Grunts and Grapples: These are the stars who made wrestling great for four decades in Britain
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
It's been almost 30 years since wrestling was cancelled on ITV. But the stars live on in a new exhibition featuring a film by Jeremy Deller
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com Just before the football scores, on the then-new station ITV from 1955, wrestling – introduced by inimitable commentator Kent Walton – heralded a new teatime age of grunting beefcakes being scolded by grannies and stylised athleticism.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com © Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com In its World of Sport slot, it became a ratings winner. More than 12 million people would tune in at its peak.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com This was part sport, part entertainment. Wrestling had emerged from music hall traditions.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com © Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com But the celebrity, spectacle and commercial sides of the sport, according to a skin-baring exhibition opening in Tunbridge Wells, were part of wrestling’s downfall in Britain.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com © Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com Design historian Kerry William Purcell’s exhibition circumnavigates the golden age of wrestling between the 1950s and the 1990s.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com © Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com Giant Haystacks and Big Daddy would appear in hundreds of town halls and theatres night after night. The posters are artworks full of big names, stacked shows, fierce posing and interesting font choices.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com © Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com Wrestlers were portrayed as baddies (heels) or goodies (blue eyes) against prevailing social narratives of otherness and racial and sexual stereotypes.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com © Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com Theirs was a carefully choreographed storyline. When ITV’s broadcasting of wrestling was cancelled in 1989, many argued that the contrived storylines, characters and manufactured bouts had drowned the sporting side of the action.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com Although it was never as successful, wrestling continued in town halls, seaside piers and theatres well into the 1990s.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com The costumes once worn by Big Daddy and Adrian Street, two of the original wrestlers, are part of Grunts and Grapples.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com There’s also a mask used to conceal the features of Kendo Nagasaki, the possible samurai whose cutting edge saw him tour Japan under the name Mr Guillotine.
© Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com © Courtesy gruntsandgrapples.com Street was the subject of a 2010 film by the ever-inquisitive Jeremy Deller. So Many Ways To Hurt You, The Life and Times of Adrian Street (“I’m a sweet transvestite with a broken nose…have you ever seen muscles on a rose?”) is screened in the exhibition.
Another film – this time a Pathé one from 1964 - shows women’s wrestling at the Victoria Hall in Hawkhurst, a village near Tunbridge Wells.
What do you think? Leave a comment below.Three museums to see television history inMuseum of Science and Industry, ManchesterThe Connecting Manchester Gallery tells the story of the development of communications in the Manchester region. Among the more familiar objects on display are classic radios, such as
the Ferranti Lancastria, and a 'Space Age' Keracolor television.
National Media Museum, BradfordWho invented television and when did it begin in Britain? What does a
vision mixer do? What did television sets look like in the sixties? Why
do we have adverts on television and how much are we influenced by what
we see? Find the answers to all these questions and explore the exciting
world of television in the interactive Experience TV gallery.
M Shed, BristolThe current exhibition, The Story of Children's Television From 1946 to Today, traces the fascinating history of children’s television,
bringing together seven decades of iconic objects, memorabilia,
merchandise, clips and images.
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/art562726-wrestling-grunts-grapples-tunbridge-wells-exhibition