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E R H I T N F G O WHEN PRO WRESTLING DECIDED TO MAKE ITS FIRST BIG-BUDGET MOVIE, IT WAS ONLY NATURAL THAT GOLDENBOY GRAPPLER JOHN CENA WOULD PLAY THE HERO. BUT DOES THE NEW KING OF FAKE FIGHTING HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO FOLLOW THE ROCK TO THE TOP OF HOLLYWOOD? on a crisp evening in january, john cena, professional wrestler and would-be movie star, arrived in Albany, New York, to defend his title as World Wrestling Entertainment champion. At his fight that night, which was a steel cage–style Elimination Chamber match against Kane, Kurt Angle, Carlito, Chris Masters, and Shawn Michaels, Cena was greeted with profanity-laced chants, a chorus of boos, and a sea of disparaging handmade signs. Billed as a thugged-out throwback jersey–wearing rapper, the 6'1", 240-pound Cena was accustomed to getting jeered – he’d had a rough couple of months – but it’s unlikely that he was prepared for the sea of outrage he waded into that night. It is considered by many fans to be the most surprisingly hostile audience reception in the history of professional wrestling. Fortunately for John Cena, the storyline, the scripted narrative the wrestlers always follow, took a favourable turn that night. In wrestling’s eternal battle of good versus evil, the WWE had for months been trying, unsuccessfully, to position Cena as a good guy, and for the Chamber match gave it one more college try by pitting him against five opponents positioned that night as “heels” (bad guys). After Cena had defeated all of them, his long-time rival Edge forced an impromptu one-on-one match. Exhausted from the Elimination Chamber, Cena was unable to defend himself. Edge pinned the WWE champ with ease. That night, Cena not only lost the title, but he also began a personal transformation. OCTOBER 2006 T ORO 69 and that wrestling is closer to a soap opera written to appeal to men. In doing so, he converted wrestling from an amateurish regional phenomenon to a sophisticated, multi-dimensional production, developing the WWE into the world’s leading sports entertainment company, last year boasting gross revenues of US$400-million. Monday Night RAW, one of three major weekly WWE events, and the one on which Cena currently appears, attracts more than 500,000 viewers in Canada. In the U.S., in excess of 14 million people tune in to a wrestling event each week (that number sits at around a million in Canada). It’s a long way from the days of Jess McMahon, Vince’s goal is for that fan who pays money to get in, to say, ‘Dude, I’m going to come back.’ ” In the WWE, where the singular objective is to entertain, popularity is almost a neutral term: fans either care about a wrestler – and boo or cheer him – or they don’t. To be hated is to be loved. Not unlike Don Cherry, Cena has a distinct knack for this schizophrenic brand of stardom. The Monday before we meet over coffee, for instance, at a RAW event in Cleveland, the audience roars as soon as it hears the first few chords of “The Time is Now,” Cena’s selfpenned entrance song, but the frenzy as Cena swaggers down the aisle is hard to identify as either adoration or disdain. (In fact, fans will flip allegiances during Cena’s match this night, a tag-team bout in which he and Ric Flair take on Edge and Johnny Nitro.) The din reaches a fever pitch as Cena, wearing baggy shorts and basketball shoes, slides under the ropes to enter the ring. He briskly salutes the decidedly patriotic crowd (when the “Star Spangled Banner” was played earlier in the evening, the crowd began chanting “USA! USA!” as soon as it ended). Cena equates himself with America; his mantra – “Hustle, loyalty, respect” – is a hip-hop spin on the American dream. As a wrestler, he’s hyperkinetic, the most energetic man in the ring, the ne plus ultra of wrestlersbouncing around frenetically, limbs turned–movie stars is The Rock, waving in a kind of chaotic adrenaa.k.a. Dwayne Johnson. When The line rush. On the mic, he is ruthless, Rock entered wrestling, in the late mocking Lita, the trashy girlfriend 1990s, the WWE (then the WWF) of the self-proclaimed Rated R was evolving into a more theatrical Superstar, Edge, as “NC-17 – no affair; many female characters were cold sores for seventeen days.” Then introduced, and plot lines became Cena hammers Shelton Benjamin with The Five Knuckle Shuffle on Monday Night Raw. he adds, “Might I remind you folks, more sophisticated. The Rock’s there is no cure for genital herpes.” arrogant and flamboyant persona After the bout, which Cena wins, grandfather, who was promoting boxing lent itself perfectly to compelling interviews there is only one name I can hear being matches in New York three-quarters of a cenand storylines. Before long, the wrestler was chanted by the fans. Cena. Still, Dave Meltzer, editor of the Wrestling tury ago. Today’s WWE is less like a travelling offered opportunities in other areas of enterObserver Newsletter and the author of three sports club than a travelling group of Elizatainment, appearing in a Wyclef Jean music books about wrestling, is amazed at the antibethan players, bringing their stage show to a video, and hosting Saturday Night Live to great acclaim. From there, the movie offers began to Cena sentiment from earlier this year. “He got different city every night. roll in, and The Rock left wrestling for Hollyit worse than anyone I’ve seen,” says Meltzer. Like the audience at Shakespeare’s Globe wood in short order. The