Terri Runnels Explained

Terri Runnels
Birthname:Terri Lynne Boatright
Birth Date:October 5, 1966
Birth Place:Live Oak, Florida, U.S.
Spouse:
    Children:1
    Names:Alexandra York[1]
    Marlena
    Terri Runnels
    Terri
    Height:5 ft 0 in
    Billed:Gainesville, Florida
    Debut:1990
    Retired:April 1, 2004

    Terri Lynne Boatright Runnels[2] [3] (born October 5, 1966) is an American retired professional wrestling manager, television host, and part-time professional wrestler. Runnels began her professional wrestling career in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) as Miss Alexandra York, manager of the York Foundation. She later joined the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), later renamed World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), where she worked for two years as Marlena, and then under her real name.

    In the early years of her career with the WWF, she managed her (then) real-life husband Dustin Runnels (known on-screen as Goldust) and was a member of the Pretty Mean Sisters alliance. She also managed both Hardy Boyz and Edge & Christian following the Terri Invitational Tournament in 1999. Subsequently, she had an on-screen rivalry with The Kat, managed The Radicalz stable, and worked as a host and interviewer. During her time with the World Wrestling Federation (or WWE), she briefly held the Hardcore Championship, her only championship during her career. After leaving the wrestling business, Runnels became involved in philanthropic work.

    Professional wrestling career

    World Championship Wrestling (1988–1991)

    See main article: The York Foundation. Runnels was originally a make-up artist for CNN from 1985 to 1991, where she worked on Larry King's make-up.[3] On the weekends, she did makeup for the wrestlers of Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP).[4] When the company was purchased by Ted Turner in 1988 and renamed World Championship Wrestling (WCW), she moved to Atlanta and continued doing make-up for some of the wrestlers.[3] Booker Ole Anderson eventually asked her to become part of the roster as a manager.[3] Runnels debuted in 1990 as Alexandra York, a laptop-carrying accountant who led an alliance known as the York Foundation, a group of wrestlers with finance-themed gimmicks.[3] The York character was created over a lunch with Tony Schiavone, one of WCW's announcers.[4] She worked at WCW for two years.[3]

    World Wrestling Federation / World Wrestling Entertainment (1996-2004)

    Marlena gimmick and managing Goldust (1996–1998)

    Runnels debuted in the World Wrestling Federation at the Royal Rumble in 1996 as Marlena, a character modeled after Marlene Dietrich.[3] [4] She debuted as a coolly unconcerned and indifferent television director-like manager, often sitting at ringside in her director's chair. With her cigar-smoking, seductive, nonchalant and mysterious gimmick, she acted as the manager of her (then) real-life husband Dustin, who was wrestling under the gimmick of Goldust.[3] Complementing Goldust, the Marlena character too was representative of all things gold (sporting gold dresses, seated in a gold director's chair, carrying a gold purse sometimes consisting of actual gold dust used to throw in the eyes of Goldust's opponents). Often, Marlena took to lasciviously making out with Goldust when she wasn't coaching and encouraging him to do the same with his fellow opponents. The cigar-smoking aspect of the character came about because Runnels enjoyed smoking them in real life.[4] The risque characters helped bring about The Attitude Era of the late-1990s and the Diva division.[3] During a feud between Goldust and Triple H over the Intercontinental Championship, on February 16, 1997, at, Marlena was choked by Chyna, who debuted as a plant from a ringside seat and later became the bodyguard for Triple H.[5] Later, Brian Pillman feuded with Goldust over Marlena.[6] As part of the angle, Pillman won Marlena in a match and sent Goldust a picture of her handcuffed in a bed.[7] Pillman, however, died in the middle of the storyline.[6] Originally, the plan was to have the rivalry culminate in an on-air wedding where Marlena would leave Goldust for Pillman. After the Marlena-Goldust alliance dissolved, Goldust revealed Luna Vachon as his new manager.[6]

    Pretty Mean Sisters (1998–1999)

