
I wrestled singly, and then I teamed up with Tony Altimore, and we wrestled for some 13 years together as a tag team. This is the first time this interview is available in digital form. These excerpts are his thoughts on his wild and wildly successful wrestling career and the acting fame that stemmed from it.

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In this stream of consciousness interview, originally published in my Wrestling- Then & Now sheet, I managed to squeeze in a few questions while "the guiding light," "the manager of champions," "the Captain" regaled me with his thoughts on everything from politics to religion, to his film and charity work, and of course, pro wrestling. The talent-laden but money-losing promotion ran from 1990 until Abrams’s death in 1996. On February 15, 1991, I was honored to interview one of my wrestling heroes in Captain Lou Albano backstage at Herb Abrams ill-fated Universal Wrestling Federation (UWF) TV tapings at the Pental Hotel in New York City.

When a Bruno Sammartino or Chief Jay Strongbow clocked him, and he floundered like a fish out of water on the canvas, the 22,000-strong roared, the building shook, and for that moment, good had triumphed over evil, and all was good in the world.

The mega-heat Lou generated at Madison Square Garden was almost beyond description. If you grew up in the old WWWF territory, the late-great Captain Lou Albano was one of the Three Wise Men of the East, along with Fred Blassie and The Grand Wizard of Wrestling, immortal heel managers who are forever etched in our childhood memories.
