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Johnson, Dwayne The Rock 1972

Contemporary Black Biography | 2001 | | Copyright 2001 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Dwayne The Rock Johnson 1972

Wrestler, actor

Dreamed of NFL Career

Flex Kavana Era

The Peoples Champion

A Multimedia Star

Selected writings

Sources

Dwayne Johnson, better known as The Rock, is the youngest champion in World Wrestling Federation (WWF) history. Johnson is of Samoan and African-American descent, and his exotic looksand impressive physiquehave helped make him one of the top-earning personalities in his field. His 2000 autobiography, The Rock Says.. The Most Electrifying Man in Sports Entertainment, spent five months on the New York Times bestseller list, and the following year, Johnson made his feature-film debut in The Mummy Returns.

Johnson was literally born into the world of professional wrestling. His mother, Ata, was the daughter of Peter High Chief Maivia, a professional wrestler of Samoan descent who wore traditional South Pacific garb in the ring, wrestled barefoot, and intimidated his opponents with his tribal tattoos. Johnsons parents met when Maivia invited a young black wrestler, Rocky Johnson, to stay overnight at his home after a match. A former boxer, The Rocks father was the first African American to win wrestling championships in Georgia and Texas when it was still a regional sport with no nationally recognized stars. Rocky Johnson was a formidable opponent in the ring, but refused to participate in some of the racist antics that occurred during this era of the sport. Other black wrestlers perpetuated stereotypes, bragging about their abilities in exaggerated slang or even eating watermelon for the television cameras. My father wouldnt do that, Johnson wrote in his autobiography, The Rock Says. He was the first black wrestler to insist on being very intelligent in front of the camera.

Dreamed of NFL Career

Johnson was born in 1972 in Hayward, California, but moved several times during his youth because of his fathers career. He attended schools in Hawaii, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania, but was often teased by classmates because of his size and his fathers career. Neither deterred him from an early passion for wrestling. I was fascinated by the business, he recalled in his memoir. I loved everything about it: the violence, the theatricality, the athleticism, the volume. Johnson began weightlifting as a teenager, and by his senior year was a standout football star at his Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, high school. He was even named to USA Todays All-American team during his senior year, and had his choice of college athletic scholarships. He chose the University of Miami, where he played defensive tackle. The team, however, had a reputation for both playing rough and openly deriding their opponents. Once, a notorious brawl at a game against San Diego State cleared the bench, and footage of Johnson tearing across the field after the opponents mascot, a man in a giant Aztec warrior costume, was replayed on news broadcasts around the country that night. The incident led the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) to impose heavy fines on players who leave the bench to participate in a fight.

Johnson hoped for a career in the National Football League (NFL), but injured his back and played poorly during his senior year. He was passed over in the NFL draft that year, but was offered an opportunity with the Canadian Football League (CFL) instead. In 1995, he

At a Glance

Born Dwayne Douglas Johnson, May 2, 1972, in Hayward, CA; son of Rocky Johnson and Ata (Maivia) Johnson; married Dany Garcia (a financial services executive), 1997. Education: University of Miami.

Career: Professional wrestler, actor. Canadian Football Leagues Calgary Stampeders, practice team, 1995; signed with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), 1996, debuted Rocky Maivia, 1996, debuted as The Rock on August 11, 1997; television appearances: DAG, Star Trek: Voyager, That 70s Show; film roles: The Mummy Returns, 2001; The Scorpion King; autobiography, The Rock Says The Most Electrifying Man in Sports Entertainment, 2000.

Addresses: HomeMiami, FL. Office World Wrestling Federation, Inc., 1241 E. Main St., Stamford, CT 06902.

became a practice player for the Calgary Stampeders franchise, and survived for months on a meager salary of $175 a week. At six-feet, four inches and well over 250 pounds, Johnson had a hard time just keeping himself fed on his wages. As he recalled in his autobiography, he often showed up at Stampeder meetings when he knew submarine sandwiches would be served, though the practices players were not required to attend. This abysmal phase of his career came to an end when Stampeders management released him from his contract to make way for a former NFL player.

Flex Kavana Era

Johnson returned to Miami, where his college girlfriend, Dany Garcia, lived, and called his father, who also lived in Florida. He asked his father to begin training him for a career in professional wrestling, to which Rocky Johnson agreed, though not without some trepidation. For the next few months, as Johnson perfected the various locks, flips, and falls that make up professional wrestlings repertoire of moves, he earned money as a personal trainer at a fitness club. With help from a former colleague of his grandfathers, he secured a try out match for the WWF in Corpus Christi, Texas. He was paired against Steve Lombardi, whose ring name was the Brooklyn Brawler, and won the eight-minute bout in a predetermined decision, along with a contract with the WWF. First, however, Johnson was sent to Memphis to compete in the WWFs second-tier system, the United States Wrestling Alliance. He wrestled in promotional matches under the name Flex Kavana, earning $40 a night during the summer of 1996.

