- Marianna Komlos
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Marianna Komlos Ring name(s) Marianna
Mrs. CleavageBilled height 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) Billed weight 135 lb (61 kg) Born September 3, 1969
Vancouver, British Columbia, CanadaDied September 26, 2004 (aged 35)Debut 1999 Retired 1999 Marianna Komlos (September 3, 1969 – September 26, 2004) was a Canadian bodybuilder, fitness model and Valet. She is perhaps best known for her stint in World Wrestling Federation in 1999 as Marianna and [1]"Mrs. Cleavage" Where she was the Manager and "mother" for a wrestler known as "Beaver Cleavage" a parody of the TV show Leave It To Beaver.
Contents
Bodybuilding career
Before she started bodybuilding, Komlos weighed as much as 197 pounds (89 kg). Komlos started competing in provincial contests in 1993, and eventually won the middleweight class at the British Columbia Championships in 1997. Jerry Kindela, editor-in-chief of Flex, said, "Marianna's one of the most beautiful bodybuilders I've ever seen." (Wennerstrom, 2004)
Komlos appeared on the covers of many fitness magazines including Muscle & Fitness (September, 1997), Flex (November, 1997), Women's Physique World (December, 1997), and Natural Bodybuilding & Fitness.
Contest history
- 1996 Gators Classic (Vancouver, BC) - 1st (LW and Overall)
- 1997 British Columbia Championship - 1st (MW) and Best Poser
- 1997 Women's Extravaganza - 1st (MW)
Personal life
She married mixed martial artist and stunt performer Paul Lazenby in 2004.[2]
Death
Komlos died on September 26, 2004 from breast cancer. She was 35.
References
- ^ http://www.obsessedwithwrestling.com/profiles/m/marianna-komlos.php
- ^ In 2003 I had the best year of my life, working non-stop on blockbusters such as "I, Robot" and "The Chronicles of Riddick". I also met and married former WWE diva Marianna Komlos, although we would be together for barely a year before breast cancer and medical malpractice claimed her life on September 26, 2004.
- Wennerstrom, Steve, "Marianna Komlos Remembered", Flex, December, 2004
External links
Categories:- 1969 births
- 2004 deaths
- Sportspeople from British Columbia
- Canadian bodybuilders
- Canadian female models
- Canadian sportswomen
- Female bodybuilders
- Deaths from breast cancer
- People from Vancouver
- Professional wrestling managers and valets
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