Killer Kowalski Death October 13, 1926–August 30, 2008)

Killer Kowalski demonstrating one of his holds
on his nephew in 1989.
Walter (Killer) Kowalski, one of professional
wrestling’s biggest stars and most hated
villains when wrestlers offered a nightly menu
of mayhem in the early years of television, died
August 30, 2008 in Everett, Mass. He was 81.
Kowalski’s death was announced by his wife,
Theresa, who said he had been hospitalized since
a heart attack in early August.
At 6 feet
7 inches and 275 pounds or so, Kowalski was a
formidable figure who delighted in applying his
claw hold, a thumb squeeze to an opponent’s
solar plexus, when he was not leaping from the
top strand of the ropes and descending on his
foe’s chest.
Emerging as a featured
performer in the early 1950s, he became a TV
celebrity with wrestlers like Antonino Rocca,
Lou Thesz, Gorgeous George, Haystacks Calhoun
and Nature Boy Buddy Rogers.
Kowalski
wrestled on the pro circuits for some 30 years
and appeared in more than 6,000 matches, by his
count. Early in his career, he called himself
Tarzan Kowalski. But, as he often related it,
one particular match, at Montreal in the early
1950s, literally made his name.
“I was
leaping off the rope, and Yukon Eric, who had a
cauliflower ear, moved at the last second,”
Kowalski told The Chicago Tribune in 1989. “I
thought I missed, but all of a sudden, something
went rolling across the ring. It was his ear.”
Yukon Eric was taken to a hospital, and the
promoter asked Kowalski to visit him and
apologize for severing his ear. Reporters were
listening to their chat from a corridor.
“There was this 6-foot-5, 280-pound guy, his
head wrapped like a mummy, dwarfing his bed,”
Kowalski said. “I looked at him and grinned. He
grinned back. I laughed, and he laughed back.
Then I laughed harder and left.
“The
next day the headlines read, ‘Kowalski Visits
Yukon in the Hospital and Laughs.’ And when I
climbed into the ring that night, the crowd
called out, ‘You animal, you killer.’ And the
name stuck.”
Kowalski came to incur the
wrath of the fans. As he told Esquire magazine
in 2007: “Someone once threw a pig’s ear at me.
A woman once came up to me after a match and
said, ‘I’m glad you didn’t get hurt.’ Then she
stabbed me in the back with a knife. After a
while, I got police escorts to and from the
ring.”
Walter Kowalski, his legal name,
was born in Windsor, Ontario. His parents,
Anthony and Marie Spulnik, had emigrated from
Poland. He hoped to become an electrical
engineer, but while he was working out at a
Y.M.C.A., someone who was evidently impressed by
his physique suggested he become a wrestler. He
made his pro debut in the late 1940s.
He
eventually tussled with all the famous names of
wrestling, and in his later years he teamed with
Big John Studd as a tag team called the
Executioners.
“He was a hell of an
attraction,” Thesz told The Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette in 1998. “He had a great body back
then. He was not a sophisticated wrestler, but
every promoter wanted him because he made a lot
of money.”
Kowalski retired in 1977 and
founded Killer Kowalski’s School of Professional
Wrestling in Malden, Mass. His protégés included
the wrestlers Triple H and Chyna. He sold the
school in 2003, and it is now in North Andover,
Mass.
Kowalski married in 2006, his first
marriage. In addition to his wife, of Malden, he
was survived by a brother, Stanley Spulnik.
Beyond the ring, Kowalski displayed a gentle
and even aesthetic side. He became a vegetarian
in the mid-1950s, pursued charitable work for
children with special needs and delighted in
photographing fellow wrestlers. His work was
sometimes displayed at galleries.
“I
wanted to take action pictures,” he told The New
York Times shortly after retiring. “But I went
up to the ring, the fans screamed at me and
threw garbage at me. It was detrimental to my
health. So all I took were posed pictures. I
sign my photographs Walter Kowalski. I used to
be a villain, but now I’m a good guy. I kiss old
women and pat babies. I’ve gone from Killer
Kowalski to a pussycat.”
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