Saturday Night Wrestling a Real ‘Trip’
There’s nothing amusing about Verne Gagne’s
plight these days but years ago he and his American Wrestling
Association, headquartered in Minneapolis, provided lots of laughs on
Saturday night television. Gagne, 82, has dementia and allegedly was
involved this winter in an incident with a fellow resident at Friendship
Village who later died.
Back in the 1960’s and 70’s Gagne’s All-Star wrestling TV show
originated from the Calhoun Beach Hotel. The program’s mission was to
rile up viewers enough so that they bought tickets for the next
wrestling card at either the Minneapolis or St. Paul auditoriums. A
sideline pursuit was to sell a vitamin called Gera Speed.
This was Gagne’s product, as was the AWA where he directed a roster of
wrestlers, many of whom he trained, on cards in places like Minneapolis,
Winnipeg and Omaha. Most of the time Gagne was also “world champion,”
except when he was valiantly trying to reclaim the championship from a
notorious bad guy like “Mad Dog” Vachon.
Wrestling fans who knew how to read and think (not everyone) knew that
pro wrestling was divided into fiefdoms where promoters like Gagne ruled
and their world champions were more regional than national or
international. Minneapolis Tribune columnist Dick Cullum
delighted in referring to Gagne as champion of the “seven county
mosquito control district.”
On Saturday nights Gagne’s blood boiled at the antics of bad guys
like “Mad Dog” and Larry “the Axe” Hennig. Gagne was often
steamed when he stepped into the TV interview area to chat with ring
announcer Marty O’Neill, a portly, bald chap who usually
appeared on camera wearing dark glasses. His famous command to the TV
masses about an upcoming main event at the auditorium was: “Don’t you
dare miss it!”
Sometimes the interview area was as hazardous as the ring. A crazed
wrestler like the beloved Crusher might ram his head through the
background wall in the interview area. O’Neill, ever alert, was
sometimes witness to an interviewee being attacked by a bad guy who just
happened to be wrestling the victim that night downtown.
O’Neill and Gagne were in harmony when they pitched the Gera Speed
product each week. I have no idea about the benefits, but those who
watched O’Neill and Gagne knew the pitch would always include how Gera
Speed provides “Vim, vigor and vitality!”