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William Moody (April 10 1954), known professionally as Percy Pringle, is a professional wrestling manager. He is best known as Paul Bearer in World Wrestling Entertainment.
CareerEarly career
In 1984, he resumed full-time involvement in the wrestling business, using his Pringle character in Florida Championship Wrestling, World Class Championship Wrestling in Texas, and the United States Wrestling Association (a successor to WCCW). During this time, he served as manager for numerous wrestlers and notably was manager for Lex Luger, Steve Austin, and Mark Calaway (who would become The Undertaker) in their first professional matches of their careers. As Percy Pringle, he was also associated with the careers of "Ravishing Rick" Rude, Eric Embry, and The Ultimate Warrior. He was also the manager of WWE's Undertaker. World Wrestling FederationPringle joined the World Wrestling Federation in December 1990, after being mentioned by Rick Rude to WWF owner Vince McMahon. McMahon used Pringle's real-life involvement in the funeral industry to create the character of Paul Bearer (a pun on pallbearer), the manager of The Undertaker. Paul Bearer made his first appearance in January 1991, and Pringle played the character for over thirteen years. As Undertaker's manager, as a heel and later a face, for over five years, he was a mentor, friend, and keeper of the urn from which Undertaker drew strength. Bearer also hosted the WWF interview show entitled 'The Funeral Parlor', which included memorable segments such as the Ultimate Warrior being locked inside a casket, among others. Eventually Bearer turned heel again by betraying his long-time friend at SummerSlam 1996 to align himself with Undertaker's enemy Mankind. During this time Bearer would also enlist the services of The Executioner and Vader to do battle against the Undertaker. Later, Paul Bearer also went on to bring Undertaker's "half-brother" Kane (who was eventually billed as Bearer's illegitimate son through Undertaker's mother) to the WWF, which led to a bitter rivalry. During that time he changed his looks, shedding the makeup of ghostly pallor and jet-black hair in favor of brown hair and less make-up. Paul and Undertaker became a team once again as heels towards the end of 1998 under the Ministry of Darkness until his departure from the WWF in September 1999 as a result of an injury. In early 2000, Bearer, who turned face once more briefly, returned to WWF TV as now-face Kane's manager, but he retired from on-screen performing shortly after WrestleMania 2000. Later that year, Pringle went backstage to serve as a WWF road agent, stage manager, and talent scout. His contract with WWE ended in October 2002; he spent the next year working with Total Nonstop Action Wrestling. In October 2003, he signed a new three-year contract with WWE. At that time, Pringle was suffering from health problems and depression related to his morbid obesity and underwent gastric bypass surgery in November 2003. As a signing bonus, WWE agreed to help pay for the surgery. After recovering, he reappeared as Paul Bearer in March 2004 at WrestleMania XX, alongside Undertaker in the latter's match, which was coincidentally against Kane.
For the June 27 2004 PPV The Great American Bash, a match pitting Undertaker against both of the Dudley Boyz was booked. Paul Bearer would be encased in a glass crypt backstage, covered up to his chest in cement. In the storyline, Heyman demanded that Undertaker throw the match or else see Bearer suffocated in cement. By the time of the PPV, Pringle had recovered from his latest operation and would appear on-screen. Undertaker won the match but proceeded afterwards to pull the lever that sent cement into the crypt, completely burying Paul Bearer and, in kayfabe terms, suffocating him. (Pringle was in the crypt throughout the event but was replaced with a stunt double for the burial (who when having huge plants on him, it appears that isn't Bearer because he appears younger). This shot ended the PPV and caused numerous complaints toward WWE, as in essence they had shown a (kayfabe) murder. However, the live audience saw an extended ending in which Bearer surfaced for air and was carried from the arena on a stretcher. On the following week's SmackDown!, Bearer was acknowledged to be alive, although gravely injured, for kayfabe purposes. However, having two years remaining on his contract, Pringle's WWE career wasn't over; he was used as a booker for the company up until WWE decided to terminate his contract, giving him ninety days notice on April 11 2005. On June 10 2005, Pringle announced that he had signed a new deal with WWE which would allow WWE to market his persona and which would involve him attending autograph sessions and making promotional appearances. Such an appearance occurred in late January 2007 at a SmackDown!/ECW live event in Mobile, Alabama, where he joined the Brothers of Destruction at ringside, wearing his Paul Bearer attire, and carrying the original urn. He later commented on the event in his blog. Pringle's health has greatly improved since his surgery. His official site has a page featuring pictures of him, one taken the night before his bypass surgery and a second taken on the first anniversary of the operation. One year later, he admitted in an entry on his blog that he had weighed 525 pounds (238 kg) before the operation but is now under 300 pounds (136 kg). In November 2005, Pringle returned to the Millennium Wrestling Federation [1] where he turned heel and helped "Sudden Impact" Dylan Kage retain the MWF Heavyweight Championship over "Latin Fury" Luis Oritz in Lynn, MA. The following weekend at the MWF's Paul Bearer Appreciation Night, it was revealed that he was the money man and leader of The Trifecta (Kage along with Jimmy Jact Cash and "Hoochie Playa" Danny Jaxx). He has been a regular with the promotion at their live events and television programs [2] since. Pringle has started his own independent promotion, known as Gulf South Wrestling. In September and October 2005 he conducted three shoot interviews for Ring of Honor. Two were done exclusively about him, talking about his career in wrestling. The third was with friend and fellow wrestling manager Jim Cornette. He has also returned fulltime to the funeral business, as he manages a Funeral Home, Crematory, and Cemetery complex along the Gulf Coast. Wrestlers managed
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