    See main article: Pretty Mean Sisters. Runnels later re-emerged in 1998, under her real name, as the on-screen girlfriend of Val Venis.[6] When Runnels claimed to be pregnant with Venis' baby, he dumped her.[6] [8] She later joined forces with Jacqueline Moore, who had just ended her alliance with Marc Mero, to form the Pretty Mean Sisters (P.M.S.).[8] They later formed an alliance with D'Lo Brown and Mark Henry, accompanying them to the ring for a match against Venis and The Godfather in December at .[9] In January, Runnels claimed to have suffered a miscarriage after she was knocked off the ring apron by Brown.[10] [8] Weeks later, Brown discovered that Runnels had never been pregnant.[11] P.M.S. gained a "love slave" named Meat in May,[12] whom Runnels controlled using sex.[13] As a part of the storyline, P.M.S. used Meat for his body, forcing him to have sex with them.[12] The alliance, however, broke up by July, when Jacqueline Moore became frustrated with Runnels' infatuation with Meat.[11]

    Various storylines (1999–2001)

    See also: The Radicalz. In late 1999, Runnels arranged the Terri Invitational Tournament, a best-of-five series, between Edge and Christian and The Hardy Boyz, with the winner receiving her managerial services and the sum of $100,000.[14] The Hardy Boyz won the tournament, which culminated in a ladder match at No Mercy (with the prize money suspended above the ring in a bag).[15] Runnels spent the next few months as their manager, notably getting involved in a Steel Cage match between Jeff Hardy and Al Snow on an episode of RAW. She continued interfering in matches until she was injured when Bubba Ray Dudley powerbombed her through a table.[10] [11] She returned on February 27 at No Way Out and cost the Hardy Boyz a match.[16] She then became the manager of Edge and Christian, and the storyline originally called for her to come between the duo, resulting in them becoming singles wrestlers with Runnels managing Christian.[17] The storyline, however, was rewritten, and on an episode of SmackDown!, Edge and Christian—who would now continue wrestling as a tag team—revealed they no longer wanted Runnels's services.[17] She, therefore, slapped Edge, who responded by spearing her.[17]

    Runnels began a rivalry with The Kat, and at WrestleMania 2000, Runnels (accompanied by The Fabulous Moolah) defeated The Kat (with Mae Young) in a catfight.[18] Val Venis was the Special Guest Referee, but was distracted when Young kissed him in response to Venis making out with both Runnels and The Kat.[18] This distraction allowed Moolah to pull The Kat out of the ring, and when Venis saw her out of the ring, he declared Runnels the winner.[18] Post-match, The Kat attacked Runnels by stripping her black body suit off to expose her nude colored thong.[18] The rivalry continued in an arm wrestling match at Insurrextion.[19] They later participated in a "Stink Face match" at SummerSlam, which The Kat won by first performing the move on Runnels.[20] [21]

    On June 8, 2000, she competed in the first ever women's battle royal to determine the #1 contender to the WWF Women's Championship, but was eliminated by Lita. Runnels subsequently became the onscreen girlfriend and manager of Perry Saturn, who was a member of The Radicalz alliance.[22] She accompanied Saturn to the ring at Fully Loaded in July 2000, where Saturn defeated Eddie Guerrero for the European Championship.[23] Saturn, Runnels, and Radicalz member Dean Malenko also had a series of matches with Team Xtreme (The Hardy Boyz and Lita).[24] The on-screen partnership lasted until Saturn, who had hit his head during a match, opted to continue seeing "Moppy" (a mop he believed was alive) instead of Runnels.[25] As a result, she then became the manager of Raven, a member of The Alliance, who stole Saturn's mop and fed it into a woodchipper.[22]

    WWE host and departure (2001–2004)

    In late 2001, Terri replaced Trish Stratus as the host of the WWF recap program Excess.[3] She briefly feuded with Stratus, resulting in a wet T-shirt contest between the two on Raw.[26] During this time, she also became the backstage interviewer on Raw and began to wrestle occasionally against the likes of Molly Holly, Victoria and Stratus. She also became the subject of Kane's affections and they regularly flirted during backstage segments.[27] On May 27, 2002, she briefly held the perpetually contested Hardcore Championship when she pinned Steven Richards, though he immediately pinned her to regain the title.[28] On the August 19 episode of "RAW", Eric Bischoff placed her a battle royal featuring former Hardcore champions such as Tommy Dreamer, Bradshaw and Jeff Hardy.[29] She eliminated herself immediately when the match began. On the September 2 edition of "RAW" she defeated Stacy Keibler in a "Lingerie pillow fight", but was hit with a clock by Keibler and humiliated after the match, thus igniting a brief feud between the two. Her final match was a losing effort alongside the returning Lita against divas Molly Holly and Gail Kim on the November 10 edition of Raw.[29]

