'It gave me freedom' - Diversity in the wrestling ring
The Guardian Weekly|September 29, 2023
Tight trousers, bare chest and a mask that, in some cases, never comes off-such is the archetypal figure in Mexico's lucha libre. But in this macho world a group of flamboyant LGBTQ+ wrestlers have not only carved themselves a space, but come out as champions.
Thomas Graham
'It gave me freedom' - Diversity in the wrestling ring

The release of Cassandro, a film starring Gael García Bernal as one of the sport's trailblazing exóticos, has swung the spotlight onto this perhaps unexpected, but thriving, element of Mexico's cultural life.

Exóticos are a decades-old tradition in the sport. The first was Dizzy "Gardenia" Davis, who performed in Arena México - the cathedral of lucha libre - in 1941.

Exóticos were just as athletic as any other wrestler but wore extravagant outfits and makeup, too.

Back then, however, exóticos were just characters to be played in the ring - often for laughs, and often to be vanquished by a more straightforwardly macho character. Even if the wrestlers were gay, they were not open about it.

This began to change in the 80s. "Little by little their homosexuality became more open, and eventually we got wrestlers like Cassandro," said Apolo Valdés, a journalist who has followed the sport for 30 years.

"Cassandro really stood out," Valdés added. "Not least because he was a great wrestler. He earned people's respect and became hugely recognisable."

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