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Gay in the
Ring
'The more popular I got, the more miserable I
got,' wrestler saysBy
Ross Forman
Special to
Outsports.com |
Chris Klucsarits
is the real name of Chris Kanyon, a pro wrestler who’s shined under
the national spotlight since 1995. Kanyon has worked for the three
major domestic federations: now-defunct World Championship Wrestling
(WCW), World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and Total Nonstop Action
(TNA).
He had a six-digit salary for years, a luxurious home in Atlanta and
worldwide fans and fame. During the summer of 2001, he was the WWE’s
United States Champion and, simultaneously, the WWE World Tag Team
Champion (with Diamond Dallas Page). Kanyon was leading the good
life, a rare champion with two titles at the same time.
But Klucsarits’ real life was hell. He was gay, closeted in an
ultra-macho profession, an emotional wreck.
Klucsarits recently revealed his homosexuality and, in his first
interview, talks with Chicago-based writer Ross Forman about his
closeted past, his suicide attempt and a promising future as an only
openly gay male athlete. (Professional wrestling is more
sports-entertainment, but the athleticism needed to excel in pro
wrestling certainly is real.)
Chris Klucsarits
didn’t know how people became straight, or if there was such a
process. He just knew that, at age 5, he was obsessed with a male
friend of the family. The boy was good-looking, athletic, and a
little older than him, Klucsarits recalls of his earliest same-sex
interest.
“I don’t know why I thought this, but, I thought that once you
kissed your first girl, it’d be like a light-switch and you’d turn
straight,” he said.
So
Klucsarits went for that first kiss at about age 11 while living in
Queens, N.Y. He went roller-skating with his buddies, like normal,
and found the girl who was going to be the one. He eventually skated
her home and then, ironically, standing in the gutter while she was
on the curb so as to not tower over her, they kissed.
“But there were no fireworks,” Klucsarits said.
They parted ways minutes later and, about a block away, Klucsarits
realized, “I was gay, that I would be gay for the rest of my life
and that my life would not be easy.”
He cried on the way home. He even had to stop to re-gain his
composure before returning home.
“The next three or four months were brutal; they were really hard
because I knew I was not like everyone else,” he said.
Klucsarits, 36, attended the University of Buffalo, where he played
on the rugby club and eventually graduated in 1992 with a physical
therapy degree. He spent the next three years as a physical
therapist, eventually quitting to join World Championship Wrestling
in May 1995. WCW – since purchased and disbanded by its competition,
World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) – was an Atlanta-based company
owned by TV mogul Ted Turner, featuring such superstars as Hulk
Hogan, Randy “Macho Man” Savage, Ric Flair, Sting and others.
Klucsarits wrestled worldwide for WCW until its final days in March
2001. In May 2001, he joined the WWE, where he worked until February
2004. He wrestled for Total Nonstop Action (TNA) in late-2005.
So why now? Why come out now?
“The time just seemed right,” he said. “I’ve come to terms with it
and want to help others.
“People cannot say I’m just doing to make a name for myself; I’ve
already made a name for myself. I’ve already accomplished almost
every one of my goals in wrestling. I wanted to hold championship
belts in the major federations, and I have. I wanted to wrestle at
Madison Square Garden (in New York City), the mecca of the sports
world, and I have. The only professional goals I have not obtained
yet are: be the World Heavyweight Champion and wrestle at or
headline a WrestleMania.
“Coming out isn’t about me. This is, hopefully, about helping
others, especially kids, who are struggling with their sexuality. I
want to be a role-model to them, someone they can look up to.”
And not just because he’s a muscled 6’5", 250-pounder whose
friendly, outgoing personality can, at times, be hidden behind the
gruff, cocky wrestling persona.
During the summer of 2001, Kanyon was at the pinnacle of his career,
the WWE’s reigning United States Champion and the WWE’s World Tag
Team Champion. He was preparing for an August pay-per-view match
against The Undertaker and Kane in California.
But Klucsarits was miserable. “All I could think of was, how alone I
was,” he said. “I had no one to call, no one to check in with, no
one to tell my problems to, no one to be there for me.
“The better my career got, the more miserable I got personally
because I had no one to share it with. Eventually, I started blaming
wrestling because, in my mind, it was wrestling that forced me into
the closet.”
He hit rock-bottom two years later, attempting suicide in September
2003 by swallowing 50 sleeping pills.
Klucsarits immediately went into therapy, hoping to come to terms
with his sexuality, “which was the cause of my depression, the
reason I attempted suicide.”
He was diagnosed as bi-polar.
“I know that, if I had gay role-models to look up to as a kid, I
might not have forced myself into the closet,” Klucsarits said. “I
knew when I was 11-years-old that my sexuality was something I
needed to keep secret from everyone, and I never re-visited that
until after the suicide attempt.”
After the suicide attempt, Klucsarits researched homosexuality. He
wanted to know why some people were homosexual, why society is so
against it.
