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Kabuki was the first wrestler to blow Asian mist into his opponents' faces. [2] When Keiji Mutoh debuted in Jim Crockett Promotions as The Great Muta in March 1989, Mutoh was billed by manager Gary Hart as Kabuki's son due to the similarities in style and the use of Asian mist. In reality, they are not related.
Wrestling Dontaku was a huge success as the event drew a huge crowd of 55,000 spectators at the Fukuoka Dome. However, the event received mixed reviews from critics. Kevin Wilson of Puroresu Central considered that he would not recommend the event to watch, with "Muta vs. Hogan was a spectacle worth watching but nothing else on this tape is worth going out of your way to see.
At the Fritz Von Erich Retirement Show Magic Dragon and Great Kabuki defeated David and Kevin Von Erich to win a championship billed as the "All Asian Tag Team Championship", which was not the AJPW version of the title, but a title promoter Fritz Von Erich had created for the occasion as a means to make the storyline between the two teams more ...
Crush, The Great Kabuki, Genichiro Tenryu and Bam Bam Bigelow interfered, [28] but The Undertaker was able to fight back until Mr. Fuji stole The Undertaker's urn from Paul Bearer. [28] Yokozuna opened the urn, and smoke poured out. [30] Meanwhile, Adam Bomb, Jeff Jarrett, The Headshrinkers (Samu and Fatu) and Diesel then came to the ring to ...
Kabuki's NWA Television Championship was defended in the first fifteen minutes, and Brown's mask was defended for the entire match. The match started with Brown having the advantage with the use of the ringpost and a steel chair. Brown applied a chokehold, but Kabuki fought back and applied a clawhold, squeezing Brown's skull
Onstage, Danjuro Ichikawa, one of the biggest stars of Japan's Kabuki theater, is a virtuoso in switching roles. The 13th man to bear the name Danjuro Ichikawa — which has been passed down ...
The match was followed by another six-man tag team match featuring Heisei Ishingun members The Great Kabuki, Kengo Kimura and Kuniaki Kobayashi against the team of Hiro Saito, Norio Honaga and Shinichi Nakano. The match climaxed when Kimura hit a powerbomb on Honaga. Next, Tadao Yasuda took on El Gigante.
The Great Kabuki defeated Mark Youngblood: Singles match: Gauntlet Match #1 — 4: The Great Kabuki defeated Jerry Allen. Singles match: Gauntlet Match #2 — 5: Steve Simpson defeated The Great Kabuki: Singles match: Gauntlet Match #3 — 6: Brian Adias (c) defeated Steve Regal: Singles match for the WCWA Texas Heavyweight Championship: 13:00: 7