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Title: The Fabulous Moolah -
First Goddess of the Squared Circle
Pages: 240
Released:
August 2002
Book Description
Lillian Ellison, known in the ring as the Fabulous Moolah, is
one of wrestling's pioneering veterans and heroines, both in and
out of the squared circle. When wrestling first caught the
attention of the public, Moolah had a ringside seat. Appearing
on the scene in 1949 as a "valet" for some male wrestlers, she
was introduced to the crowd as a "slave girl" dressed in
revealing leopard skin. But the woman who got into the business
for the "Moolah" wouldn't remain a valet for long, and soon
Moolah turned her humble beginnings into a successful and
long-lived career.
Growing up in Tookiedoo, South Carolina, Moolah was the youngest
of thirteen children -- and the only girl. Surrounded by twelve
rambunctious brothers, she had to be tough from the get-go.
After the death of their mother when she was just ten years old,
Moolah and her father spent Tuesday nights at local professional
wrestling matches. At first she was just excited to do something
special with her father. But everything changed when Mildred
Burke (one of the most popular "lady rasslers" of the day) came
to town. After years of being surrounded by boys, Moolah had
finally found a woman she could look up to.
From that night on, Moolah was hooked. She stayed in the ring
throughout the 1950s and 1960s, even though technically women
were banned from wrestling "for their own good." When the
Women's Division of the National Wrestling Alliance was failing,
Moolah started training girls at her home base in South
Carolina, and by the late sixties the girls she had trained at
Girl Wrestling Enterprises represented the single largest group
of female wrestlers in the country. Soon the National Wrestling
Alliance recognized her as the undisputed Women's Champ, a title
she would hold for the next twenty years.
Here, for the first time, the Fabulous Moolah tells all, from
her friendship with the infamous Jerry Lee Lewis to a marriage
proposal from country-music legend Hank Williams Sr. Moolah
dishes plenty of wrestling dirt as well and relates hilarious
moments from her decades long friendship with her in-ring cohort
Mae Young.
After more than half a century of wrestling, Moolah still trains
girls for the ring and even manages to get into the ring herself
now and again. She is a role model for strong women everywhere,
and she will go down in history as one of wrestling's all-time
greats. |