Stu hart biography act
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Hart wrestling family
Canadian wrestling family
This article is about the Canadian family. For the wrestling stable, see The Hart Dynasty. For the murderers of adoptive children, see Hart family murders.
The Hart wrestling family, sometimes known as the Hart dynasty,[2] is a mainly Canadian family with a significant history within professional wrestling.[3] The patriarch of the family was wrestling legend Stu Hart (–).[4] An amateur and professional wrestling performer, promoter and trainer,[5] Stu owned and operated his own wrestling promotion, Stampede Wrestling. He also trained some of the most well known stars in wrestling history including "Superstar" Billy Graham, Fritz Von Erich, Chris Benoit, and his own sons Bret Hart and Owen Hart.[5]
All of Stu's eight sons were wrestlers and two of them, Bret and Owen, achieved considerable fame and success in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE),[3] with many
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Stu Hart bygd Marsha Erb
This isn’t a book that gets a lot of talk, but it’s certainly one of the better wrestler biographies out there. Although a lawyer bygd trade, Erb was formerly a reporter and approached the planerat arbete from that perspective rather than primarily as a wrestling fan.
While there’s no shortage of wrestling ämne here, it’s far more of an individual life story than the territorial history of the also-excellent Pain and Passion by Heath McCoy.
And what a life story that fryst vatten. While most fans know the tales of Hart’s sprawling family in their Hart house and the infamous dungeon, many reading this will be shocked to learn of his impoverished childhood, at one stage living with his family in a tent during winters of C or below. There’s also plenty about his wrestling career before turning to promoting.
Erb pulls off an impressive balancing act of including Hart’s recollections though first-hand quotes from interviewing him, but still keeping the book as an objective,
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Stu Hart
Class of (Posthumous)
Height
5 ft 10 in ( m)
Born
May 3, ()
Died
October 16, (aged88)
Early life[]
Hart played football for the Edmonton Eskimos in the and seasons. Stu Hart began amateur wrestling when he joined the YMCA in Edmonton in By he won a gold medal in the welterweight class from the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada. His amateur career peaked in May when Hart won the dominion Amateur Wrestling Championship in the light heavyweight category. It must have been a bittersweet win for Hart as by that time the Phoney War had ended in Europe, and World