The first time
Klucsarits had
walked the dog that Friday night and was heading home at about 11:30
p.m., when he noticed someone following him. Klucsarits thought the
guy was checking him out and Klucsarits also was checking out the
“good-looking kid.”
When he got home, Klucsarits looked out the upstairs window and
again spotted the guy staring at him. So Klucsarits went back
outside, but didn’t see him immediately.
They eventually bumped into each other at a nearby park where
Klucsarits hung out with his friends on a daily basis. In the back
of the park, by the monkey-bars, they started messing around,
Klucsarits said.
“My heart was pounding. I was scared and guilt already was setting
in,” said Klucsarits, 17 at the time. “I thought I’d burn in hell
for what I was doing, because that’s what I had always been taught
happens to homosexuals.”
Out of the corner of his eye, Klucsarits noticed a friend walking
into the park. They hid as his friend, ironically, walked next to
the monkey-bars before leaving the park.
Klucsarits immediately and abruptly ended his first homosexual
experience and told the companion that they couldn’t do anything
else – that night or ever. In fact, Klucsarits even told him, ‘If
you ever see me again, do not approach me. If I want to approach
you, I will. But do not approach me. My friends know all of my other
friends, so if some stranger approached, I know they’d be curious.’”
The next day, the stranger was back and approached Klucsarits in
front of his friends – against Klucsarits’ demands.
And he snapped, pulling the stranger away from his friends.
“I told him, ‘If I ever again even see you at this park, I will kill
you,’ ” Klucsarits said. “I was that paranoid (about being out-ed)
that I threatened murder.”
Klucsarits never saw him again.
“In my heart, I knew what I did in the park that night was right,
what I wanted to do. But, I kept hearing for years that
homosexuality was wrong,” he said.
Klucsarits had several homosexual encounters in college, but it was
difficult because, remember, that was in the pre-Internet era.
Klucsarits also had homosexual encounters with one of his rugby
teammates.
In May 1996, while living in a new Atlanta apartment, Klucsarits
bought his first computer. “That’s when I realized the Internet may
be the easiest, and best, way for me to at least quench my urges. I
wasn’t looking for a boyfriend at the time; I was just looking for
(a one-night stand),” he said.
Kanyon was a rising TV celebrity in the mid- to late-1990s. WCW
aired on SuperStation WTBS and syndicated worldwide. Kanyon was on
TV several times per weekend.
But Klucsarits was way too nervous to picture himself online in the
gay community. So he used someone else’s partially obscured
face-photo and claimed it was his. “I did not feel comfortable
sending my face picture via email, just in case I was recognized,”
he said. “I was never called out for the picture not looking like
me.”
In 1998, Kanyon was one of the main trainers for Jay Leno when the
late-night talk show host stepped into the ring for a WCW match. He
also had helped train NBA superstars Karl Malone and Dennis Rodman
for their in-ring runs.
Plus, Klucsarits was an integral part – on and off camera – for the
wrestling movie "Ready To Rumble."
In 1999, Kanyon won the WCW World Tag Team Championship when a trio
known as the Jersey Triad – New Jersey natives and longtime friends
Kanyon, Diamond Dallas Page and Bam Bam Bigelow – won the gold.
“When the homosexuality was getting me down, when I was really
struggling with my identity and self-confidence, I could tell. My
work-rate, my ability in the ring really suffered,” Klucsarits said.
“I was in a catch-22. The more popular I got, the more miserable I
got. I always thought I could do so much better if I could just come
clean, be who I was. But I couldn’t.
“Everyone is looking for a significant-other, be it a man or a
woman, in their life. There were times I thought I’d never find one,
especially with the profession I was in. I always thought if (my
sexuality) got out, I’d get in trouble or get fired.”
Klucsarits heard regular locker room slurs directly at homosexuals,
“but I didn’t know if they really meant what they were saying, or
just saying things to fit in.” He said his homosexuality was never
an issue among the other wrestlers.
“It’s hard enough being on the road normally, as we were, sometimes
as much as 30 days a month, but then the pressure of not knowing if
in fact these people are your friends makes it even harder.”
Since coming out, Klucsarits said it’s been “no big deal” among the
wrestlers he’s long been friends with. He has not had any negative
responses from other wrestlers, “at least not to my face,” he said.
Klucsarits said since coming out he’s “a million percent happier,”
and is appreciative for all of the overwhelmingly supportive fans
who he’s spoken with and others who have e-mailed him.
“I want to help people who are struggling with their sexuality,
especially kids. I want to be a role-model,” he said. “I hope
someday being gay is thought of in the same sense as being
left-handed … no big deal.”
Klucsarits, who eventually plans to write a book, said he is not
dating anyone now. “But I definitely have a lot more gay friends
today than I did a month ago,” he said, laughing.
Related:
Kanyon discusses his coming out on the Outsports message board
March 31, 2006 |