    After eight years with the company, in March 2004, Runnels was released from WWE prior to a massive firing spree.[3] [10] In an April 2015 interview with Vince Russo, Runnels stated that she was flown up on April 1, 2004, to the WWE offices for a meeting with WWE executives Kevin Dunn and John Laurinaitis where she was told that they were parting ways with her; the reason she was told that she was flown up was because the WWE respected her.[30] After leaving the company, Runnels spent time traveling the world.[3]

    Return to WWE (2018)

    On January 22, 2018, in the Raw 25 Years special episode, Runnels was honored as part of a segment involving women considered legends that contributed to the company's success, including Maryse, Kelly Kelly, Lilian Garcia, Michelle McCool, Maria Kanellis and the Hall of Famers Torrie Wilson, the Bella Twins, Jacqueline and Trish Stratus.[31] In 2021, Runnels was listed by WWE.com as one of the women who made an impact outside the ring.[32]

    Other Media

    During her tenure in the WWF, Runnels appeared on the show The Weakest Link in 2002 as part of a charity show where all the contestants were WWF personalities.[33] On the show, she played for the Ronald McDonald House charity, which houses parents of hospitalized children for reduced or no cost.[33] Runnels was the fourth contestant voted out of the game.

    Video Games

    YearTitleRoleNotes
    1999WWF WrestleMania 2000 (video game)Terri
    2000WWF No Mercy (video game)
    2003WWE Raw 2

    Video Releases

    YearTitleRoleNotes
    1996Terminators '96Marlena
    1997Best of Raw 3
    Best of Raw 4
    Best of Raw 6
    Best of Raw 7
    1998Best of Raw 8
    2000Terri
    Most Memorable Matches of 1999
    2001Divas in Hedonism
    2013Marlena

    Television

    YearTitleRoleNotes
    1991WCW WorldwideAlexandra York1 Episode
    WCW Saturday Night2 Episodes
    1996Wrestlemania XIIMarlenaTV Special
    1996 - 1997WWF Superstars4 Episodes
    1996 - 2018WWE RawTerri / Marlena / Terri Runnels / Self206 Episodes
    1997WWF on MSG NetworkMarlena1 Episode
    WWF Shotgun Saturday Night4 Episodes
    WWF Friday Night's Main Event1 Episode
    1998 - 2003WWE Sunday Night HeatTerri / Terri Runnels70 Episodes
    1999WrestleMania XVTerriTV Special
    1999 - 2001WWE Smackdown!62 Episodes
    2000FreedomSandi Mueller1 Episode
    2000 - 2001WWE JakkedTerri12 Episodes
    2001WWE Metal1 Episode
    2002SummerslamTV Special

    Personal life

    Boatright grew up in Florida.[4] She grew up as a Southern Baptist, but later became non-denominational.[3] Runnels has worked with various charities, including the Make-a-Wish Foundation, Big Brothers Big Sisters of America, Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Children's Miracle Network, and Hermie & Elliott Sadler Foundation and Fit Kids Marathon.[3]

    She dated Brian Pillman in 1990 while they were both in WCW.[4] In 1993, she married Dustin Runnels, whom she met while they were both working for WCW, taking his last name as her own.[3] [4] They have a daughter, Dakota, who was born in 1994.[3] [4] Dustin Runnels's strained relationship with his father Dusty Rhodes caused problems in their marriage, and Terri alleges that Dusty spread rumors about her that included infidelity and gold-digging.[4] The couple divorced in 1999 after six years of marriage.[3] Years after the divorce, they were able to have a "better relationship".[3] [34] In 2003, she began a relationship with Tyree Clowe, a US soldier 15 years her junior. The couple remained together for over five years.

