First Family (professional wrestling)

The First Family was the name of three professional wrestling stables led by Jimmy Hart, first in the late-1970s and early-1980s in the Memphis, Tennessee-based Continental Wrestling Association, then in the late-1980s in the World Wrestling Federation, and finally in the late-1990s in World Championship Wrestling.[1]

First Family
Stable
MembersJimmy Hart (manager)
CWA - See Below
WCW - See Below

Incarnations

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Continental Wrestling Association

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The original First Family was founded in the late 1970s by Hart to take the CWA title from his former protégé, Jerry Lawler. The group extensively feuded with Lawler into the 1980s, a time particularly remembered for comedian Andy Kaufman's rivalry with Lawler.

Members

World Wrestling Federation

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In 1985, When Hart got hired by WWF, he began becoming a manager of wrestlers including Greg Valentine and King Kong Bundy. He briefly co-managed The Dream Team (Beefcake and Valentine) until he was phased out and gave full control to Johnny Valiant. In September 1985, Hart traded Bundy to manager Bobby Heenan in exchange for Adrian Adonis and The Missing Link.

Members

World Championship Wrestling

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Many years later, after the demise of the Dungeon of Doom in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in 1997, Hart resurrected the First Family concept the following year, bringing together several mid-card performers. This short-lived group featured entirely different wrestlers than the Memphis version of the 1970s and included former Dungeon members.

They frequently appeared on WCW programs including WCW Monday Nitro and primarily feuded with Fit Finlay.[2] Hugh Morrus and Brian Knobbs often tagged together, defeating members of Revolution at 1999's Fall Brawl and making a losing effort in a three-way WCW World Tag Team Championship contest at Halloween Havoc.

With an instrumental version of "The Zoo" as their entrance theme, the stable featured a variety of colorful wrestling personalities with unique ring styles: Jerry Flynn demonstrated martial arts strikes and submissions while Brian Knobbs utilized a rougher brawling style. Considering publicity photos were taken of the group, WCW's First Family was likely intended for a substantial run; however, according to Hart, the group quickly disbanded due to injuries sustained by numerous members as well as new bookers hired by WCW. In the aftermath of The First Family, Knobbs and Hart pursued WCW's hardcore scene that was on the rise in late-1999.

Members

Championships and accomplishments

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Continental Wrestling Association

Notes

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  1. ^ "Jimmy Hart profile". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
  2. ^ a b c d e "First Family (WCW) profile". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2009-09-04.