| The Midnight Express | |
|---|---|
| Stable | |
| Members | Dennis Condrey Randy Rose Norvell Austin Ron Starr Honky Tonk Ferris Bobby Eaton Stan Lane Wendi Richter Bob Holly Bart Gunn Rikki Nelson Jimmy Hart (manager) Jim Cornette (manager) Paul E. Dangerously (manager) |
| Name(s) | The Midnight Express Midnight Express Incorporated The Original Midnight Express |
| Hometown | Dark Side |
| Debut | 1980 |
| Disbanded | 2011 |
The Midnight Express was the name used by severalprofessional wrestlingtag teams of changing members, usually under themanagement ofJim Cornette. The group started in 1980 withDennis Condrey andRandy Rose inSoutheast Championship Wrestling. In 1981 they were joined byNorvell Austin. This group disbanded in 1983, but later the same year a new version of the Midnight Express was formed inMid-South Wrestling by teaming up Condrey andBobby Eaton, with Cornette as their manager. After leaving Mid-South, the Midnight Express competed briefly inWCCW (Dallas) before moving on toJim Crockett Promotions (JCP). Condrey left in 1987, and was replaced byStan Lane. Eaton and Lane (still managed by Cornette) competed in JCP andWCW, where they briefly feuded with "The Original Midnight Express" of Condrey and Rose (managed byPaul E. Dangerously). This version of the Midnight Express disbanded in October 1990 when Cornette and Lane left WCW. In 1998, theWorld Wrestling Federation (WWF) teamed upBob Holly andBart Gunn as "The Midnight Express", who were also managed by Jim Cornette. From 2004 until 2011 various combinations of Condrey, Eaton, and Lane competed as The Midnight Express on the independent circuit.
In 1980 a new team was formed inSoutheast Championship Wrestling consisting ofDennis Condrey andRandy Rose.[1]Norvell Austin adopted the masked persona of "The Shadow" and teamed withBrad Armstrong to defeat Condrey and Rose for the title on May 4, 1981. After losing the title back to Condrey and Rose on July 27, 1981, Austin turned on Armstrong and joined up with Condrey and Rose to form astable (group) known as The Midnight Express.[2] In the bookThe Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame: The Tag Teams Condrey explains that the name did not stem from the movieMidnight Express (although later versions of the Midnight Express would usethe film's theme byGiorgio Moroder, or a cover version, as their theme music), but from the fact that they all dressed in black, drove black cars, and were out partying past midnight.[3]
Together the three men won the AWA Southern Tag Team title in the CWA and invokedthe "Freebird Rule" to allow any two of the three men to defend the titles on a given night.[4] The Midnight Express lost the AWA Southern tag team title toBobby Eaton andSweet Brown Sugar before returning to SECW in the spring of 1982.[1] Upon their return to Southeastern Championship Wrestling the Midnight Express quickly regained the Southeastern Tag Team title fromRobert Fuller andJimmy Golden on September 27, 1982. The Express then became involved in a feud with theMongolian Stomper and his storyline son "Mongolian Stomper Jr.", with whom they traded the Southeastern title.[1] The Midnight Express's next challengers were"Dizzy Ed" Hogan and local wrestler Ken Lucas. The two teams repeatedly traded the title until the Midnight Express, using their 3-on-2 advantage, finally reclaimed the championship by the end of July 1983.[1] The Midnight Express's final feud in the SECW was with the local heroes Jimmy Golden and Robert Fuller, who managed to drive the group out of SECW.[2] After dropping the Southeastern Tag Team titles to Brad andScott Armstrong, Austin, Condrey and Rose went their separate ways.