    Terri began dating former professional wrestler New Jack in 2009. Jack professed his love for her in an interview with host Fat Man After Dark on the Future Endeavors wrestling radio show and described some of the pitfalls, even today, of a mixed-race relationship.[35] As of July 2011, the couple was no longer together.[36]

    In August 2011, a Florida judge ordered Jack to stop selling nude and bloody photographs of Runnels. Runnels filed suit, accusing Jack of making libelous comments about her and requested that a court ban him from distributing sexually-explicit photographs of her. Jack said that he took the photos, that they belonged to him and that he should be free to pass them on to whoever he pleases. A judge in Sanford, Florida, temporarily banned Jack from distributing photographs of Runnels ahead of a hearing.[37]

    On May 29, 2019, Runnels was arrested in Hillsborough County, Florida, and charged with felony possession of a firearm after bringing a loaded gun into the Tampa International Airport.[38] She was later released on $2,000 bond and posted a video to her Twitter page, explaining her side of the incident.[39] In June 2019, the charges against Runnels were dropped.[40]

    Championships and accomplishments

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Terri Runnels. WWE.com. WWE. September 25, 2017.
    2. News: Varsallone . Jim . September 24, 2008 . Terri overcame assault, robbery to star in WCW, WWE . The Miami Herald. A transcript of the article can be found at http://www.lethalwow.com/wrestlingnews/2008/09/new-terri-runnels-miami-herald-articlefeatureassault-robbery/
    3. Web site: Wrestling diva a woman for all seasons . Mooneyham, Mike . . December 25, 2008 . November 30, 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081204105815/http://www.charleston.net/news/2008/nov/30/wrestling_diva_woman_all_seasons/ . December 4, 2008 .
    4. Web site: Terri Runnels reveals brain, not body, in shoot DVD. https://archive.today/20121208142132/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/Reviews/2008/11/10/7368106.html. usurped. December 8, 2012. Dean Johnson, Steven. SLAM! Wrestling. December 26, 2008. November 16, 2008.
    5. Book: If They Only Knew. Laurer, Joanie. ReaganBooks. 2001. 0-06-109895-7. 259, 269.
    6. Web site: Goldust bio. https://archive.today/20120720222246/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/Bios/goldust.html. usurped. July 20, 2012. SLAM! Wrestling. Milner, John M. and Richard Kamchen. December 26, 2008. June 4, 2006.
    7. Book: Oppliger, Patrice. Patrice Oppliger. Wrestling and hypermasculinity. 2004. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Jefferson, North Carolina. 103. 9780786481361.
    8. Web site: PMS's profile. Online World of Wrestling. August 29, 2008. December 30, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20091230102325/http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/profiles/p/pms.html. dead.
    9. Web site: Foley screwed again. https://archive.today/20120629143630/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingArchive/dec14_rockbottom.html. usurped. June 29, 2012. Powell, John. SLAM! Wrestling. January 5, 2009. December 14, 1998.
    10. Web site: Q&A with Terri Runnels. Eck, Kevin. The Baltimore Sun. January 5, 2009. July 9, 2008.
    11. Web site: Terri Runnels' profile. Online World of Wrestling. January 3, 2009.
    12. Book: WrestleCrap: The Very Worst of Pro Wrestling. Reynolds, R. D. and Randy Baer. ECW Press. 2003. 1-55022-584-7. 222.
    13. Book: Oppliger, Patrice. Patrice Oppliger. Wrestling and hypermasculinity. 2004. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Jefferson, North Carolina. 101. 9780786481361.
    14. Web site: Flying to the top. https://web.archive.org/web/20060319001125/http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCO/is_4_3/ai_80302525/pg_2. dead. March 19, 2006. Varsallone, Jim. Wrestling Digest. December 22, 2008. December 2001.
    15. Book: The Hardy Boyz: Pro Wrestlers Matt and Jeff Hardy. Peterson Kaelberer, Angie. Capstone Press. 2003. 0-7368-2142-2. 23–24.
    16. Web site: No Way Out for Cactus Jack? Triple H ends Foley's career?. https://archive.today/20120713175653/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingPPV/nowayout2000.html. usurped. July 13, 2012. Powell, John. SLAM! Wrestling. January 5, 2009. February 28, 2000.
