The Kat Explained

The Kat
Birth Name:Stacy Lee Carter
Birth Date:September 29, 1970
Birth Place:West Memphis, Arkansas, U.S.
Names:The Kat
Lovely Stacy
Miss Kitty
Stacy
Stacy Carter
Height:5 ft 3 in
Weight:106 lb
Trainer:Al Snow[1]
Ivory
Triple H
Terry Golden
Debut:1998
Retired:2011
Spouse:
    Family:Brian Lawler (ex-stepson)

    Stacy Lee Carter (born September 29, 1970) is an American retired professional wrestling valet and professional wrestler. She is best known for her tenure in the World Wrestling Federation from August 1999 to February 2001 under the ring names Miss Kitty and The Kat, where she held the WWF Women's Championship once.

    Professional wrestling career

    Early career (1998–1999)

    Carter was introduced to professional wrestling by her then-partner, Jerry Lawler. She made her wrestling debut on April 18, 1998 in Jonesboro, Arkansas for Power Pro Wrestling.

    World Wrestling Federation (1999–2001)

    Alliance with Chyna; Women's Champion (1999–2000)

    Carter first appeared on World Wrestling Federation (WWF)'s flagship program, Raw is War, on August 23, 1999. She debuted as Miss Kitty, an assistant to Debra, appointed to her by Jeff Jarrett, whom Debra managed.[2] The partnership ended when Jarrett left the company after losing the Intercontinental Championship to Chyna at No Mercy.[2] [3] Because Jarrett was departing the company after the match, Miss Kitty began managing Chyna,[3] and then started dressing in 'Chyna-like' clothing and wearing a black wig.[2]

    At Armageddon in December 1999, Miss Kitty won her only WWF Women's Championship in a Four Corners Evening Gown Pool match by defeating then-champion Ivory, Jacqueline, and Barbara "BB" Bush by stripping them of their gowns. The special guest referees were The Fabulous Moolah and Mae Young.[4] After the match, Miss Kitty stripped out of her dress in celebration and quickly flashed the crowd her breasts. The following evening, she announced before successfully defending her title in a thong in a Chocolate Pudding Match against Tori that she was changing her name to The Kat. The Kat then appeared at the Royal Rumble in the 'Miss Royal Rumble Swimsuit Contest', where she appeared in a bikini made out of bubble wrap.[5] The contest, however, was won by Mae Young.[5] She lost the Championship on the January 31 edition of Raw to Hervina in a Lumberjill Snowbunny match, a match that took place in a snow filled pool surrounded by female wrestlers whose purpose was to keep The Kat and Hervina from leaving the pool.[6]

    Rivalry with Terri Runnels (2000)

    The Kat then began an on-screen rivalry with Terri Runnels, although neither were fully trained wrestlers. At WrestleMania 2000, Runnels (accompanied by The Fabulous Moolah) defeated The Kat (with Mae Young) in a catfight. Val Venis was the special guest referee, but he was distracted during the match when Young kissed him, which allowed Moolah to pull The Kat out of the ring. When Venis saw her out of the ring, he declared Runnels the winner.[7] Post-match, The Kat attacked Runnels by stripping off her pants to expose her thong.[7] The feud continued, and the duo had an arm wrestling match at Insurrextion.[8] The Kat was victorious, but after the match, Runnels pulled The Kat's top off, exposing her breasts,[8] which The Kat allowed.[8] The two women continued to feud throughout the summer, often in mixed tag matches. In June 2000, The Kat attempted to regain the Women's Championship by entering in the first-ever women's battle royal to become the #1 contender, which also featured the likes of Lita, Jacqueline and Ivory, but was eliminated by her rival Terri. The feud resurfaced in a 'Thong Stink Face' match at SummerSlam, which The Kat won by performing a stinkface on Runnels.[9] [10] She would at times team up with Jerry Lawler, Rikishi and Al Snow in mix tag matches against Terri with Dean Malenko and Perry Saturn.

    Rivalry with Right to Censor (2001)

    In early 2001, The Kat began a new storyline with a stable called "Right to Censor", a group of wrestlers purportedly wanting to rein in the vulgarity of the "Attitude Era," during which she demanded equal time for the "right for nudity".[11] During this time, The Kat also began competing in WWF's various developmental territories against the likes of Victoria, Molly Holly, Jasmine St. Claire and Cynthia Lynch. At No Way Out, Jerry Lawler, who was representing The Kat, lost a match to Steven Richards, the head of the stable, after The Kat mistakenly hit Lawler with the Women's Championship belt. As a result of Lawler losing the match, she was forced to join the stable.