WhenBobby Eaton was sent toMid-South Wrestling under promoterBill Watts as part of a talent trade it was decided that he should be part of the new version of the Midnight Express. Eaton joined with former rival Dennis Condrey under the management ofJim Cornette in this incarnation of the team. The Express had until this point been a group of wrestlers, but now worked exclusively as a two-man team.[5] To complement "Loverboy" Dennis Condrey, Eaton was nicknamed "Beautiful Bobby", a nickname he continued using. The Express was first booked in a storyline with the Mid-South Tag Team championsMagnum T. A. andMr. Wrestling II. The highlight of the angle saw Eaton and Condrey tarring and feathering Magnum T. A. in the middle of the ring. Condrey and Eaton won their first tag team championship when Mr. Wrestling II turned on Magnum T. A. and attacked him during a match, allowing The Midnight Express to walk away with the titles without much opposition. Collectively Dennis Condrey and Bobby Eaton held 53 tag team titles, setting the record in all of professional wrestling. During the Midnight's Express time in Mid-South,Wendi Richter was made an honorary member by Jim Cornette.[6]
With Mr. Wrestling II and Magnum T. A. splitting up, the Midnight Express needed a new team to defend their newly won title against. This team wasThe Rock 'n' Roll Express (Ricky Morton andRobert Gibson), with whom they started a long-running series of matches that would last well into the 1990s and span several wrestling promotions. The two Expresses had a series of matches which differed from the way tag team wrestling was presented at the time and drew attention both locally and nationally.[5] The two teams feuded throughout 1984 in Mid-South Wrestling before the Midnight Express left the promotion to work elsewhere.
The Midnight Express had a short stay inWorld Class Championship Wrestling in Texas where they feuded mainly withThe Fantastics (Bobby Fulton andTommy Rogers).[7] When opportunities in WCCW looked to go nowhere the Midnight Express signed withJim Crockett Promotions (JCP) in 1985, giving them national exposure through JCP's television shows that were broadcast onSuperStation TBS.[5] Shortly after joining JCP, the Midnight Express reignited their feud with the Rock 'n' Roll Express from whom they won theNWA World Tag team titles in February 1986 onSuperstars on the Superstation. Eaton and Condrey lost the titles back to the Rock 'n' Roll Express six months later.[1] Besides feuding with the Rock 'n' Roll Express, Eaton and Condrey also had long-running feuds withThe New Breed (Chris Champion andSean Royal) as well asThe Road Warriors (Animal andHawk). The feud with the Road Warriors included a high-profileScaffold Match atStarrcade 1986, which the Midnight Express lost and where Jim Cornette famously hurt his knee when he fell off the scaffold.[8]
In March 1987, Dennis Condrey suddenly left JCP without giving any reason, leaving Eaton without a partner. Bubba Rogers worked a few dates to fulfill obligations, but Dusty Rhodes made the decision to pick Stan Lane who was a singles star in Florida at the time. Tom Prichard was thought about, but never officially suggested.[5]
Eaton and Lane reached the semi-finals of the Crockett Cup Tag Team Tournament on April 11, 1987, in Baltimore. On May 16, 1987, the combination of Eaton and Lane won theNWA United States Tag team titles for the first time, a title they would win three times during their time together.[1] A year later the team was cheered on despite being heels as they won the NWA World Tag Team Titles from the HorsemenArn Anderson andTully Blanchard on September 10, 1988 (Anderson and Blanchard left NWA to go toWorld Wrestling Federation). The Midnight Express's title run only lasted a little over a month and a half before the Road Warriors (who had recently turned heel onSting) took the gold from them in a brutal match.[1]

Meanwhile, Condrey eventually signed a contract to wrestle for theAWA, which at the time was recording television inLas Vegas; Condrey was living in Denver, Colorado at the time. He reconnected with former Midnight Express member Randy Rose and the two began teaming as the Midnight Express under the management ofPaul E. Dangerously. The unit won theAWA World Tag Team Championship in October 1987 after defeatingJerry Lawler andBill Dundee, then “lost” the titles toThe Midnight Rockers in December. In reality, Condrey and AWA ownerVerne Gagne were in a dispute over money owed to Condrey and he, Rose, and Dangerously all left the promotion in early 1988 while still being promoted as champions; the AWA decided to retroactively declare the Midnights/Rockers match in December to be a title change in favor of the latter.
About a year later, on an episode ofWorld Championship Wrestling, Cornette received an on-air phone call from someone who was claiming to be anonymous; Cornette recognized the man’s voice and challenged him to come out and speak his piece to his face. The man turned out to be Paul E. Dangerously, and he, Condrey, and Rose came out and attacked Cornette and Lane during a singles match featuring the latter. This began one of the most anticipated feuds in the tag team division, with Eaton and Lane facing off against Condrey and Rose.