lesson? Wrestling According to Meltzer, Cena is also a weak Theatre in London, wrestling fans are both and showbiz are not all that different: Both technical wrestler. “He’s kind of awkward and notoriously raucous and notoriously fickle. are character-driven entertainment vehicles in his stuff doesn’t look very real. He’s distinctly John Cena handles the swings in approval with which charisma, good looks, and a sense of the below average.” Like Hulk Hogan before him, grace; it’s because he understands the WWE’s dramatic go a long way. Cena relies on charisma and simple moves. positioning as theatre first, where personal It was Vincent K. McMahon, current chairThe fact is, wrestling is increasingly not admiration is irrelevant and ratings are king. man of the WWE, who first laid bare really about wrestling. It’s only a small group “My main goal is not winning the popularity wrestling’s secrets, acknowledging in the early of fanatics more interested in quality wrestling of fans,” he says to me over coffee, on a rare 1980s that match outcomes are predetermined, than storylines, who are truly uninterested in Saturday morning off in Boston. “My main 70 T ORO OCTOBER 2006 W W W. T O R O M A G A Z I N E . C A Cena. (Tellingly, Cena’s pay-per-view numbers are weak, a reflection of the hard-core fan base that spends $40 to see a single event.) On the whole, says Meltzer, “Cena’s got more emotion behind him than any other character in the business.” courtesy of wwe Soon after, he lost the throwback jerseys, abandoning his gimmicky rapper image, which so many fans resented, and resumed the role of underdog, a “blue-collar son of a gun,” according to WWE commentators. He also stopped trash-talking in rhyme, one thing that some fans may actually miss. (Cena once rapped about how Chris Masters “has a body that makes people say, ‘Oh my God’ / but his Masterpiece is smaller than the Nano iPod.”) His popularity resurged. Within weeks, he was enjoying overwhelming crowd approval, which he carried through the summer. And it was a good thing, too. Cena’s ability to elicit an impassioned fan response, positive or negative, has cemented his role as the new golden boy of the WWE. The twenty-nine-year-old is not only their biggest draw by far; he’s also the great hope of WWE Films, the star of their first independently produced mainstream feature, The Marine, a high-octane action film due out this month. The stakes are high. If the movie flops, it could send WWE Films the way of the XFL, the WWE’s failed football venture; if it succeeds, it will allow the WWE to gain a foothold in a very lucrative industry, and will make John Cena a star. being a character is nothing new for John Cena. It’s how he describes himself as a teenager in high school.“In West Newbury [the small town north of Boston where he grew up], they listen to rock music. I listened to rap music. Those guys were wearing T-shirts that were ripped and stained; I got a rayon Kwamé polka-dot shirt on,” he says.“I would show up in a jail jumpsuit with an afro wig. I was different.” Hip-hop’s flamboyant style and its message of rebellion and individualism captured Cena. “I knew there was something about hip-hop that I could find my identity with.” After high school, Cena left for Springfield College, a Division III NCAA school where he was an all-American offensive lineman. He graduated with a degree in exercise physiology and went to California, where he started wrestling in 2000. He enjoyed moderate success initially, even landing a role in a reality program called Manhunt, in which he played Big Tim Kingman, hunting down contestants with a paintball gun. The show ended in controversy after participants alleged the series had been partially scripted and its outcome predetermined. (Fittingly, it was produced in association with the WWE.) After griding it out for a couple of years on California’s Ultimate Pro Wrestling circuit, Cena’s fortunes changed. WWE brass overheard Cena rapping to himself on a tour bus, and soon after, the small-town white boy appeared on live television in a gaudy Vanilla Ice–style costume on Halloween in 2002, performing an outlandish rap mocking his opponents. He’d found his gimmick, and it was a phenomenal success: The fans hated it. Cena carried the shtick further, releasing an album, You Can’t See Me – a favourite taunt he mimes to semi-conscious players in the ring – a passable debut released by Columbia Records. Cena insists that his character “is me, with the volume and the excitement turned up.” He’s not the first wrestler to make this claim, and not the first to inspire doubt. Meltzer, who interviewed Cena multiple times in his early days, says that five or six years ago,“his dialect was completely different. He talked like a California surfer guy.” It’s possible Cena may have picked up his surfer-dude affectation on ANSFORMED FROM RA R T S A H PPER CENA BLUE-COLLAR SON OF A G UN” TO “ 72 T ORO OCTOBER 2006 W W W. T O R O M A G A Z I N E . C A grooming: lynne avallone/ennis. this page: courtesy of twentieth century fox the Pacific coast during his first years on the that. Although The Marine was originally curricular activities – filmic or musical – as wrestling scene; and the split-personality act intended to be a straight-ahead action film, the vehicles to drive more people to wrestling; may simply prove he’s just an adaptable guy. first time Bonito read the script he realized it what’s good for the WWE is good for John Cena. Ultimately, the