    On February 27, 2001, The Kat was abruptly released from the WWF in the middle of the Right to Censor storyline.[12] As a result, her husband Jerry Lawler also quit the company.[13] [14] According to Lawler, The Kat was released from the WWF because Vince McMahon decided to end the angle with the Right to Censor.[15] Other insiders cite The Kat's negative backstage attitude as the reason for her dismissal.[16] In 2021, Professional wrestling commentator and WWE Hall of Famer Jim Ross stated that the reason for The Kat's departure from the WWF was "based on what the writers said, she was too hard to work with. So, they caught Vince on a day when he was not in a really great mood, apparently. I got called in Vince‘s office, 'I want her gone.' 'What?' 'I want her gone today.'" So, you know, that’s where your job becomes very challenging and Vince McMahon’s word was final”.[17]

    Late career (2001, 2010-2011, 2015)

    After Carter and Lawler left the World Wrestling Federation, they worked various independent wrestling events.[12] She retired from wrestling in 2001. They also signed with Tri-Star Productions and worked at Memphis Championship Wrestling.[12] Carter made her debut for Tri-State Wrestling Alliance (TWA) on June 5, 2010 at the TWA Homecoming event in Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania, where she teamed up with Demolition (Ax and Smash) in a winning effort defeating Sheeta and The Nigerian Nightmares (Maifu and Saifu) in a 6-person mixed-tag team match. Carter made her debut for Stranglehold Wrestling (SHW) on August 26, 2010 at the Stranglehold Devils Playground Tour in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada, where she competed in an Arm-Wrestling match against Pissed off Pete in a no-contest. Later that event, Carter accompied Sinn Bohdi to the ring where he competed against George Terzis. Her last match was teaming with Sinn Bohdi defeating Massive Damage and Sexy Samantha at Future Stars of Wrestling (FSW) in Las, Vegas on April 18, 2011.

    In 2015, Carter was featured as a guest in WWE's documentary titled Good To Be The King: The Jerry Lawler Story, which featured her ex-husband Jerry Lawler.[18] In the same year, she also appeared in an episode of The WWE List, a digital series that aired on WWE.com.[19]

    Personal life

    Carter's family was originally from West Memphis, Arkansas.[20] After her parents divorced, Carter's mother moved to Memphis, Tennessee.[20] Stacy Carter, however, as well as her younger brother and sister, continued to live with their father, who worked as a policeman, in Arkansas.[20] Carter moved to Memphis to live with her mother, Cathy, after graduating from high school.[20]

    Carter met Jerry Lawler, her future husband, at a charity softball game at Treadwell High School in Memphis on July 23, 1989, two months before her nineteenth birthday.[20] [21] She was attending the game with her mother, who was dating one of the players on the team for which Lawler also played.[20] Lawler, however, was married at the time, and he claims that when he initially met Carter, he considered an affair.[20] After Lawler separated from his wife, Carter moved in with him.[20] When Carter first met Lawler, she was working as a bank teller.[20] Lawler later helped her get a job at a photography studio, and she also opened and ran her own hair salon.[20] Carter was less than sixteen months older than Lawler's son Brian.

    Lawler and Carter married in September 2000.[22] While they were together, former professional wrestler Missy Hyatt offered Carter $10,000 to pose nude on her website, but Carter refused the offer.[23] Carter decided to leave Lawler in July 2001, and they separated not long after.[24] She left professional wrestling upon separating from Jerry Lawler. She worked in the field of real estate in Lee County, Florida for Century 21 Real Estate for some time after the divorce.[25]

    Carter and professional wrestler Nick Cvjetkovich announced their engagement on June 12, 2010.[26] Cvjetkovich and Carter were married in St. Petersburg Florida July 29, 2010 on the beach in front of many family and friends. Stevan Cvjetkovich (Nicholas' younger brother) and Edge both stood as best men. Jimmy Hart gave Carter away in the ceremony.[27] They divorced in 2013.

