Paul Orndorff

Acting

Paul Orndorff

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Oct 29, 1949 (76 years old)

Paul Orndorff

Known For

Biography: 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper
1h 25m
DOLBY
Movie 2021

Biography: 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper

Focuses on 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper, who is universally considered one...

350 Days
2h 5m
DOLBY
Movie 2019

350 Days

Starring former world champions Bret Hart and Billy Graham, 350...

Andre the Giant
1h 25m
DOLBY
Movie 2018

Andre the Giant

An ambitious and wide-ranging documentary exploring Andre’s upbringing in France,...

The True Story of WrestleMania
2h 1m
DOLBY
Movie 2011

The True Story of WrestleMania

It is the most anticipated yearly event in Sports Entertainment,...

Bob Uecker's Wacky World of Sports
29min
DOLBY
Movie 1987

Bob Uecker's Wacky World of Sports

Bob Uecker hosted this show in the mid to late...

WrestleMania 2
3h 1m
DOLBY
Movie 1986

WrestleMania 2

Emanating from New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago, WrestleMania 2...

WrestleMania
1h 54m
DOLBY
Movie 1985

WrestleMania

WrestleMania, sequentially known as WrestleMania I, was a 1985 professional...

Bob Uecker's Wacky World of Sports
28min
DOLBY
Movie 1985

Bob Uecker's Wacky World of Sports

Here is the legendary Bob Uecker hamming it up, commentating...

Biography

Paul Parlette Orndorff Jr., nicknamed "Mr. Wonderful", was an American professional wrestler and college football player, best known for his appearances with WWE and World Championship Wrestling (WCW). After seven years working around the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), Orndorff became a star in the 1980s WWE wrestling boom, and featured with manager Bobby Heenan and champion Hulk Hogan extensively, including in the main events of the first WrestleMania and Survivor Series. With an untreated neck injury, he left WWE for WCW in early 1988, where he won the WCW World Television Championship and the WCW World Tag Team Championship with Paul Roma (as a team called Pretty Wonderful). Arm atrophy from a nagging injury led him to retire in 2000 and he was treated for cancer in 2011. After retiring, he trained aspiring wrestlers. Orndorff was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2005 and the National Wrestling Alliance Hall of Fame in 2009.