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Editor's note:
We've received some really interesting and positive e-mail on the
Ric Flair peacock graphic that occasionally adorns the front of the
Gateway. I thought I'd do a little article on the man behind it and
how that graphic came to be. (I am fascinated by the smallest
details of anything Mid-Atlantic!)
Smoke Filled Rooms
Mid-Atlantic Gateway Lobby
Gateway version of the Peacock graphic occasional used on our splash
page.
Original graphic by Les Thatcher,
enhanced by Dick Bourne.
Les
Thatcher Photos
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“The pride of the Peacock is the glory
of God.”
– William Blake, 19th Century English Poet
Nineteenth century
poet William Blake may have been onto something here in this line
from a proverb he wrote on expression and relationships. The
relationship between Ric Flair and his fans has indeed been a
glorious manifestation of the unique way he has connected with
them over his long career. Even as a “bad guy”, most fans have never
been able to escape the irresistible bad-boy charms of the Nature
Boy. One of those charms has always been his collection of
resplendent robes, especially in the 1970s, early in his career,
something in which he took great pride. It wasn’t long into Flair’s
career that Les Thatcher recognized that Flair’s colorful
robes had become his signature, and he put that to work in one of his
projects.
Les
Thatcher is known within the wrestling industry as one of the most
versatile and creative minds in the business. For over four decades,
he has literally done it all: wrestler, television announcer,
television producer, magazine editor, magazine writer, promoter,
booker, trainer - - you name it, he’s done it, and done it pretty
darn well.
In the 1970s,
Thatcher’s work in television and magazine publishing was cutting
edge for the wrestling business at that time. He hosted and produced
the “Southeastern Championship Wrestling” program in Knoxville TN
for Ron Fuller, and created unique segments for the show, such as
the “Personality Profile”, ideas that had never really been tried
before on wrestling programs. He convinced Jim Crockett Jr. to allow
him to publish an in-house full color wrestling magazine, a risky
prospect unheard of at the time primarily because of the additional
costs involved. Within the pages of those magazines, he would come
up with increasingly clever ideas to feature the wrestlers.
When Ric Flair
exploded onto the national wrestling scene in the mid-1970s, he had
successfully crafted the image of the “Nature Boy”. It wasn’t always
going to be that way. Flair originally wanted to be a cowboy, asking
promoter Verne Gagne if he could be “Cowboy” Ricky Rhodes, and be
billed as the younger brother of his idol at the time, Dusty Rhodes.
In a moment of great wisdom and judgment, Verne emphatically told
him “no”.
The “Nature Boy”
was born a few years later when booker George Scott had a vision of Flair
as the second coming of the flamboyant “Nature Boy” Buddy Rogers, a
former world heavyweight champion and one
of
wrestling’s top stars in the 1960s. Rogers made famous the
peacock-like strut that Flair would later adopt and custom in his
own image.
Flair carried
Scott’s vision, not to mention Roger’s style, to an entirely
different level. He became a peacock, embodied in the
colorful robes he quickly collected in the years following his
return from the 1975 plane crash. Flair commissioned his robes
crafted by the great Olivia Walker who made some of the most famous
robes in wrestling for some of the greatest names in the business.
In fact, one of his most popular robes was a gorgeous creation
adorned in colorful peacock feathers. Sadly, and famously, that robe
was destroyed in the “hat and robe” angle in 1978; Blackjack
Mulligan ripping it to shreds in response to Flair destroying
Mulligan’s cowboy hat given to him by Waylon Jennings.
In 1977, Les Thatcher came up with the idea for Mid-Atlantic Wrestling
magazine to further allow Flair his expression as the most colorful
wrestler in the territory. The famous peacock graphic was born.
Flair at this
point had amassed an impressive collection of robes in many
different designs and colors. Thatcher conceived of a montage of
photographs of Flair in each of his robes, each representing a
single feather in a peacock’s plumage. Here is how Les told me it came
together:
Thatcher brought
photographer Woody Smith into the project. They met at Flair’s house
one afternoon and set up a tripod in the backyard. Smith had Flair
stand in the same spot so that he would be in identical proportion
in each shot. Flair would put a robe on, Smith would take a photo,
Flair would change into the next robe, hit his mark, next photo
taken, and so forth. In all of the photos Flair had his back turned
to the camera, showing off the “Nature Boy” inscribed on each,
except for one. The one photo where Flair faced forward was the one
where he wore that now famous peacock robe. Flair squared with the
camera, arms open wide, seemingly ready at any moment to break into
that famous strut. You can almost hear the “Wooooo!”

Thatcher and art
director Cal Byers took a drawing of a peacock and placed the photos
of Flair inside each of the peacock’s feathers. It was the perfect
way to highlight Flair’s colorful, cocky character and to feature
the robes which had quickly become his trademark.
It was a very
creative idea that resulted in a special graphic image that is still
enjoyed today, and l kept alive forever here on the Mid-Atlantic
Gateway.
- Dick Bourne
Mid-Atlantic Gateway
February 2009

Gateway version of the Peacock graphic occasional used on our splash
page.
Original graphic by Les Thatcher,
enhanced by Dick Bourne.
Copyright © 2009
Mid-Atlantic Gateway |