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[WWW] Slam 3.17.08 Manager/booker Gary Hart dies
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GYXU > Pro Wrestling > [WWW] Slam 3.17.08 Manager/booker Gary Hart dies 21 March 2008 03:26:22

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[WWW] Slam 3.17.08 Manager/booker Gary Hart dies

Evad Seltzer 21 March 2008 03:26:22
 http://slam.canoe.ca­/Slam/Wrestling/2008­/03/17/5028281.html

Manager/booker Gary Hart dies
By GREG OLIVER - Producer, SLAM! Wrestling

[Gary Hart in 1989 while with WCW. Photo by Greg Oliver]

In front of the camera, Gary Hart, who died Sunday, was one of the
most vile and hated managers of all time; behind the scenes, he had
one of the greatest minds for professional wrestling.

"He was a slinky bad guy, ruthless," said World Class Championship
Wrestling announcer Bill Mercer. "I think he was the best of all the
managers. With all respect to the others, God, he could slink around
and look like he was always involved in doing something dirty behind
the scenes -- which he did."

Born Gary Williams on January 24, 1942, Hart broke into the business
in Chicago, his hometown, in 1960. Through his competitive swimming,
Hart met Billy Goelz, who was the booking agent for promoter Fred
Kohler in the Chicago area and a wrestle. Goelz helped Hart get a job
at the Marigold Arena, and he used the opportunities in the building
to start early. "So I started when I was only 18 years old, but I had
been trained since I was 15," he said.

Hart never played down his rough edges. "I'm a guy from Chicago, I did
grow up in a rough area and I learned early if somebody's got a brick
you get a board, if they got a board you get a knife, and if somebody
gets you today, you get them tomorrow. That's always been my
mentality," he told The Missing Link (Dewey Robertson) biographer
Meredith Renwick. "I'm a kid from Chicago who worked very hard to make
it in wrestling."

His actual start was as a manager. One night, Angelo Poffo was looking
for someone to be a second to him, as Bronco Lubich had gone to the
Carolinas. "I started as his second. As time went by, he liked me, I
became his tag team partner, then I became his manager."

Hart had made an appearance on Saturday in Allentown, Penn., for a
signing, a story covered by our own Steven Johnson [World Class not a
distant memory].

At the signing, Hart took credit for the legendary Von Erichs versus
Freebirds feud from World Class. "Contrary to what Michael Hayes said,
that was all 'Playboy' Gary Hart. I brought him in, I manipulated him,
I positioned him," said Hart, who ran the office with referee Bronco
Lubich, a 10 percent owner, since Fritz Von Erich spent most of his
time tending to other interests. "They [The Freebirds] were great at
what they did, but that was me. I would have never told you that 10
years ago," Hart said. "What popped Dallas and Texas itself was Kevin,
David, and Kerry. They were the guys that packed arenas."

Other Hart creations? How about changing Virgil Runnels into Dusty
Rhodes, and later baptizing him The American Dream.

In Rhodes-speak in his autobiography, he addressed how Hart was the
ideal adversary. "In 1974 Pak Song Nam and 'Playboy' Gary Hart were
the players who not only had a hand in changing the landscape of
wrestling, but they were the tools used to build the icon,
transforming the interview into the reason to many would attend the
event, and most of all to see the Korean Assassin with his manager
matched against the son of a plumber from Austin, Texas -- 'The
American Dream' Dusty Rhodes. It does not get any simpler than that.
Good versus evil."

Hart had numerous stints as a booker, primarily in Texas, but also in
Florida and Australia. By his own account, he was a booker for 14
years.

It was a job he took seriously. "I was the booking agent and I was the
producer of the TV and I had a responsibility to World Class, and I
had a responsibility to the other wrestlers in the area to make this
thing work," he recalled about returning to World Class around 1987.

A list of wrestlers that Hart managed reads like a who's who of
professional wrestling: Angelo Poffo, George "The Animal" Steele, The
Kangaroos (Al Costello, and Karl von Brauner), Missouri Mauler and
Brute Bernard, The Spoiler (Don Jardine), Mark Lewin, Curtis Iaukea,
the Great Kabuki, the Great Muta, Pak Song, Bob Orton Jr., Dicky
Slater, Buzz Sawyer, Bruiser Brody, Gino Hernandez, Al Perez. In all,
there were probably 25-30 wrestlers. "I usually had a crew of five
guys that I kept with me, that way you could control the town. I
learned from Buddy Rogers that 'he who surrounded himself with the
best talent controlled the town.' It worked like a miracle until
corporate wrestling. When it got into corporate wrestling, they didn't
really care if you drew or not. They would pay you. Therefore, it was
really difficult to get guys to do things that was good for business
rather than just for themselves. My deal was that I always had four or
five guys with me, and we would do what was best for the town and
ourselves. But corporate wrestling kind of f***ed that all up."

He wouldn't commit to just one favourite to manage. "I had a good
rapport with all my guys. I was very selective. I wouldn't take a guy
unless I really got along with him really, really good. I was a
primadonna when it came to guys who I would manage. I can't really
think of anyone, even to this day, that I was with that we weren't
good friends, and still don't have a good rapport with. I didn't have
any of those 'I hate you' type things."

"I looked at myself as a finder and developer of talent," Hart said.
"I was very good as a manager. I don't think there was anyone any
better on the mic, or at the ring. I think I had excellent ideas. But
my forte was, I had the ability to find and develop talent. That was
what I brought to the table more than anything else. I always felt
that you could be excellent at interviews, you could be excellent at
ideas and finishes and the way to present people, but if you didn't
have a good eye for talent, pick the right, you weren't going to be
very successful. I had a hell of an eye for wrestling talent. I more
or less credit that to my success -- finding a developing guys that
really had not had a chance until they got with me, for whatever
reason."

The other famed incident in Hart's life was being on board the plane
that Buddy Colt crashed in the Tampa Bay Gulf, killing Bobby Shane.
"In 1974 I crashed in Tampa Bay in a light aircraft with three other
guys, and I got broke up really bad. I broke my leg, my wrist, my
back, lost the sight in my right eye," he recalled.

Hart retired at the age of 48. "I had had a full cup by the time, in
1990, that I was with WCW. I wasn't really happy with the direction
wrestling was going," he said. "I definitely wasn't happy with the
management at Turner Broadcasting. It was quite easy for me to walk
away."

[Gary Hart, right, honours his former team Rip Hawk (left) and the
late Swede Hanson at a 2007 Hall of Heroes banquet and awards
ceremony.last August at the NWA Wrestling Legends Fanfest in
Charlotte, NC. Courtesy Greg Price]

After leaving the spotlight, Hart retired to Texas, and promoted
independent wrestling shows; "I hated promoting, but it was a way to
make a decent living."

The last few years, Hart was a house-father, raising his son Chad, who
had begun his own career in pro wrestling, in Euless, Tex. He appeared
on various World Class DVDs and at fan conventions.

He had completed work on his autobiography with writer Philip Varriale
of New York. "It's a long process, but I'm really pleased with the
final product. I worked on it for, I'd say, a little over a year,"
Hart said in August 2006.

Hart died Sunday afternoon, leaving behind no regrets. "I was in
wrestling some 30 years. I had a great life. I have no complaints. I'm
not a bitter guy. I enjoyed every moment that I was involved."

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GYXU > Pro Wrestling > [WWW] Slam 3.17.08 Manager/booker Gary Hart dies 21 March 2008 03:26:22

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