed up by his manly opponents. And how they loved that alluringly alliterative name . . . Gorgeous George . . . the self-proclaimed Toast of the Coast, the Sensation of the Nation!

    All this was timed to the arrival of that new invention everyone was talking about—television. In its early days, professional wrestling and its larger-than-life characters dominated prime-time broadcasts—none more so than Gorgeous George, who sold as many sets as Uncle Miltie.

    Fans came in droves—to boo him, to stick him with hatpins, to ogle his gowns, and to rejoice in his comeuppance. He was the man they loved to hate, and his provocative, gender-bending act took him to the top of the entertainment world. America would never be the same again.




    Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

    2 out of 5 stars Wrestling Buff's disappointment   January 6, 2009
    Nelson A. Santini (NYC)
    This reads more like a novel. The recreation of his early days are a mystery to his wives, yet he composes his early days quite vividly. So there are a lot of liberites here. Later it gets better.
    I got more about him from PRO WRESTLING:THE HEELS than I did this. But for some ideas on how this legendary wrestling icon grew with the audience, it's ok.....



    4 out of 5 stars Blast From the Past   December 2, 2008
    A. McDonald (Oklahoma USA)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    I was never a big "rasslin'" fan myself but my grandpa and my younger brother were. I remember staying overnight at my grandparents' house and because our bed was made in the living room my sister and I had to stay awake while Grandpa watched the Saturday night rasslin'. He took my little brother to see Gorgeous George in person in our town during the late 1950's and they talked about it for weeks. Last summer when our family was creating a memory book about the way we remembered our grandparents, now long gone, and my brother (60 years old himself) immediately said he wanted to include the story about seeing Gorgeous George. It was the only time he had seen Grandpa get riled up. I bought this book to give my brother for Christmas. I had hoped there would be more about the days, late in his career, when he wrestled in small southwest towns. I was disappointed there was nothing much about those days but I did enjoy being reminded about an era long forgotten. I guess I was paying more attention to the TV than I thought I was because I sure remembered a lot of it. It pretty well researched and easy to read. The photos are great.


    3 out of 5 stars The Human Orchid   November 1, 2008
    Johnny Heering (Bethel, CT United States)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    Gorgeous George was the biggest star in wrestling from the late 1940s to the late 1950s. This is the first biography written about him, as far as I know. It does a pretty good job of covering the events of his life. But I felt like the author did a bit too much speculating about what was going through George's head, when he has no way of knowing that. He also spends too much time talking about famous people who were influenced by George, in an attempt to make George seem relevent to today's world. And not to nitpick, but he refers to the wrestling word for a practical joke as a "swerve", when the correct word is "rib" (a "swerve" is actually a sudden change in the direction of a storyline to surprise the fans). Overall though, this is an entertaining book about a colorful character.


    4 out of 5 stars Orchids and hammerlocks   October 9, 2008
    Jon Hunt (Old Greenwich, Ct. USA)
    In the late 1940s and early 1950s, professional wrestling and Gorgeous George went hand in perfumed hand. It was the ultimate "match made in heaven" and the budding television industry couldn't get enough of this bender of rules and purveyor of sniff. Due to his enormous success, Gorgeous George may have had imitators along the way, but he remained always, the original thing.

    John Capouya largely captures the ups and downs of George Wagner's life and career...its many triumphs inside the ring and its disastrous failures outside the squared circle. Gorgeous George was "sui generis" and inspired several future celebrities such as Muhammad Ali and Bob Dylan. But the real story here is George and his connection with wrestling as a lifestyle and as a promotion with its sexual subtext. Wrestling, by its nature, is a homoerotic sport, and George played the edges to a fault. Could he have been a star today? I doubt it with the plethora of today's luminaries crossing all sorts of lines. Good vs. bad was more clearly defined a couple of generations ago, whereas now, the boundaries are often nonexistent.

    As with many stars of the first order, Gorgeous George could not keep up a life equal to the one he had on stage. His drinking led to his premature death and his marital relations were often in tatters. Capouya's narrative tends to get goofy sometimes, distracting from the larger elements of George's popularity. But if we all wish we had our own fifteen minutes of fame, Gorgeous George had hundreds of hours of being in the public eye to last a lifetime. It's sad that he could never find the happiness, himself, that he brought to millions of others.



    4 out of 5 stars Memories of times passed   September 29, 2008
    RusticBK (Gillett, WI USA)
    4 out of 4 found this review helpful

    In the early days of TV in my life, I remember my aged aunt sitting in her mohair chair screaming in Swedish at the small, black and white image of Gorgeous George prancing across the screen. What she said, I'd not wish to repeat, but it did have some reflections on his parents and some mention of bodily functions. Otherwise, my aunt was prim and proper... we kids would sit out stunned at what we were hearing. This book does some justice to George, but doesn't quite get ot the impact on small town middle American as I recollect it.


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