Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Pro wrestling (documentary) returns to Memorial Hall Thursday night

Posted by Justin Kendall on Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 12:00 PM

click to enlarge Harley Race
  • Harley Race

The Kansas City FilmFest starts today at AMC's new Mainstreet Theatre but the film I want to see isn't showing at the festival. It'll debut Thursday night (April 23) at 7 at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas. Metro Sports' Chris Gough will unveil his pro wrestling documentary, K.C. On The Mat: The History of Professional Wrestling in Kansas City.

"Thursday nights is when they ran the actual cards back in the day in

Kansas City inside Memorial Hall," Gough tells The Pitch, "so this will be a

Thursday night inside Memorial Hall."

The screening is free and stars from the bygone era are scheduled to attend, including eight-time world champion Harley Race, promoter Bob Geigel, "Nature Boy" Roger Kirby, Billy Howard, Tom

Andrews, Richard Brown, Mike George, Bill Grigsby and announcer Bill Kersten.

"Most of them have seen a rough cut and all of them have been really

happy about it, which made me feel good because if I wanted to impress

anybody, it was them," Gough says. "I wanted to make sure that I didn't

offend them because wrestling is such a business about respect."

A week later, on April 28, the documentary will air on Metro Sports at 7 p.m. Here's a sneak peek.




click to enlarge Chris Gough
  • Chris Gough
Gough has seen the inner-workings of professional wrestling's biggest traveling circus -- World Wrestling Entertainment's Monday Night Raw. As a creative writer for WWE's Raw, Gough flew from city to city on a private jet with wrestling's elite: WWE owner Vince McMahon, his daughter Stephanie McMahon, champion Triple H, announcer Jim Ross and other story line writers.

"We'd be in and out of limos to like arenas back to like some five-star hotel, and then go to the next town," Gough says.

"I was never home. I had no life. I had a girlfriend, but I never saw

her. ... I never saw my family. It was one of those jobs that it was so

cool and so hot at the time that you never wanted to quit."

Gough witnessed some of the biggest

moments in professional wrestling -- the rise of "Stone Cold" Steve

Austin, DX and The Rock, the fall of WCW and ECW --

and he helped write some of wrestling's most bizarre story lines (Triple H as a necrophiliac, hot lesbian action,

the Billy and Chuck wedding).


"When we were writing story lines for WWE, after a while, I

couldn't read the Internet, because everything I did was horseshit,"

Gough says.


WWE runs through writers. Freddie Prinze Jr. didn't last. Neither could the guy who wrote Liar Liar, which starred Jim Carrey. Gough was no different. A falling out with Stephanie McMahon in 2003 led to a choice: resign or be fired. Gough didn't elaborate on his departure other than saying, "Stephanie McMahon is a horrible boss."


click to enlarge Rufus R. Jones
  • Rufus R. Jones
Gough returned to Kansas City and became a freelance photographer, shooting

high school sports. Not quite the pageantry WrestleMania. The monolithic WWE that Gough worked for is also the same company

that crushed local territorial wrestling, which Gough documents in K.C.

On The Mat. The documentary starts in the 1930s with Kansas-born Orville Brown, the first NWA Champion, and runs through 1988 when the territory folded.

Gough started working on the documentary in 2007. It was

a side project but a passion project. Gough used old tapes of Central States Wrestling and still photos to put the documentary together, a tough feat because the WWE owns nearly every major tape collection.

"This is pretty much in my blood," Gough says. "I have a big passion for it."

When people found out that Gough had worked for WWE, people would tell

him stories of watching "Bulldog" Bob Brown, Rufus R. Jones and Harley

Race on Thursday nights at Memorial Hall.

"It was amazing to

me that everybody had these nostalgia trips about Kansas City wrestling

when it was just a territory," Gough said. "I wanted to sort of

memorialize that era because a lot of people seemingly were affected by

it and have a nostalgia feeling about it.

"You get to see he side of the people who Vince basically crushed and left homeless," Gough says.

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MY FAVORITE WRESTLER::::::

DANNY LITTLE BEAR

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Posted by EVELYN BROWN SANDERS on August 18, 2010 at 9:20 PM

I am SO excited about seeing this documentary & seeing some of my old friends. My best friend & I used to drive to KCK every Thursday night from St. Joe to see the matches. Afterward, we would go to the Tender Trap on 12th St., KCMO, which was a small hole-in-the-wall bar owned by some of the wrestlers. The "bad" guys would sit in the back & the "good" guys up front. We had a lot of great times at both the matches & at the Trap. Times I will never forget.

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Posted by Vicki Kerns on April 22, 2009 at 9:49 PM
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