Rose, circa 1984 | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | Paul E. Perschmann (1952-11-27)November 27, 1952 Omaha, Nebraska, U.S. |
| Died | April 28, 2009(2009-04-28) (aged 56)[2][5] |
| Professional wrestling career | |
| Ring name(s) | Playboy Buddy Rose[1] The Executioner[1][2] |
| Billed height | 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)[1] |
| Billed weight | 271 lb (123 kg)[3] |
| Billed from | Las Vegas, Nevada[1] Parts Unknown (as The Executioner) |
| Trained by | Verne Gagne[4] Billy Robinson[4] |
| Debut | 1973[4] |
| Retired | 2005 |
Paul E. Perschmann[4][6] (November 27, 1952 – April 28, 2009) was an Americanprofessional wrestler, better known by hisring name, Playboy Buddy Rose.[1] He wrestled primarily for theAWA,WWF, and for promoterDon Owen inPacific Northwest Wrestling.[5]
Paul E. Perschmann[6] was born on November 27, 1952, in Omaha, Nebraska. In his youth, he participated in baseball, softball, and hockey.[5]
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Paul Perschmann was trained byVerne Gagne andBilly Robinson in the early 1970s.[5] Under his own name, he made his debut as a babyface[7] on December 3, 1973, in Rice Lake, Wisconsin, in a 15-minute draw[8] with fellow campmateBob Remus (better known as Sgt. Slaughter).[5] He continued to wrestle under his own name for the duration of his initial tenure, facing such opponents as Billy Graham,Dusty Rhodes,Billy Robinson, andJos LeDuc. After being defeated by Khosrow Vaziri (The Iron Sheik) at a house show in Milwaukee, WI on January 3, 1976, Perschmann departed from the promotion.[9]
Perschmann joinedNWA Western States and made his debut twelve days later, losing toRed Bastien at a house show in Amarillo, Texas, on January 15, 1976.[10] He wrestled in severalNational Wrestling Alliance territories that year before settling in the collective'sPacific Northwest Wrestling promotion. He made his debut on October 15, 1976, and wrestledRick Hunter to a draw. This was also the first time that he did not wrestle under his name, instead having been redubbed "Buddy Rose".[5]
Now wrestling asBuddy Rose both in the PNW and other NWA outfits, on May 24, 1977, he received his first NWA World Heavyweight Championship title opportunity when he facedHarley Race in an unsuccessful effort inPortland, Oregon. However, later that year he would capture his first championship, teaming withJesse Ventura to win the NWA Pacific Northwest Tag Team Title. After losing the titles that June, he would team with Ed Wiskoski (Colonel DeBeers) to regain them fromLonnie Mayne andSam Oliver in a "loser leaves town" match on December 6, 1977. Rose would team on and off with Wiskoski for several decades afterwards, no matter whether the latter was using his "Polish Prince", "Mega Maharishi Imed", or "Colonel De Beers" gimmicks.
On May 17, 1978, Rose partnered withJohn Studd to win50th State Big Time Wrestling'sNWA Hawaii Tag Team Championship. They would lose them on June 14, 1978, in Honolulu toJohn Tolos andSteve Strong. Later that summer Rose entered a tournament to crown the vacantNWA San Francisco United States Heavyweight Title. He won it on September 16, 1978, when he defeatedDean Ho, securing his first singles championship. Meanwhile, in the PNW, Rose and Wiskoski were finally beaten for the PNW Tag-Team titles byDutch Savage andJohnny Boyd on November 21, 1978.
By 1979 Perschmann was now a mainstay of the PNW and one of their top attractions.[5] At some point in the year Rose & Wiskoski regained the Pacific Northwest Tag Team Title. On May 8, 1979, in Portland, Oregon, he wrestled PNW Heavyweight Champion"Rowdy" Roddy Piper to a draw, the start of a feud which Piper credits in his autobiography as establishing his name in the business.[7][11] Three days later Rose regained the Big Time Wrestling United States Title by pinningRon Starr. However his efforts to win the PNW's primary title remained unsuccessful, as he was unable to defeat Piper or latter championStan Stasiak.
However, on November 17, 1979, Rose finally broke through when he defeated Stasiak to win the PNW Heavyweight Championship. His first title reign saw defenses against Roddy Piper,Ron Bass,King Parsons, andDon Leo Jonathan. He would finally lose the title on March 22, 1980, toRick Martel. While he was initially unable to regain the championship, he feuded with Martel, Piper, andThe Sheepherders for much of the year. On July 28, 1980, he and Wiskoski defeated The Sheepherders in a loser leaves town match; on August 8 Martel & Piper defeated them to win the vacant PNW Tag-Team Championship.
On August 16, 1980, Rose defeated Martel to regain the PNW Northwest Heavyweight Championship, and following this triumph by defeating Roddy Piper in a loser leaves town encounter on September 20 in Portland, Oregon. He successfully defended the title that winter againstJonathan Boyd andSivi Afi before losing it toJay Youngblood in early 1981. Rose would get a measure of revenge by defeating Youngblood in a loser leaves town match on May 12, 1981. On October 6, 1981, he capture the Northwest Heavyweight Championship for a third time, defeatingSteve Regal in Portland. Regal would regain it eighteen days later in a rematch.