    Filmography

    Video games

    Year Title Notes
    2000 WWF No Mercy Video game debut [28]
    [29]

    Championships and accomplishments

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: The Ross Report #141 Bill Goldberg & The Kat . YouTube . Grilling JR . 30 July 2023.
    2. Jerry Lawler, It's Good to Be the King ... Sometimes, p. 337.
    3. Web site: Tag match highlights No Mercy. https://archive.today/20120714030011/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingArchive/oct18_nomercy.html. usurped. July 14, 2012. John Powell. SLAM! Wrestling. July 13, 2008. October 18, 1999.
    4. Web site: Steph betrays Vince at Armageddon. John Powell. SLAM! Wrestling. July 13, 2008. December 13, 1999. June 30, 2012. https://archive.today/20120630014803/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingPPV/dec13_armageddon.html. usurped.
    5. Lawler, p. 350.
    6. Web site: Hervina's Title Reign . WWE.com . May 9, 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090420160630/http://www.wwe.com/inside/titlehistory/women/304454132121112213 . April 20, 2009 .
    7. Web site: WrestleMania 2000 a flop Pre-show better than WWF's biggest event. April 3, 2000. Powell. John. January 27, 2013. Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. June 30, 2012. https://archive.today/20120630014803/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingPPV/apr3_wrestlemania.html. usurped.
    8. Lawler, p. 339.
    9. Web site: SummerSlam 2000 results. WWE. January 27, 2013. December 1, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111201201705/http://www.wwe.com/shows/summerslam/2000/results. live.
    10. Web site: Stunts highlight SummerSlam. https://archive.today/20120715121001/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingPPV/aug28_summerslam.html. usurped. July 15, 2012. John Powell. SLAM! Wrestling. July 13, 2008. August 28, 2000.
    11. Web site: The Dirty Dozen: Jerry Lawler. Playboy.com. March 19, 2008. Antonia Simigis. https://web.archive.org/web/20090219003320/http://playboy.com/sex/d12/jerrylawler/index.html. February 19, 2009.
    12. News: Landing on her feet . Tim Towe . Wrestling Digest . October 8, 2007 . February 2002 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071015054527/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCO/is_5_3/ai_81826835 . October 15, 2007 . dead .
    13. Web site: WWF releases The Kat, loses Lawler. https://archive.today/20120718085327/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingBiosL/lawler_01feb28-can.html. usurped. July 18, 2012. SLAM! Sports. October 9, 2007. February 28, 2001.
    14. Lawler, p. 403.
    15. Lawler, p. 405.
    16. R. D. Reynolds and Blade Braxton. The WrestleCrap Book of Lists! (140)
    17. Web site: Jim Ross Recalls Vince McMahon Firing a Former WWE Women's Champion in a Bizarre Fashion. February 25, 2021. August 12, 2021. February 25, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210225200220/https://www.essentiallysports.com/wwe-news-jim-ross-recalls-vince-mcmahon-firing-a-former-wwe-womens-champion-in-a-bizarre-fashion/. live.
    18. Web site: Good To Be The King: The Jerry Lawler story . WWE.com . March 15, 2022.
    19. Web site: Foxiest Features. WWE.com . March 15, 2022.
    20. Lawler, p. 264.
    21. Lawler, p. 333.
    22. Web site: SLAM Bio: Jerry Lawler. SLAM! Sports. October 8, 2007. February 5, 2005. July 14, 2012. https://archive.today/20120714192415/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/Bios/lawler.html. usurped.
    23. Lawler, p. 305.
    24. Lawler, p. 415.
    25. Lawler, p. 448.
    26. Web site: Two former WWE personalities announce their engagement. June 13, 2010. Gerweck. Steve. June 13, 2010. WrestleView. https://web.archive.org/web/20100616141438/http://www.wrestleview.com/viewnews.php?id=1276403505. June 16, 2010.
    27. Web site: Two former WWE personalities announce their engagement. June 13, 2010. Gerweck. Steve. June 13, 2010. WrestleView. June 16, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100616141438/http://www.wrestleview.com/viewnews.php?id=1276403505. live.
    28. Web site: 10 Playable Characters You Totally Forgot Were In WWE No Mercy. DJELJOSEVIC. Danny. September 18, 2020. The Sportster.
    29. Web site: WWF Smackdown 2!: Know Your Role. IGN. November 14, 2000 . May 20, 2012.