Interview for a Dutch Wrestling Organization, conducted by Twan Kreeft of the Netherlands.
For our younger readers can you introduce yourself and historically update us?
 My name is Duane Bailey aka Don Anderson. I wrestled professionally
in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), American Wrestling
Alliance (AWA) and the worldwide Wrestling Alliance
(WWWA) from 1971 until my retirement in 1977. I wrestled
throughout the United States and Canada, and had the
pleasure of working with some of the greatest wrestlers
in the business.
After my retirement from Professional wrestling, I started
a career in large aircraft maintenance working for major
airlines in the United States. I currently am working
as a " Lead Technician " supervising maintenance
on aircraft for Continental Airlines based in Houston,
Texas in the United States.

Why the two names?
 I first started wrestling in Phoenix, Arizona. The promotion
there was looking for a young, good-looking wrestler
to appeal to the young crowd and I was just what they
wanted. The promotion like everything about me except
my name, it did not sound like a young super stars name
so they asked me to use the name of "Donnie Anderson".
I agreed to use the name, the fans liked it and me so
my new identity was born.
Later in my career, I started
to wrestle in the areas I grew up and went to school
in, so I used my real name there. So my career was lived
as two names for the same person, like so many movie
stars and professional people do.

Why did you change from baseball to wrestling?
 I
loved baseball and was very good at it. Baseball is
a team sport and not an individual sport for personal
recognition. I loved wrestling as much as baseball and
it is more of an individual sport for personal recognition
and more of a challenge for you, not your team. You
are out there in the ring by yourself (unless your
are working a tag team match) and may the best man or
woman win. Now that's what I wanted, the challenge!

How do you look back on your NWA days? Can you tell us a
little more about that? And the same for the AWA/ And
also the WWWA?
 When I think back on the days I was in the AWA, NWA, WWWA,
I have only wonderful memories. I think of the tremendous
bond that develops between the men and women in the
business and the endless friendships that last through
out your career and life. I also think of all the grudges
that develop, the never ending task of getting even,
mending torn muscles, broken bones and the scars that will
never go away. They will remind you of your mat days every
time you look in the mirror.

Where did you enjoy wrestling the most?
 I enjoyed wrestling everywhere that I was booked to wrestle.
The fans were so nice to me and I met so many wonderful
people. If I had to select a favorite place to wrestle,
it would have to be in the Pacific Northwest area known
as Oregon. The reason would be, of course, because I was
born there. That is my home, where I went to school
and grew up.

How do you look back on your career? Any regrets?
 When I look back on my career, I have no regrets. I had a
wonderful career, meet a lot of interesting people,
saw a lot of different towns and made a lot of money.
I would have liked to have had a longer career in wrestling
but I wanted a career that would allow me to be with my family
more and not spend so much time on the road traveling.

Please respond to the following names: Andre the Giant, Dory
Funk, Terry Funk, Jimmy Snuka, Bobo Brazil, Lou Thezs,
& Jerry Lawler.
 Andre
the Giant: 7ft. 4 in. 500 lbs. He truly was a giant
but what a nice man. He was very good at selling out
the arenas we wrestled in and always put on a good show.
Dory Funk: what a performer. Dory knew all the
wrestling moves and how to get into and out of all the
wrestling holds a hundred different ways.
Terry Funk: did not use a lot of wrestling moves.
He liked to kick, punch, bite, more or less a bar room
fighter but he won most of his matches and drew a lot
of money.
Jimmy Snuka: the "Super Fly" was poetry
in motion. He would fly off the top rope and turnbuckles
like an Olympic high diver in a swimming pool. He was
a bodybuilder before he became a wrestler and he
looked terrific.
Bobo Brazil: very good wrestler and a big money
drawer. I only meet him once but I was very impressed
with his style and wrestling abilities.
Lou Thezs: World Champion several times over,
many years in the business. A very tough wrestler that
knew how to wrestle and how to draw big money. Someone that any wrestler could look up to.
Jerry Lawler: A good wrestler that is still
active in the WWE today. Jerry has excited the wrestling
audiences for a number of years and is a credit to the
wrestling business.

Who has been your toughest opponent ever and why?
 It
is very hard to narrow down a career of wrestling 5, 6,
or even 7 days a week for years to the toughest opponent
I have ever wrestled. Everyone is the "toughest"
in there own special way. To answer this question, I
would have to separate it into two parts:
The first is the toughest opponent I had ever wrestled
in a clean, scientific match and I will have to say
that it was Ken Mantel. Ken was the "Junior
Heavy champion" of the world. He had a very good
amateur background, which complimented his outstanding
professional wrestling skills. He was a clean, scientific
wrestler but he could get very rough if he had to.
In
one of the matches we had, I remember I wrestled him
in the semi- main event in Shreveport, Louisiana. We
wrestled for about 25 minutes of good clean wrestling,
trading holds, reversals, take downs, non-stop action
and neither one of us seemed to be able to really get
the advantage over the other. Ken suddenly lost his
temper and hit me up side of the head with a fore arm,
"not a fist" but a fore arm, a legal move. The crowd jumped to their feet and booed him, they booed
the champion...what a great match!
At the end of our
match, the crowd gave us both a standing ovation. The main event had a very hard time trying to follow
our match. Ken held many titles and was a very hard
man to defeat.
Second, the toughest opponent I ever had in a wrestling
match / fight was a 6-ft.6 in. 350 lbs. Apache Indian
named Bull Ramos. He was extremely strong and
took very good bumps for a big man. I would do my wrestling
stuff and he was so strong he could just do what he
wanted to with my little 5 ft. 9 in. 235 lbs. Body.
He was a very good wrestler and drew a lot of money
at the box office.