    17. Book: Adam Copeland on Edge. Copeland, Adam. 146. 0-7434-8347-2. 2004. World Wrestling Entertainment.
    18. Web site: Kat vs. Terri at WrestleMania 2000. World Wrestling Entertainment. May 9, 2007. January 28, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100128072705/http://www.wwe.com/content/media/video/specialty_clips/wrestlemania_diva_matches/wm2000terrikat. dead.
    19. Book: Jerry Lawler. It's Good to Be the King...Sometimes. 2002. 339. WWE Books. 978-0-7434-5768-2. Jerry Lawler.
    20. Web site: SummerSlam 2000 results . . May 9, 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070621022644/http://www.wwe.com/shows/summerslam/history/2000/results/ . June 21, 2007 .
    21. Web site: Stunts highlight SummerSlam. John Powell. SLAM! Wrestling. July 13, 2008. August 28, 2000. July 15, 2012. https://archive.today/20120715121001/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingPPV/aug28_summerslam.html. usurped.
    22. Web site: Raven's bio. https://archive.today/20120629212107/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/Bios/raven.html. usurped. June 29, 2012. SLAM! Wrestling. Milner, John M.. January 5, 2009. May 31, 2005.
    23. Web site: A bloody good PPV; WWF stars bleed for the company at Fully Loaded. https://archive.today/20120714162807/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingPPV/jul24_fullyloaded.html. usurped. July 14, 2012. SLAM! Wrestling. Powell, John. January 5, 2009. July 24, 2005.
    24. Book: Lita: A Less Traveled R.O.A.D.--The Reality of Amy Dumas. Dumas, Amy. Simon and Schuster. 2004. 0-7434-7399-X. 221–223.
    25. Web site: Perry Saturn's profile. Online World of Wrestling. January 5, 2009. July 27, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120727062111/http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/profiles/p/perry-saturn.html. dead.
    26. News: McAvennie, Michael. WWE The Yearbook: 2003 Edition. Pocket Books. 2003. 18–20.
    27. Web site: The Divas' Favorite Demon: The twisted, romantic history of Kane. Benigno, Anthony. WWE.com. June 12, 2012.
    28. News: McAvennie, Michael. WWE The Yearbook: 2003 Edition. Pocket Books. 2003. 156.
    29. Web site: Terri Runnels. Internet Wrestling Database. January 15, 2021.
    30. Web site: Vince Russo Brand - Interview with Terri Runnels - Apr 23 2015. vincerussobrand.com. April 23, 2015.
    31. Web site: WWE honors female WWE Legends: Raw 25, Jan. 22, 2018. WWE. January 22, 2018.
    32. Web site: WWE Top 50 Female Superstars: WWE releases the list of all time top 50 Greatest female superstars. Gupta, Rohit. Insider Sport. June 1, 2021. April 2, 2021.
    33. WWF Superstars Edition #2. The Weakest Link. Weakest Link (US game show). March 10, 2002. 2. 28.
    34. Web site: Terri still having a blast. https://archive.today/20130101041311/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingBiosR/runnelsterri_01nov07-sun.html. usurped. January 1, 2013. Leroux, Yves. SLAM! Wrestling. November 7, 2001. January 6, 2009.
    35. Web site: Over The Limit - Review / Results & NewJack. May 27, 2011. Blogtalkradio.com. May 23, 2011. May 28, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110528170745/http://www.blogtalkradio.com/future_endeavors/2011/05/23/over-the-limit--review-results-new-jack. dead.
    36. Web site: Former WWE Diva Terri Runnels Steamed Over Vicious Allegations. July 15, 2011. hackd.org. July 13, 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110720134309/http://wwe-news.hackd.org/39407-a-Former-WWE-Diva-Terri-Runnels-Steamed-Over-Vicious-Allegations.html. July 20, 2011.
    37. Web site: Ex-wrestling couple fighting over photos. August 17, 2011. hackd.org. August 17, 2011.
    38. Web site: Ex-WWE Superstar Terri Runnels Charged with Carrying Concealed Weapon at Airport. BleacherReport.com. May 29, 2019. May 29, 2019.
    39. Web site: Terri Runnels Comments On Concealed Weapon Arrest (Video). WrestlingInc.com. May 29, 2019. May 29, 2019.
    40. Web site: Terri Runnels Escapes Jail Time After Being Arrested for Bringing a Loaded Gun to Tampa Airport. comicbook.com. June 24, 2019.
    41. Web site: WWE Hardcore Championship history. September 29, 2009. World Wrestling Entertainment.
    42. Web site: And the winner is.... June 23, 2018. WWE.