THIS IS A REVIEW FOR ROWDY: THE RODDY PIPER STORY (2015) as well as IN THE PIT WITH PIPER (2002).THERE ARE MANY SIMILARITIES, SOME REPETITIONS OF STORIES, BUT ALSO SOME QUESTIONABLE INFORMATION from the first book. That's up for you to decide...
"Rowdy" Roddy Piper--one of the biggest names in pro-wrestling--wasn't even named Roddy Piper--it was Roderick George Toombs. He also didn't "hail" from Scotland, but Saskatoon, Saskatchewan in Canada. But, while living in an Indian reservation called La Pas in Manitoba when he was very young, he was taught how to play the bagpipes. Heading out on his own at age 13, he hitchhiked and played the bagpipe for loose change so he could pay to spend the night in a youth hostel. One of the youth hostels had an amateur league coach and Piper excelled.
In early 2015, mostly retired from wrestling and going by his birth name, Roderick Toombs, Roddy began researching his own autobiography with a trip through Western Canada where he had been born. He was re-discovering his youth, a part of his life he had never discussed, sometimes even with his wife, during his 61 years.
Needless to say, Roddy's life had been a difficult one, but a memorable one and he became quite the legion: "the man people loved to hate" since he was good in the ring, but even better on the microphone-adlibbing his lines and getting everyone worked up. This, of course, led to "Piper's Pit"--a brief "talk show" where he "interviewed" other wrestlers using his sharp wit and rapid-fire banter without letting them get a word in edgewise, and then often getting violent. But the audience loved it!
In the book, he talks about his life wrestling, about his family--his wife, Kitty, and his four children--and how difficult it was to balance the two--family and work. He also delved into some very dark places (altho not as deeply as the first book) about how many untimely deaths of so many dear friends and other wrestlers he had lived through.
Roddy's body was physically and emotionally taking its toll as the wrestling and his constant pain was getting to him--as was the death of his friends and colleagues ("Frat Brothers" they called themselves), and he was running out of steam. Even taking some time off to so do a few movies like "Hell Comes to Frog Comes to Frogtown" and John Carpenter's "They Live", he was always drawn back to wrestling. But so much had changed since he'd been gone and now he was seen as "the good guy" while the now all-in-black "Hollywood Hogan", leader of the NWO--the New World Order had gone "to the dark side". And Roddy--now the hero--was expected to saunter in like the new sheriff in town and take control.
And, although he wrestled several more years, time catches up with everyone and the enormous damage done to his body (numerous broken bones, spinal fractures, uncounted--and some undiagnosed--concussions, a plane crash, burns, knife wounds, car accidents, titanium hip replacement, busted eardrum... and so much more...) although his heart wanted to continue, his body finally had to call it quits.
Roddy started writing a second book in Feb 2015-- called "Rowdy: The Roddy Piper Story", although he had stopped using "Rowdy" and had given the namesake of "Rowdy" to UFC star Ronda Rousey. The first book he had written had a lot of "cover story" in it--the things you're not supposed to say about your "character" or what goes on behind the scenes--and he wanted to set things straight, promoters be damned.
And even without wrestling, he still kept busy with the book, but also doing podcasts, even some standup comedy, and charity work involving hospitalized children that he had been doing for decades. And he had been enjoying spending time with his wife and 4 children on their farm in Oregon.
Unfortunately, Roddy never got to finish the book. On Friday, July 31, he died of a heart attack in his sleep in his home in Orgeon. It was then that two of his children, Colt--a professional wrestler--and Ariel--a wrestler, actress and singer--decided to complete the book in his honor. As it says on the back cover: "Piper knew how to keep fans hungry, just as he'd kept them wishing for a complete portrait of his most unusual life. He wanted to write this book for his family, now they have written it for him."
I have loved Roddy Piper whether he was "bad", "good", wrestling, acting, or doing his ad-lib promos. He was truly a "bad guy you loved to hate" and an even better good guy to love. Although most of his movies aren't easy (or impossible)to find except for "They Live", I think he does a pretty good job as a wrestler turned actor. (Not to say he's anything like Dwayne Johnson...) but he did well considering the movies they kind of strapped him with. (Hell Comes to Frogtown comes to mind... what was he thinking?)
Whatever the case, I started watching wrestling, and Piper, in the '80s when I was just in my t'weens but I loved his fearlessness, his attitude, his... his everything. And over the past few years, having read his books, and seeing the DVDs about his life, they make me love him even more to know what a gentle man he really was, considering the life he had to live. May you rest in peace now, Roddy. Blessed be.