André the Giant

@Professional Wrestler, Birthday and Life

André the Giant was a French professional wrestler and actor

May 19, 1946

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: May 19, 1946
  • Died on: January 27, 1993
  • Nationality: French
  • Famous: Professional Wrestler, Sportspersons, WWE Wrestlers
  • Spouses: Jean Christensen
  • Known as: André René Roussimoff
  • Childrens: Robin Christiansen

André the Giant born at

Coulommiers, Seine-et-Marne

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Birth Place

André the Giant was married to Jean Christensen and the couple had a daughter named Robin.

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Personal Life

André was dubbed as the “greatest drunk on Earth,” as he once drank more than 41 liters of beers within six hours. It was also reported that he once drank 127 beers in a hotel bar in Pennsylvania and passed out in the lobby. The hotel staff were unable to move him, so they decided to leave him there until he woke up.

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Personal Life

André passed away on January 27, 1993, in his hotel room in Paris, due to congestive heart failure. He was in the city to attend his father’s funeral.

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Personal Life

André the Giant was born André René Roussimoff, on May 19, 1946, in Molien, France, to Boris and Mariann. His family worked on the farms and they barely made a living. André showed signs of gigantism very early in his life. Gigantism is an ailment of growth hormones that allows the body to grow beyond normal. He hit the height of 6 feet 3 inches when he was 12 years old, and he never quite stopped growing even after that. This was a strange occurrence, as he had shown no signs of hormonal imbalance when he was a kid.

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Childhood & Early Life

He started attending a local school the age of 6. He was academically brilliant, with math being his favorite subject. He also happened to be good at sports. He was part of the school soccer team. He mostly played as a goalkeeper, as it was almost impossible to get the ball past him. By the time he was 10 years old, he stood at 6 feet. Soon, his parents began worrying about him and feared that there was something wrong with their son.

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Childhood & Early Life

The family owned their own farm, and when his father noticed that André was able to do the work of three men all by himself, he made him quit school. André, too, believed that there was no point in studying any further, as studies were of no use when it came to farming.

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Childhood & Early Life

However, after a few years of working on his family’s farm, André felt that he was not cut out for it. He wished to do something more challenging in life. At the age of 17, he moved to Paris. There, he met a wrestling promoter who thought André had a bright career in professional wrestling. André agreed, and hence began a career that made him one of the most recognizable wrestlers on the planet.

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Childhood & Early Life

He fought for a few months in Paris and places around the city, and this brought him a lot of popularity in Europe. A Canadian promoter named Frank Valois got in touch with him in the mid 1960s. Soon, Frank became André’s representative, and with him, André traveled around quite a lot and made a good name for himself in the UK, Germany, Australia, Africa, and New Zealand.

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Career

In 1970, he entered the Japanese wrestling scene and became a massively popular wrestler, fighting for the ‘International Wrestling Enterprise.’ He performed brilliantly in both one-on-one matches and tag-team matches and soon emerged as a tag-team champion. He returned to Canada in the 1970s and soon defeated Buddy Wolfe in New York’s ‘Madison Square Garden.’

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Career

In 1980, he started a feud with Hulk Hogan, in which he appeared as a hero and Hogan was termed a villain. André won several matches that took place between Hogan and him, and the feud continued in Japan all through the early 1980s.

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Career

In 1982, Vince McMahon Jr. took over the ‘WWF.’ He needed a few new wrestlers to expand his company, and André was one of the very first wrestlers that he signed up. He also made several exceptions for André. After he signed a professional contract with André in 1984, he allowed André to fight in the ‘New Japan Pro Wrestling’ bouts.

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Career

One of André’s most dangerous feuds was the one with Killer Khan, also known as the “Mongolian Giant,” in the early 1980s. “Big John Studd” was another fighter with whom André had a long-standing feud. However, André ended up losing his matches by disqualification. Nobody was able to pin him down. The two of them fought several matches all over the world, many of which were held in Japan and the US.

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Career