While continuing to be a mainstay in Portland Northwest Wrestling, Rose also traveled to fellow NWA territoryGeorgia Championship Wrestling in 1982. Teaming withRip Oliver they won two televised matches before losing to theFunk Brothers in the first round of a tournament to crown theNWA World Tag-Team Championship on February 28, 1982, inAtlanta. Back in PNW and five years after his first NWA World Heavyweight Championship match, Rose earned another shot—this time against current championRic Flair. Flair however was victorious in a match that was refereed byCurt Hennig.
Rose next embarked on a lengthy tour ofNew Japan Pro-Wrestling that spring, wrestling opponents includingYoshiaki Yatsu,Yoshiaki Fujiwara, andAnimal Hamaguchi. He returned to the PNW in June and had multiple matches withMatt Bourne before finally departing for theWorld Wrestling Federation.
While still finishing up with the PNW, Rose made his WWF debut on June 1, 1982, at aChampionship Wrestling taping inAllentown, Pennsylvania, at the Agricultural Hall.[12]

Now managed byGrand Wizard and accompanied by two women to ringside (one wasSherri Martel and the otherJudy Martin), he pinned Steve King.[10][12] Rose wrestled twenty two matches at television tapings between June and August, which served to keep him in the public eye until he finished his PNW commitments and began the WWF house show loop.[12] On August 30, 1982, he worked a main event againstBob Backlund for the WWF World Heavyweight Title, but was unsuccessful.[5] Rose quickly moved to a house show feud with former WWF Tag-Team ChampionTony Garea and dominated the series.[12]
On October 4, 1982, he challengedPedro Morales for the Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship at Madison Square Garden; like the match with Backlund in August this too was also unsuccessful.[12] Rose faced Morales numerous additional times but was unable to win the title.[12] He eventually moved that winter to a house show series withCurt Hennig, where he found considerable success.[12]
Following another tour of New Japan Pro-Wrestling, Rose returned to the PNW on May 8, 1983, and defeatedJesse Barr. On August 20 he teamed withBrian Adidas to win the PNW Tag Team titles fromRip Oliver andThe Assassin, but would lose the belts back eleven days later. On October 11, 1983, he teamed with former opponent Curt Hennig and captured the tag-team titles back from Oliver and the Assassin. Again the reign was short-lived as they in turn were beaten byDynamite Kid and Oliver. Following a third tour of New Japan Pro-Wrestling, Rose returned to the PNW and defeated Rip Oliver to win the Heavyweight Championship at an event on April 28, 1984. He defended the title against Oliver and future tag-team partnerDoug Somers before losing it later that year and returning to the World Wrestling Federation.[7]
Rose returned to the WWF in 1984. He appeared onPiper's Pit on the December 22 episode ofChampionship Wrestling and was now managed byBobby Heenan. On the February 26, 1985, edition ofPrime Time Wrestling he was defeated byBarry Windham. He was later put under a mask as "The Executioner", losing toTito Santana in the opening match of the inauguralWrestleMania.[13][6][5] This would be his last match, as he departed once more for the PNW.[5]
He returned on April 29 edition of PNW Portland Wrestling, losing to Steve Pardee via DQ. On May 21, 1985, the PNW held a 60th Anniversary Wrestling Extravaganza at the Portland Memorial Coliseum attended by an estimated 13,000; Rose was defeated by Roddy Piper at the event. Over the next two months he feuded withBilly Jack Haynes andBilly Two Eagles.
In August 1985 Rose began a tour ofChampionship Wrestling from Florida and formed a partnership withRick Rude. Rose was more dominant in this run, defeating Billy Jack Haynes,Frank Lang, andCocoa Samoa. On October 6, 1985, he earned a NWA Florida Southern Heavyweight Championship shot againstWahoo McDaniel but lost via DQ. He did capture the NWA Florida Bahamian Championship and held it until October 18, where he lost it toTyree Pride inNassau, Bahamas.
