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Savage love story will have you wrestling with all the feels

Savage love story will have you wrestling with all the feels

Geoffrey Owen Hughes has more than 30 years of experience dressing up as wrestling superstar Macho Man Randy Savage, attending his first event as the 'Macho Manitoban' at a screening of Wrestlemania 8 at a restaurant in 1992.
A wrestling ring had been set up in the parking lot; while in the ring with a group of other kids, Hughes attempted Macho's trademark vault exit over the top rope to the ground.
'But I had never done it before,' the Macho Manitoban says prior to the start of his fringe show Randy and Elizabeth: A Savage Love Story.
Geoff Hughes plays Macho Man Randy Savage
in Randy and Elizabeth: A Savage Love Story.
Hughes' foot caught on the top rope, but 'the wrestling gods were merciful on that day and I stuck the landing — oh yeah, dig it!,' he says in his pitch-perfect Savage impression.
The 52-year-old Winnipeg-born 'theatre kid' has been a wrestling fan since the 1970s, when his mom left him in front of a cluster of televisions showing a wrestling match while she was shopping at a department store.
'I had glue in my shoes. I was transfixed by my first-ever look at wrestling on TV,' he says.
Hughes' imagination was captured by the archetypes present at the core of professional wrestling — specifically, the way good will always overcome evil.
'We don't get to see good guys prevail in real life. We seek that in culture, and wrestling offered that,' he says.
One would not expect a lot of emotional vulnerability from professional wrestlers, specifically the Macho Man Randy Savage.
So can macho men cry?
Hughes thinks so, attributing the emotional vulnerability of his generation of men to the 1974 Marlo Thomas record Free to Be You and Me, which featured the song It's All Right to Cry.
'Macho Man was once asked by Arsenio Hall if macho men can cry and his answer will bring you to tears,' Hughes says, referring to a 1992 appearance on Hall's late-night talk show.
'On the show, Savage, in his trademark gravelly voice, said, 'It's all right for macho men to show every emotion. I've cried a thousand times, I'm going to cry some more. There's one guarantee in life and that is there are no guarantees. So if you get knocked down, get back up and fight again.''
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
Geoff Hughes plays Macho Man Randy Savage in Randy and Elizabeth: A Savage Love Story.
Tears abounded during the five-year-long World Wrestling Federation storyline involving Randy Savage and his onscreen manager and real-life wife Miss Elizabeth, the focus of Hughes' show.
The WWF saga concluded with a wedding at Summerslam 1991 that saw Miss Elizabeth in a Princess Diana-esque dress and a wedding gift of a cobra from the evil Jake (the Snake) Roberts that ended the night.
But the true heart of Hughes' show is Randy Savage's loss at Wrestlemania 7 in 1991, where, in true Rocky fashion, our hero loses the match but gains the love of his life.
'I love that moment more than any comic book, any song. It was just so romantic and life-affirming. I hope I can make (my audience) feel even a fraction of what I felt when I watched it,' Hughes says.
Randy and Elizabeth: A Savage Love Story runs to July 27 at One88 (Venue 23).
Sonya Ballantyne is a Cree writer-director whose credits include the Chris Jericho-produced wrestling documentary The Death Tour and writing the Acting Good episode Battle in the Bush.
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New U of W project a crash course in classic and contemporary works
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New U of W project a crash course in classic and contemporary works

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Film footage of Winnipeg from the 1960s surfaces online after languishing in storage locker
Film footage of Winnipeg from the 1960s surfaces online after languishing in storage locker

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Film footage of Winnipeg from the 1960s surfaces online after languishing in storage locker

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Fringe Fest play shines spotlight on If Day, when 'Nazis' invaded Winnipeg
Fringe Fest play shines spotlight on If Day, when 'Nazis' invaded Winnipeg

CBC

timea day ago

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Fringe Fest play shines spotlight on If Day, when 'Nazis' invaded Winnipeg