Despite the success the feud had generated early on, the battle between the Midnight Express and the Original Midnight Express eventually petered out.[5] Cornette contended in ashoot interview that backstage politics and animosity between the Original Midnights, promotion headJim Crockett and head bookerGeorge Scott led to the feud being cooled off.
Due to various differences over the direction of the Midnight Express, Cornette, Lane, and Eaton also left JCP briefly, a few months afterTed Turner purchased the company and it was renamedWorld Championship Wrestling (WCW). When the issues were resolved, Cornette and the Midnight Express returned to the promotion. In the tournament to determine new World tag team champions, the Midnight Express advanced to the finals before losing to the Freebirds with some assistance from the Samoan Swat Team. They engaged in a feud with the Freebirds and Samoans until the 1989 Great American Bash, where they teamed up with the Road Warriors and Dr. Death Steve Williams to defeat the Freebirds and Samoans in a War Games match.
The Midnight Express soon turned heel as a result of a feud with the Dynamic Dudes (Johnny Ace andShane Douglas). Jim Cornette duped the Dudes into thinking he wanted to be their manager but then turned on them during their match against the Midnight Express atClash of the Champions IX in New York. The Dynamic Dudes gained a measure of revenge when the Midnight Express laid out an open challenge for any team for $10,000. After dispatching of a couple of no-name teams, the Express was challenged by the masked Dynamic Duo, billed fromGotham City, who pinned the Express and unmasked as Ace and Douglas. The feud soon lost steam and was forgotten soon after.
After returning to their cheating ways, the Midnight Express started a feud with the up-and-coming team ofFlyin' Brian and"Z-Man" Tom Zenk over the United States Tag team titles. The Express won the titles from the young team in early 1990, but lost them toThe Steiner Brothers (Rick andScott) three months later.[1] They were then defeated atHalloween Havoc 1990 byTommy Rich andRicky Morton.[9]
On October 29, 1990, the Express showed up to theWorld Wide Wrestling TV tapings in Anderson, South Carolina, only to discover they were not on the card for any of the shows. Since they were not told ahead of time, Eaton was unable to take the day off to spend time with his wife and children. Cornette, already frustrated over what he perceived as the burial of Lane and Eaton by WCW PresidentJim Herd, discovered the next day that the Express was booked for four matches at the October 30World Championship Wrestling TV tapings in Atlanta, Georgia, and they were to lose all of them. After confrontingOle Anderson, the booker at the time, over the scheduling, Cornette was told to "go home" if he disagreed. Calling Anderson's bluff, Cornette walked out of the room and told Lane he was leaving for good. Lane decided that he was going to quit as well, and after they said goodbye to Eaton (who decided to stay due to his family obligations), both men left and began heading north toward Charlotte, North Carolina; it was not until Anderson came looking for Cornette and Lane later that he realized they had quit after questioning Eaton of their whereabouts. So, for the first time in almost a decade, there was no Midnight Express.[5]
The Midnight Express name was resurrected by theWorld Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1998, when they put a combination ofBob Holly (as "Bombastic Bob") andBart Gunn (as "Bodacious Bart") together as "The Midnight Express" with Cornette as their manager[10]—all as part of the"NWA invasion"angle. On March 30, 1998, they won the NWA World Tag Team Championship fromThe Headbangers, but did not achieve much more success in the WWF. Despite the name "Midnight Express" and having Cornette in their corner, in shoot interviews Cornette has indicated that he never considered the team as continuing the lineage of the Midnight Express.[citation needed]
In 2003, Eaton worked for NWA Mid-Atlantic forming a new version of the Midnight Express with Rikki Nelson. This version was short-lived as Eaton soon started working independent wrestling cards with Dennis Condrey, sometimes with Lane and Cornette as well. Often they would be booked in matches against old rivals the Rock 'n' Roll Express, including theNWA 60th Anniversary Show inAtlanta, Georgia on June 7, 2008, and their final match atJCW's "Legends & Icons" show in August 2011.
Wrestlers[edit]
Managers[edit]
|
"At one time, we all dressed in black. We had black Lincolns, black automobiles and everything else, and we were all out until midnight, so we went as the Midnight Express.