In August of that year, Johnson was given another tryout, this time against a well-known wrestlerOwen Hart, whose accidental death in 1999 devastated Johnsonand two weeks later received a phone call summoning him to WWF headquarters and training facilities in Connecticut. Elated, Johnson packed his apartment and drove away within an hour of receiving the news. He made his official WWF debut, as Rocky Maivia, at Madison Square Garden on November 16, 1996 in its Survivor Series, entering the ring as a babyface, or, in wrestling parlance, good guy. But this was a much different era compared to his grandfathers or even his fathers day: the WWF had consolidated all the regional federations and, with live spectacles that attracted sellout crowds and savvy marketing strategies, had made pro wrestling a multimillion-dollar business. Moreover, wrestlers now admitted that their moves are choreographed, and the outcomes predetermined, a fact which had been a taboo topic before the 1980s.

The Peoples Champion

Johnson won his first WWF championship in February of 1997making him, at 24, the youngest ever to win a belt. But his prowess did not make him a favorite with live audiences, who had become far more aggressive during the 1990s and liked to boo Rocky. After a knee injury forced him to take a few months off, Johnson strategized with WWF writers to revamp his ring persona. The Rock debuted on August 11, 1997, in a Jackson, Mississippi event, and was introduced as an ally of the Nation of Domination, a coalition of heel (bad-guy) wrestlers which drew upon Black Panther history for inspiration. Through more plot twists, The Rock regained or lost the WWF title several more times.

The WWF writers devised storylines for The Rock and his foes such as Triple H, a wrestler named Paul Leveque, and pitted them in battles with WWF executives in the McMahon family as well. Johnson, responsible for fleshing out the character further through dialogue, kept a notebook with him in order to jot down ideas and new putdowns as they come to him. As a heel, The Rock arrogantly browbeat his opponents outside of the ring before the cameras. The character of The Rock is perpetually defiant, perpetually talking or glaring, observed Miami Herald writer Peter Whoriskey, and calls himself The Peoples Champion, a moniker that has nearly unlimited spinoffs. There is The Peoples Eyebrow, a trademark gesture in which he lifts one indignant and threatening eyebrow. The Peoples Elbow is a basic flying elbow move that Johnson dresses up by tossing his elbow pad into the crowd, waving his arms dramatically, and bouncing off the ropes a few times before delivering the blow. Johnson himself believes The Rocks over-the-top persona appeals to many: There are a lot of people who live vicariously through the WWF characters-like The Rock and Stone Cold Steve Austin, he told the Miami Herald. What I think some of them want is to be able to put people downlike their bossesand then get away with it.

A Multimedia Star

Johnsons success and name recognition as a pro wrestler rivaled that of Hulk Hogan during the 1980s. He was only the second wrestler in the history of Saturday Night Live to host the showHogan was the firstand even appeared on the cover of Newsweek. He gained further fame with the success of his 2000 autobiography, co-authored with Joe Layden. The Rock Says spent 20 weeks on New York Times bestseller list, and attracted the attention of Hollywood producers. Johnsons performance as the Scorpion King in The Mummy Returns (2001) led to an offer to reprise the role in a prequel, The Scorpion King.

In the summer of 2000, Johnson spoke before the Republican National Convention. He talked about the need for voter registration, noting that fourteen million eligible voters watch The Rock every single week, according to the New York Times, and then introduced Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives and former wrestling coach J. Dennis Hastert to the delegates. At the end of the year, Johnson was named one of People magazines 25 Most Intriguing People of 2000. He asserted, however, that he harbored no desire to enter politics himself, as one former wrestler, Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura, had done. As Johnson told St. Petersburg Times writer Jim Varsallone, his experience at the convention and the contested presidential election later that year made him far more interested in politics, but from a distance. [Q]uite frankly I follow it closely now, but as far as running for any type of office, I think Ill leave that to the politicians, Johnson told the paper. I think Im too outspoken at times, and I might get myself in trouble.

Selected writings

(With Joe Layden) The Rock Says The Most Electrifying Man in Sports Entertainment, Regan Books, 2000.

Sources

Periodicals

Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ), March 23, 2000, p. 26.

Miami Herald, February 13, 2000, p. 1M; March 4, 2000, p. 1B.

New York Times, August 6, 2000.

People, November 15, 1999, p. 84; December 25, 2000, p. 94.

Scholastic Action, March 6, 2000, p. 4.

St. Petersburg Times (St. Petersburg, FL), January 1, 2001, p. 4D.

Wrestling Digest, August 2000, p. 11; December 2000, p. 24.

Online

The Internet Movie Database, http://www.imdb.com.

Carol Brennan

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Brennan, Carol. "Johnson, Dwayne The Rock 1972." Contemporary Black Biography. Gale Research Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 22 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Brennan, Carol. "Johnson, Dwayne The Rock 1972." Contemporary Black Biography. Gale Research Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (December 22, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-2873100036.html

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