Blimp Levy
Quick Facts
Biography
Martin Levy (c 1903 – November 8, 1961), better known by his ring name Blimp Levy or simply The Blimp, was an American professional wrestler who was a major attraction on the wrestling circuit in the 1930s and ‘40s. Regarded as the largest wrestler of his time, the Boston Globe stated “there’s no one challenging his claim to being the world’s biggest", whilst the New York World-Telegram called Levy “the most meat which ever stepped into a ring.”. In his heyday, Promoter Jack Pfefer stated that "no living wrestler today can outdraw the human Blimp."
Early life
Levy was born and raise in Boston. A large person from his early days, Levy (who was Jewish) weighed 200lbs at his bar mitzvah and over 350lbs during high school. He had a brief stint playing football but had to leave his school team after injuring several opponents and linesmen. Prior to entering professional wrestling, Levy worked as part of a side show.
Professional wrestling career
Levy was discovered by prominent wrestling promoter Jack Pfefer while he was working as 'the fat man' in a Coney Island side show. Pfefer would promote Levy into the 1930s and 40s. Though famed for his massive bulk, fellow wrestler Paul Boesch stated in his autobiography that Levy was surprisingly agile for his size. Boesch recalled a story of Levy successfully kicking a metal can which was dangling approximately six feet off the ground. Levy was able to tap the can with his foot while standing, which impressed his fellow wrestlers, many of whom could not do it themselves without falling.
Levy wrestled throughout the United States territories, defeating wrestlers such as Tor Johnson, Nature Boy Buddy Rogers and Gorgeous George. Pfefer also pitched Levy to promoters in Australia, stating in 1948 that "all that you have to do is use him as an extra few minutes exhibition and I am more than sure that the Blimp will sell out every arena...as he has proven that in this country".
On January 21, 1947 in Baltimore, Levy wrestled boxer-turned-wrestler Primo Carnera, who had been boxing's World Heavyweight Champion from 1933-1934.
During his career, Levy was interview for and featured in various national US magazines and newspapers, including the October 1936 edition of Time Magazine.
Later Life and Death
By the mid-1940s Levy’s health was failing. The Connecticut State Athletic Commission revoked his professional wrestling license on the recommendation of physicians who examined him. Follow this, Levy briefly performed abroad in Malaysia and Singapore, wrestling Dara Singh amongst other famed South Asian wrestlers.
Levy’s career came to an end around 1950 and he died in 1961 in his Alabama trailer park home at the age of 56, reportedly weighing 900 pounds.
Personal life
Levy married several times during his lifetime. He married Charlotte Jones in 1946 in Dallas, Texas. A few years prior, he had married Juanita Thomas. Unbeknownst to Levy, Thomas was already married at the time. Though separated, she had never obtained a divorce. The relationship ended in 1945, with Levy stating that Thomas was physically abusive towards him.
In an interview with the Washington Post in 1946, Levy discussed the eating habits which contributed to his size. He stated that some mornings he would "eat a dozen eggs, and then again, sometimes only two. Sometimes I eat six pounds of steak, and then I might eat a pound.” He also spoke of eating large amounts of mashed potato, requiring a half bushel of potatoes a pound of butter and two quarts of milk.
Legacy
One of the early Jew's in professional wrestling, Levy was honoured as part of the Yiddish Fight Club exhibit at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in Manhattan, New York. He is regarded as one of the first "giants" of professional wrestling, paving the way for similar attractions like Giant Haystacks and Man Mountain Mike.
In wrestling
- Nicknames
- The Miniature Mastadon
- The Boston Pachyderm
- The Human Blimp
- Managers
- Jack Pfefer