On a cold February day more than 80 years ago, Winnipeggers got a chilling glimpse of what the city would look and feel like if the Nazis won the Second World War. "This was 1942 — the war wasn't going very well," said Gilles Messier, a Winnipeg-based history writer and playwright. "[There was] an idea — 'hey, why don't we pretend to be invaded by Germans, and show people what it's like in Europe, and bring the war home, and the reality of what they're fighting for, what could happen if we lose.'" So on Feb. 19, 1942, during the height of the war, the City of Winnipeg staged "If Day," an elaborate one-day simulated Nazi invasion and occupation of the Manitoba capital. It was intended to boost the sale of war bonds, which funded war efforts at the time. The massive stunt included more than 3,800 volunteers dressed in Nazi uniforms who rolled in tanks right through downtown Winnipeg. It also included a staged firefight, mock German aircraft flying overhead, the "arrest" of prominent politicians to be taken to internment camps, the takeover of newspapers and radio stations, and public burning of books. Messier said that from all accounts, If Day painted an eerie picture for Winnipeggers and North Americans of how European nations were experiencing real-life Nazi takeovers at the time. The staged invasion of Winnipeg is the inspiration for Messier's new play If Day, a fictional and humorous take on the events of Feb. 19, 1942, running at this year's Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival, which features shows from Winnipeg and around the world. "It's a fictionalization, because the actual event went exactly as they planned," Messier said. "But I've written a sort of a farce, a comedy of errors, where it goes horrifically wrong. "But the setup of it, the basic premise, is based on reality." 'A real worldwide success' Messier said the play features a range of characters, and examines how each of them would react to seeing If Day play out, blending both humour and more serious moments. And while the stories in the play are made up, Messier said the production is also a chance for audience members to learn about a real part of Winnipeg's wartime history that many might not know about. "I find it so fun to integrate as much fact into these fictional narratives as possible, where you can't tell where one begins and the other ends," he said. WATCH | A March 2025 report on the day fake Nazis 'invaded' Winnipeg: That time fake Nazis 'invaded' Winnipeg 5 months ago On Feb. 19, 1942, people in Winnipeg woke up to a simulated Nazi invasion, with fake German soldiers marching in the streets. The CBC's Trishla Parekh shows how If Day became one of Canadian history's most elaborate fundraising events. Bill Zuk, a Winnipeg-based historian and the secretary of the Manitoba chapter of the Canadian Aviation Historical Society, plans to take in Messier's show this week at the Fringe Fest. He said while the play shows a comical version of things going wrong on If Day, accounts indicate the actual event couldn't have gone better, with widespread media coverage of the event, including major Canadian and U.S. newspapers and newsreel companies filing stories. "It became a real worldwide success," said Zuk. "People around the world heard about If Day in Winnipeg." Zuk said once the Fringe Festival wraps up, a professional film crew is scheduled to record the live show in a local studio, and there are plans for a free screening of a film version of the play at Winnipeg's Caboto Centre on Sept. 24. The screening will be part of multiple events in Winnipeg that Zuk and others have been organizing this year to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War and the Allied victory. The anniversary should also serve as a reminder to Canadians about what can happen when dictators and authoritarian regimes gain power, he said. "I think we're once again in a very perilous time," said Zuk. "But one thing the Second World War taught us is that we have the ability to come out of this on the right side of it." Despite themes of war and military takeovers, Messier said he wants people to remember that above all else, his play If Day is meant to make people laugh. "It's got something for everybody," he said. "If you want to learn a little bit of history, I pride myself on putting together really accurate sets and costumes. "And if you want to laugh, if you want to see a good old-fashioned farce, go see If Day." Messier's production is one of the more than 140 shows now running in venues around central Winnipeg as part of this year's Fringe Festival. If Day runs at Venue 6 — the Tom Hendry Warehouse Theatre — with performances at various times until July 27, the last day of the festival.

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