Ten years after his first run, Buddy Rose returned to the AWA on March 9, 1986, and defeatedScott Hall via disqualification at an event in St. Paul, Minnesota. He also renewed his tag-team partnership with Ed Wiskoski, who was now wrestling as Colonel DeBeers.[10] Rose and DeBeers lost to AWA World Tag-Team Champions Scott Hall and Curt Hennig on March 23, 1986, leading him to quickly form a new team with Doug Somers.[10][7]
On May 17, 1986, Rose and Somers defeated Hennig and Hall via countout, but won the AWA World Tag-Team Championship anyway via stipulation. That summer they began to feud withThe Midnight Rockers, a series that Michaels would later credit as taking his team with Jannetty to the next level.[10][7]
Rose returned to the WWF on February 5, 1990, at a house show in Brandon, Manitoba, and was defeated byHillbilly Jim. He made his televised return on the March 12 edition ofPrime Time Wrestling, teaming up withIron Mike Sharpe againstThe Hart Foundation. Rose was primarily used as an enhancement talent during this run, losing his televised matches to elevate other stars.[5][11] Rose lost toKerry Von Erich in Von Erich's WWF television debut on the July 1990 edition ofSaturday Night's Main Event XXVII.[14] Having gained a large amount of weight, Rose turned it into a comical gimmick; when the ring announcer introduced him and listed his weight at 317 pounds, Rose would angrily take the microphone away from the announcer, and claim to weigh "a slim, trim, 217 pounds"; this drew jeers from the crowd.[5][7] On occasion, he would do one-handed push-ups and kip-ups in the ring, and challenge muscular opponents to a "pose-down."[5] Rose claims that Vince McMahon told the locker room, "I want everybody to work out... except for Buddy," knowing that Rose's weight was his gimmick.[10] Rose memorably appeared in a faux infomercial for the "Buddy Rose Blow Away Diet," which consisted of pouring powder all over himself and then "blowing away the fat" with a household fan; Rose looked exactly the same after the blow away.[5][11]
In this run however Rose was not winless; he did secure pinfall wins againstJim Powers,Pez Whatley,Dale Wolfe,Jim Brunzell, andDustin Rhodes on house shows.[15]
On August 27, 1990, he wrestledShane Douglas in the dark match ofSummerSlam '90.[15] Rose finally gained his first televised victory on the December 10, 1990, edition ofPrime Time Wrestling, where he defeatedMario Mancini.[15] Rose left the company after a January 14, 1991, house show encounter againstKoko B. Ware in Huntington, West Virginia.[15]
Buddy Rose returned to Pacific Northwest Wrestling and began to experience a career revival. He made his debut on a television show on December 21, 1991, and upset PNW ChampionDemolition Crush in a non-title match. Four days later on Christmas Day, Crush defeated Rose at a house show in Portland, Oregon. During the first half of 1992 Rose gained victories overCW Bergstrom,Mike Winner, andBrickhouse Brown, while falling in defeat toJesse Barr andBart Sawyer.
By May 1992 Rose had moved to West Coast Championship Wrestling out of Vancouver and entered a feud withTimothy Flowers. On September 26, 1992, he teamed withMichelle Starr to faceMighty Quinn andMike Roselli for the vacant WCCW Tag-Team Championship, but were unsuccessful. On October 16, 1992, Rose and Starr defeated Quinn and Roselli to win the WCCW titles at a house show in Surrey, British Columbia. Their reign lasted until March 27, 1993, when they were defeated byMoondog Moretti and Timothy Flowers.
In 1994 Rose jumped to the Oregon Pro Wrestling Federation, a newly formed company owned byBilly Jack Haynes andRon Barber. On February 2, 1994, he defeatedMike Miller to win the vacant OPWF Heavyweight Championship. Rose remained champion of the OPWF until April 16, when he lost the title toScott Norton. That summer he began to team withBuddy Wayne and would win the OPWF Tag-Team Championship from Mike Miller andLou Andrews.
Rose made two appearances in the California-basedAll Pro Wrestling in 1995, before moving on to the fledglingAmerican Wrestling Federation in 1996. In his first appearance he lost toSgt. Slaughter at an event in Oakville, WA on August 16, 1996. He would wrestle in several other house shows that summer for the AWF. In 1997 he renewed his rivalry with Timothy Flowers in the International Championship Wrestling Promotion based in British Columbia.
In the mid-to-late 1990s, Rose hosted a call-in talk show on a Portland radio station. Rose managed the Butcher in the short-lived revival ofPortland Wrestling.[16] Rose's final match occurred at Wrestle Reunion 2005 in Tampa, Florida, where he teamed with Colonel DeBeers andBob Orton Jr. againstJimmy Valiant, Roddy Piper and Jimmy Snuka. The match was billed as Jimmy Valiant's retirement match, but Rose also retired after the match. Rose continued to make personal appearances, and opened awrestling training school with DeBeers in Portland.[5]
Rose was first married to Lanette Lucinda Hansch. Buddy and Lanette had one daughter, Alexia, born in May 1977 in Portland, Oregon. Buddy's daughter has 4 children; Luke, Sofia, Lane, and Brooke, Buddy's grandchildren.[17] He later married Toni Osborne (the sister ofMatt Osborne), and they were divorced three months into their marriage.[10] Buddy lastly married Tammy Marie Kelly, a wrestling fan living in the Pacific Northwest, she and Buddy were married from 1990 until his death in 2009.[17][5] Buddy also had a brother named Gary.[17] Rose enjoyed Motown music and had two dachshunds, Prince and Penny.[17]
Rose battled a cocaine addiction for years, for which he later went to rehab as an outpatient for six weeks. He also had a lifelong struggle with obesity.[7]
On April 28, 2009, Rose was found dead in his chair in front of his television at his home inVancouver, Washington, by his wife.[5] The medical examiner attributed his death to natural causes.[7] Rose, who had struggled with his weight since the late 1980s, experienced problems with blood sugar and diabetes.[2]