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  • Kenny Casanova: Wrestling’s Carnival Barker Turned Storyteller

Kenny Casanova: Wrestling’s Carnival Barker Turned Storyteller

Posted on July 31, 2025 By admin No Comments on Kenny Casanova: Wrestling’s Carnival Barker Turned Storyteller
Old Time Wrestlers

In the carnival of professional wrestling, there are stars, there are sideshows, and then there are the guys who keep the lights buzzing and the crowds buying tickets. Kenny Casanova was one of those guys. A manager, wrestler, commentator, drag champion, ghostwriter, DJ — the man didn’t just wear many hats, he wore wigs, masks, and sometimes a horseshoe-shaped grin while orchestrating chaos from the corner of the ring.

Casanova, born in May of 1971, carved out a reputation in the Northeast independents as wrestling’s answer to a vaudeville hustler: part con man, part comedian, part genuine antagonist. He was inducted into the New England Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame in 2010, not because he was the best athlete in the room, but because he was the loudest, strangest, and hardest to ignore.


The Early Hustle

Casanova’s first brush with the wrestling world came in 1988, as a high school kid schlepping tickets for a Lou Albano–run fundraiser. By the mid-’90s, he was ring announcing for the WWF and learning his craft under T.C. Reynolds, Tom Brandi, Bam Bam Bigelow, and Jimmy Snuka. He wasn’t chiseling his body into a specimen. He was learning pratfalls, comedy spots, and how to milk a crowd’s attention like it was the last cow in town.

Soon he was managing in the United States Wrestling Federation, leading “Damage Inc” to tag gold and feuding with the likes of Steve Corino and Salvatore Sincere. But managing wasn’t enough. Casanova had a knack for improvisation, for turning the absurd into the main event.


Camp Casanova: A Traveling Freak Show

If Jimmy Hart was the “Mouth of the South,” Kenny Casanova was the Hustler of the Hudson Valley. He surrounded himself with outsize personalities — King Kong Bundy, Brutus Beefcake, H.C. Loc, even a robot named Shockwave. He called it Camp Casanova, and it was part heel stable, part wrestling burlesque.

One infamous night in 1997, Bundy dropped his massive frame on Primo Carnera III, breaking the ring and leaving a crater in the mat. Casanova, ever the opportunist, pivoted instantly: the championship would now be decided in a reversebattle royal, where the first man to crawl into the busted ring would win. Iron Mike Sharpe emerged victorious, and Casanova emerged as the guy who could turn a disaster into a magazine headline.


The Glove, the Mask, the Wig

Casanova’s toolbox of tricks was deeper than most. He didn’t just manage — he wrestled, albeit in ways that stretched the definition. He wrestled under a mask as “The Jive Turkey” Jimmy Giblets. He donned drag as “Kendra Casanova,” beating Miss Patricia and Missy Hyatt to claim the NBW Ladies Championship. He sang karaoke for his entrances, not because anyone asked, but because it was funny and because no one could stop him.

In World of Hurt Wrestling, he created The Pie Mafia, a rotating stable of masked hitmen who would sprint in mid-match to plaster opponents in the face with pies. It was slapstick anarchy, part Three Stooges, part Andy Kaufman, and it kept small-town crowds buzzing about indie shows long after the house lights dimmed.


Behind the Curtain: The Ghostwriter

But Casanova’s strangest, and maybe most enduring, contribution came outside the ring. In the late 2000s, he began ghostwriting autobiographies for wrestling legends whose stories deserved telling. When he donned the Kim Chee mask to manage Kamala on the indie circuit, he forged a bond that would turn into Kamala Speaks, an autobiography that doubled as a Kickstarter to help James Harris cover medical costs after losing both legs to diabetes.

From there, Casanova became wrestling’s literary midwife. He co-wrote Brutus Beefcake’s “Struttin’ & Cuttin’,” Vader’s “Vader Time,” Sabu’s “Scars, Silence, & Superglue,” and Danny Davis’s “Mr. X.” He even had a hand in Buggsy McGraw’s memoir. The man who once wrestled as his own “sister” was suddenly the scribe preserving wrestling’s history, one chaotic life at a time.


The DJ, the Commentator, the Showman

Outside the ropes, Casanova kept spinning plates. He was a DJ, hyping wedding receptions the same way he hyped six-man tag matches. He was a commentator for Tri-State Wrestling’s High Impact TV, giving fans across America the soundtrack of independent grit from 2001 to 2004. He was, in every way, a carny spirit in modern tights — always with a hustle, always with a gag, always with one more outrageous idea to get himself booked.


The Legacy of the Hustler

Kenny Casanova won’t go down in history for five-star classics. He wasn’t a technician, and he didn’t headline Madison Square Garden. But wrestling has always needed men like him — the glue guys, the carnival barkers, the hustlers who keep the tent pitched when the main attractions falter. He could manage a giant, wrestle in drag, announce with a wink, and then go home to ghostwrite the legends who sold out arenas.

In a business where everyone takes themselves too seriously, Casanova leaned hard into the absurd. He turned pies, wigs, and karaoke into a career. And when his time inside the ring wound down, he picked up a pen and helped the broken bodies of wrestling’s past have a voice.

In that sense, Kenny Casanova may not just be remembered as a manager or a wrestler — but as the guy who proved that wrestling’s greatest weapon isn’t always muscle or charisma. Sometimes, it’s the ability to keep the circus moving.

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