point is moot. was so over the top, he had only one recourse. Is The Marine good? Only the fans will tell. An early preview received a positive response The question of what’s fake and what’s real Wrestling was in the air, which meant winkonline, but Dave Meltzer, for one, is not optiis fundamentally irrelevant in the wrestling ing was, too: he turned it into a comedy. mistic. “The WWE’s track record at going into world. Wrestling is premised on the suspennew things is pretty horrible,” he says, referring sion of disbelief, and Cena knows this. the winking approach is a good fit for not only to the XFL but to other failed ventures “I make my living through believability,” he the WWE, a league that never takes itself too in reality television (2001’s Tough Enough) and says, acknowledging that matches are predeseriously. In this sense, Cena is perfect for a nightclubs (The World, a WWE-themed termined. “But between the time that bell starring role. “The way you play comedy off restaurant-club combo in Times Square, shut rings and when it rings again, that’s my time, of John Cena,” says Bonito, “is you ask him to down in 2003 after four years). “I don’t see and that’s impromptu.” Wrestling mats provide play it straight.” John Cena having much appeal outside of the little protection, and there’s no way to fake a For three-and-a-half months, Cena comwrestling audience.” fifteen-foot fall off a ladder. Injuries are comThough Cena resists the comparmon. (Cena, who doesn’t warm up ison, the name that continues to before matches, or stretch afterward, loom large for any wrestler crossing damaged his neck recently but will over into film is Dwayne Johnson. not require surgery.) The bottom Cena claims his ambitions are excluline is entertainment, and behind the sively focused on wrestling – fans entertainment is always the script. felt abandoned by The Rock when Movies, ergo, are a perfectly he started acting, and Cena knows logical extension for WWE. The better than to incur their wrath if he characters already exist, and, more can avoid it – but the promise of importantly, so does the fan base. earning US$5- to US$10-million for Besides, all wrestlers are actors, to three months’ work is appealing, some degree. The Marine is Cena’s formal acting debut, but according especially compared to the alternato the film’s director, John Bonito, tive, enduring chokeholds four nights Cena’s a natural. “He’s got the a week for US$1.7-million, Cena’s chops,” says Bonito. “He’s got a long estimated annual salary. career in movies if he wants it.” Cena’s unlikely, however, to be That career begins this way: In confronted with the choice. As a The Marine, Cena plays John Triton, wrestler, The Rock inhabited a “coma recently discharged marine officer pletely different echelon” of popuwho must rescue his wife, played by larity than Cena, says Meltzer. The Kelly Carlson (CSI, Nip/Tuck), from Rock has an appealing, mixed-race the murderous criminals who’ve face, and, more importantly, he quit taken her hostage. Joel Simon, preswrestling, and studied under top ident of WWE Films, is thrilled with acting coaches to make the transiCena’s performance. “We’d like John Cena takes on all comers in The Marine, the first big-budget release by WWE Films. tion. Cena wrestles more than 200 Cena to become another Clint Eastdays a year, which doesn’t leave a lot wood or Charles Bronson,” he says. of time for acting lessons. muted almost weekly between the set in AusPlans are in the works for at least two more Besides, the wrestling lifestyle is taking its tralia and various RAW events in the U.S. Cena films, but The Marine is the sink-ortoll on Cena even before you add the Hollyswim opportunity, for both Cena and the Bonito says he was indefatigable. “He’d get off wood extracurriculars. “I feel old,” he says, WWE. It’s one of the league’s biggest gambles an eighteen-hour flight and do chase scenes sounding it. “I’ve stopped listening to rap yet. Though WWE Films has been around in a car without a roof on it, getting smashed music. I guess it’s because I’ve been on the since 2002, The Marine is just their second up at seventy miles an hour. John is a director’s road. You learn a lot, you see a lot. I started independent release. Its first outing was See No dream. The guy will do anything it takes.” In listening to a lot of older country.” In spite of Evil, a low-budget horror picture starring felthe wrestling world too, Cena has a reputation his weariness, though, Cena is determined to low wrestler Kane, released in May. See No Evil as a hard worker. He hasn’t taken time off in carry on in the ring for many years to come. turned a modest profit – no mean feat in Holyears, and though he is often driven around “This gig is cake forever,” he says. “There’s lywood – but it’s unclear if the film attracted by limo and flies first class, he is known in the nothing else I’d rather be doing. Nothing.” many non-wrestling fans. The Marine’s budget WWE as a low-maintenance character. Except, maybe, accepting an Oscar. He might is closer to $20-million, and in order to be Cena insists that he hopes the film succeeds make time in his schedule for that. Ω successful, it will need to reach beyond what “not for personal reasons, but for company Simon calls the WWE’s “built-in audience.” reasons.” In an unconventional business, Cena Benjamin Leszcz is a regular contributor The gamble is even more precarious than is a classic company man. He views his extrato our Ringside section.