How
do you look back on the territory days? Please compare
them to the current state of wrestling. Do you still
follow wrestling? What do you think of it now?
 Back
in the "territory" days, if you were burned
out in an area (stayed too long in an area and the fans get tired
of seeing you) you could call another promoter
and go to that territory and wrestle for a while. Most
of the wrestlers did just that, go where the money was
for them.
I have been retired for many years now but
I think most of the wrestling in the United States is
promoted by only one promotion. Oh sure, there are some
small wild cat promotion running but the big money makers
and big box offices are run by only one promotion.
I
still follow wrestling because after all the years I
have been around the wrestling business I still love
it and I still am a "wrestling fan". Not a
mark but a fan. I think wrestling today is a lot different
then when I was in the business. They use a lot more
gimmicks and ladies with very little clothing on but
they give the fans what the want to see. The wrestling
of today gives the fans 2 to 3 hours of non-stop, exciting
action and they are selling out every arena that the
wrestlers perform in. They are doing a fantastic job.

Do
you have a big video/DVD collection wrestling wise? What
do you like to watch? Also non-wrestling stuff.
 No
I don't have a big video / DVD collection of wrestling.
I enjoy watching all the pay-per-view but once I have
seen them I don't care to watch them again. I love to
watch wrestling, boxing, car racing and drag racing,
almost any sporting events. I enjoy regular movies also, action, westerns, dramas, and love stories.

What
was Portland Wrestling like? How is the Portland scene
now, if you know?
 Portland,
Oregon wrestling was fantastic. The promotion was run
by Don and Elton Owens, two brothers that knew the business
and how to make money at it. Both Don and Elton took
good care of the wrestlers and paid well. Most of the
trips were short and there was not so much traveling
as in some of the larger states that I have wrestled
in.

What
do you know about The Netherlands and about our Dutch wrestling scene?
 I
don't know much about the Netherlands except that it
is very beautiful there and the Dutch people seem to
be extremely friendly and loving. I reviewed your website and your Dutch wrestlers appear to be very talented
wrestlers and performers. They look like they can draw
some big money at the box office for some promotions.

What
does it mean to be a C.A.C. member? Are you in touch
with other members?
 The
C. A. C. (Cauliflower Alley Club) is a group of people who share a common feeling
and that feeling is the love for wrestling. All the
members are wrestlers, have been wrestlers, referees,
managers, promoters, or just people who love wrestling
and want to keep the "ring of friendship" alive
forever.
It is wonderful to keep in contact with the
business, the wrestlers and know how everyone is feeling
and doing. We also know about the friends that we have
lost. I only found out about the C. A. C. this year
but I am a very proud member and will be forever. The
C. A. C. also helps me keep up on the location of friends,
and how to get in contact with them.

A
lot of ex-wrestlers do personal appearances. Do you
as well? Why or why not?
 I
do not do any personal appearances because I just do
not have the time. I work a full time job with a major
airline and when I am not on the job I want to be doing
something with my family and friends. Being in the airline industry, my family and I do a lot of traveling
and that keeps us busy.

How
did you end up in aircraft maintenance?
 I
have always loved mechanical and electrical devices. When I retired from the ring, I wanted a career that
had longevity and good income. Aircraft have always
fascinated me so I enrolled in a school to learn aircraft
maintenance. Here I am, 28 years later working for
a major airline supervising aircraft maintenance. I
love it!

What
is it like to live in Texas, compared to Oregon or Portland?
 I
live in Houston, Texas. It is a very large state
and Houston is the 4th largest city in the United States.
Everywhere you choose to go is very busy and crowded.
Houston is also very hot in the summers but it cools off
in the winters making it nice and mild. We have our
"hurricane" season and we always have to be
on the lookout for a possible disaster.
Oregon on the
other hand, has booth mild summers and winters, a real
4-seasons place (spring, summer, fall,and winter). Oregon
has many large mountains and mountain ranges, lots of
trees, and beautiful lakes and the Pacific Ocean coast.
Oregon is where I will live when I finish my aircraft
maintenance career and retire.

Where
will wrestling be in about 5 or 10 years?
 Where
wrestling will be in 5 or 10 years is very difficult
to guess. Let us just hope and pray that it is still
around for all the fans to enjoy. Let us also hope and
pray that the feature generations of wrestling superstars are as exciting and entertaining as the
past and that there will forever be professional
wrestling for the world to enjoy.

Who
was/is the biggest wrestler ever, Hulk Hogan, "Stone
Cold" Steve Austin or maybe someone else?
 Of
the two wrestlers you have chosen (Hulk Hogan and Stone
Cold Steve Austin), I feel that Hulk Hogan is better
known. However, give Steve Austin the same amount of
time in the business and he may become equally as well
know as Hulk Hogan.

Famous
last words...
 In
closing, I'd like to thank you for doing this interview
with me. I am very honored. Thank you also for letting
me become a member of your "Wall of Fame"
and sharing that honor with other wrestling greats. Most
of all, I'd like to thank the wrestling fans for always
being there. Because without the fans, the wrestlers
would have no one to perform for and no reason to perform.
The wrestling fans are the real heroes.
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