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Revision as of 14:31, 26 March 2008
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2006) |
Doink the Clown | |
---|---|
Born | Parts Unknown |
Professional wrestling career | |
Ring name(s) | Doink the Clown |
Billed height | 6 ft 0 in (183 cm) |
Billed weight | 243 lb (110 kg) |
Debut | 1992 |
Doink the Clown is a gimmick used by several professional wrestlers since the 1990s. The Doink character originally wrestled in the World Wrestling Federation. Doink now can be found occasionally on the independent wrestling circuit in the United States and on WWE programming.
History
The Doink wrestling persona nug is that of a circus clown. He wrestles in a clown costume, complete with face paint, makeup, and bright green hair. His diminutive sidekick, Dink the Clown (who was approximately four feet tall) wore a similar clown suit.
After making appearances in late 1992 in the crowd and at ringside, playing tricks on the fans and wrestlers, The Doink character made his in-ring debut in the WWF in 1993,[1] and he wrestled as both a heel and face. As a heel, Doink played cruel jokes on both fans and face wrestlers in order to amuse himself and put them off guard.[1] Some of his heelish pranks included tripping The Big Boss Man with a trip wire and attacking Crush with a prosthetic arm. As a heel, some of his most notable clashes were with Crush at WrestleMania IX, Randy Savage on an early edition of Monday Night RAW, and Bret Hart after substituting for an "injured" Jerry Lawler at SummerSlam 1993.
Doink would turn on Lawler, effectively turning face as a result.[1] Matt Borne, the original man behind Doink, was fired for re-occurring drug abuses, eventually leaving the gimmick (after bouncing through a few others) to Ray Apollo. Now as a face and with a new dwarf sidekick Dink, Doink encountered Lawler again the following year in a match at Survivor Series 1994. In this match, Doink and Dink teamed with Wink and Pink to meet Lawler's dwarf team of 'little kings' Queazy, Cheezy, and Sleazy.[1] As a face, Doink was more of a comic relief character, but continued to play jokes on other wrestlers, mostly heels such as Jerry Lawler and Bobby Heenan. These jokes were considerably less cruel while Doink was a face, however. Doink and Dink would also battle with Bam Bam Bigelow and his 'main squeeze' Luna Vachon in a feud that would culminate at WrestleMania X.[1]
Doink found himself a feature character in two fairly successful WWF video game releases. The first: WWF Raw, the 1994 sequel video game to WWF Royal Rumble (1993). WWF Raw was released on the SNES, Sega Genesis, and Sega 32x platforms, as well as Game Boy and Game Gear (although the Doink character was omitted in the Game Gear version). The second: WWF WrestleMania - The Arcade Game, a 1995 arcade, Sega 32x, Playstation, and SNES release which attempts to mimic the fighting style of the hugely successful Mortal Kombat series.
Some wrestling purists criticized the WWF for creating the Doink character, claiming that it pandered to what they saw as the "one-ring circus" atmosphere the WWF was promoting at the time; others thought that Doink was appropriate given professional wrestling's carny origins. Others preferred the heel version, saying that Matt Borne made the gimmick work, but once he was turned face, his character was neutered. One of Doink's final appearances in his original run was at the Slammy Awards when he was attacked by Stone Cold Steve Austin amidst chants of 'kill the clown'.
Doink would make random appearances in the next decade. He competed in the Gimmick Battle Royal at WrestleMania X-Seven. He showed up in the A.P.A. Bar Room Brawl on the Smackdown! Vengeance 2003 pay-per-view. Then on the following SmackDown! he wrestled Chris Benoit. He fought Rob Conway on an October 2005 episode of Raw.
On the June 2, 2007 episode of Saturday Night's Main Event, he teamed up with Eugene and Kane to defeat Umaga, Viscera, and Kevin Thorn. On Raw XV, the 15th-anniversary WWE Raw special on December 10, 2007, Doink participated in the 15th Anniversary Battle Royal. His profile is in the wwe alumni section of wwe.com.[1]
Wrestling facts
- Finishing and signature moves
- Stump Puller (Inverted Boston crab) - used as a heel
- Whoopie Cushion (Seated Senton) - used as a face
- Theme music
- Doink's entrance music originally consisted of the famous circus song Entry of the Gladiators, which segued into menacing music, which contained maniacal laughing like that of an evil clown.
- After the character was turned face, the music changed to a full version of "Entry."
The personnel behind Doink
A number of men have used the Doink gimmick in the WWF. The first (and best-known) Doink was Matt Borne. He was succeeded by Dusty Wolfe and Steve Lombardi, who played the character temporarily after Borne left the company until Ray Apollo was brought in as the permanent replacement.
- Steve Keirn donned the Doink gimmick as part of an angle that involved multiple Doinks, the character's first feud, with Crush, which culminated in a WrestleMania IX match where a second Doink (Keirn) crawled from underneath the ring during the match to incapacitate Crush with a cast. The 'real' Doink was at this point still played by Borne.
- Men on a Mission and The Bushwhackers dressed as "The Four Doinks" at the 1993 Survivor Series.
- Jeff Jarrett disguised himself as Doink to play practical jokes on Dink.
After the first run of Doinks, the character was not used for a number of years.
- Chris Jericho donned the Doink costume shortly before WrestleMania X-Seven in order to ambush William Regal
- Ray Apollo competed as Doink in a "gimmick battle royal" at WrestleMania X-Seven' [citation needed] (the timing of the event led several commentators to speculate that the advertised "battle royal" was an April Fools' Day joke, but the event did in fact take place and was won by the Iron Sheik).
- Nick Dinsmore portrayed Doink in a bar room brawl at Vengeance 2003, as well as the following SmackDown, losing to Chris Benoit.
- Steve Lombardi as Doink made yet another return on the October 10 2005 edition of RAW, in a match against Rob Conway.[2] He once again donned the Doink the Clown gear in 2006, while in the corner of Eugene during a match against Umaga at Vengeance 2006. [citation needed] Doink sprayed Umaga with a water pistol after he won the match, prompting Umaga to attack him.
- Dwaine Henderson portrayed Doink in the 6 man tag match on the June 2, 2007 episode of Saturday Night's Main Event . [citation needed]
- Matt Borne also assumed the role for WWE RAW's 15th Anniversary Special in the 15 man Battle Royal, and was eliminated by Al Snow.[3]
The Doink character is easily portrayed by just about anybody on the independent wrestling scene by purchasing the Doink gimmicks (wig and tights) from one of many wrestling gear makers.
Championships
None of the people who've played Doink ever won a championship as the Doink character, however a lot of them have won championships while they were not playing Doink.
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f "Doink's Alumni Profile". WWE.com. Retrieved 2007-06-17.
- ^ Dusty Giebink. "WWE Raw review: October 10, 2005". PWTorch. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
- ^ Jim Ross. "Jim ROss' Blog". Jim Ross. Retrieved 2007-12-23.