ESPN's Ric Flair 30 for 30 'Nature Boy' provides insight into the wrestling legend's life
Posted: Oct 9th 2017 By: SI.com
What is always interesting about professional wrestlers—and particularly the stars of the 1980s and 1990s— is where the distinction lies (if any) between the in-ring character and the real man. The terrific journalist David Shoemaker examined this duality in his sensational 2011 piece on Randy (Macho Man) Savage, and if ever someone’s on-screen “Nature Boy” persona blended into his real life, from self-
destructive behavior to high living to repeated bouts with legal authorities, it would be Ric Flair, born Richard Morgan Fliehr in 1949. He lived his gimmick, which in his own words, became his disease.
That theme is at the crux of an outstanding ESPN Films 30 for 30 documentary on Flair that debuts on Nov. 7 at 10 p.m. ET on ESPN. “Nature Boy” is titled after the character Flair portrayed in the ring over multiple decades in sports entertainment, a Rolex-wearing, diamond ring-wearing, kiss stealing (Woooooo!), wheelin dealin, limousine riding, jet flying son of a gun. Directed by Rory Karpf, who has
multiple ESPN documentaries on his credits including the excellent “I Hate Christian Laettner” and “The Book Of Manning,” the film (which will run 90 minutes, with commercials and the director’s intro and director’s feature) examines Flair’s obsession with being the man inside and outside the ring, and what Richard Fliehr lost in that transaction.
“Ric said he could never live with being a man,” says Karpf. “That is the conundrum that is Ric Flair. That is what Ric Flair is about: The Man vs. a man.”
I screened the film last week. “Nature Boy” opens with the now 68-year-old Flair in the center of a smoky wrestling ring, narrating the central theme of his life. “Wrestling was my love,” Flair says. “The Nature Boy was my wrestling character. The Nature Boy wasn’t fake. The Nature Boy was me. I have sacrificed everything for wrestling. I always wanted to be The Man. I could never live just being a man. I
gave my entire life to the wrestling business. I paid the price. I am the Nature Boy.”
Karpf said he interviewed 46 people for the doc (the filming started in Sept. 2015 and post-production ended this month) and what he pulled from pro wrestling icons such as Ricky Steamboat, Hulk Hogan and Shawn Michaels is particularly compelling. (Karpf said the only people from the wrestling world he wanted for the film but failed to get were Steve Austin, Paul Heyman and The Rock.)
The film includes multiple interviews with Flair over a two- year period, all three of Flair’s living children including daughter Ashley, who wrestles in the WWE under the name of Charlotte, and a host of retired wrestlers including Hogan, Michaels, Steamboat, Sting, Triple H, The Undertaker, Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard. Other interviews include Hall of Fame announcer Jim Ross, as well as Flair’s first wife,
Leslie Jacobs, who provides in stark reality the damage Flair did to his home life through his infidelity and lack of interest in raising his eldest children. Karpf interviewed Jacobs for two hours at Karpf’s home in Charlotte. She had never been interviewed on camera prior to this film and provides the nexis between Richard Fliehr and Ric Flair.
Karpf said he screened the film for Flair three weeks ago while Flair was recuperating last month at a hospital in Atlanta. The 68-year-old underwent surgery in August to relieve an intestinal blockage, which required the removal of a portion of his bowel. Flair experienced significant complications during that procedure and was believed to be close to death. Flair has since recovered, and left the hospital. He plans to be at the premiere of the film in Atlanta next month. “He really liked it a lot and feels it is an honest portrayal of him,” Karpf said. “It has the good, the bad and the ugly.”
Karpf said that he would address Flair’s latest hospital stay in a director’s statement that will run as an
interstitial between segments of the film. “We wanted the film to be evergreen,” Karpf said. “While it is definitely newsworthy, it isn’t really what the film is about. The thing with his health is that he made it, he lived. If he had passed away, obviously we would have included that.”
The most dramatic moment of the documentary comes when Flair painfully discusses Reid Flair, his youngest son who died at 25 of a combination of heroin and prescription drugs in 2013. Reid was found dead by Ric in a hotel suite in Charlotte. Asked what he would say to his son today if he could, Flair breaks down and says, “I regret the fact that sometimes I was your best friend instead of your Dad.”
Those close to Flair are honest about his strengths and weaknesses. Triple H discusses forcing him to get help for his alcohol problem and says he uses Flair as an example for young wrestlers that you can have it all but still end up in a precarious spot. Ashley Flair talks about the assuming the burden of Reid’s and Ric’s wrestling dreams (“I am living vicariously through her right now,” says Ric. The greatest
moment of my wrestling career was Ashley winning that title.”) Hogan is remarkably honest and deferential about Flair’s influence on wrestling and where he ranks him all- time. (There’s a big reveal that Hogan makes but I won’t spoil it for you here.) The film does a terrific job explaining how Flair developed his in-ring and promotional genius as The Nature Boy.
Few performers were as good as selling for their opponents and this promo is one of the greatest in the history of pro wrestling (start at 3:10).
The most revealing interview of all, though, turns out to be with Michaels, who famously wrestled Flair in a 20-minute “Career-Threatening Match” at WrestleMania 24 in 2008 in Orlando.
“Ric doesn’t love Richard Fliehr,” Michaels says. “I don’t know that he’s ever taken the time to get to know him or to find out who in the world he is. He only knows who he is through the image and gimmick of Ric Flair. Because when everything is said and done, The Nature Boy Ric Flair is just a myth. Richard Fliehr is a real guy.”
If you are looking for small quibbles, there’s an overreliance on animation early on and Karpf glosses over a lot of the details in this seminal Grantland piece on Flair’s financial issues. “We definitely touched on it and you know he has had financial problems,” Karpf said. “We don’t necessarily get into the details of the Grantland piece. If you do that, you already have an emotional section with Reid. To me, I made a choice and you can agree or disagree with it. That was the ultimate price he paid. A lot
of athletes have financial problems. I think that Ric’s son trying to live a lifestyle that he lived as an example and passing away for it, what greater price can a guy pay?”
Karpf said one of his filmmaker dreams was to do a wrestling-based 30 for 30 for ESPN, and one of the reasons it happened was that Flair’s interview for his Laettner doc really resonated on social media, according to ESPN’s research. That helped convince ESPN Films executive John Dahl to give the standalone Flair project the green light.
“I love wrestling and I am so in awe of the talent of those athletes—and I do think they are athletes,” Karpf says. “I wanted to give it just due and try to explain a little how it works and what makes a good wrestler. As for Ric, I leave that up to viewers. I don’t want to tell someone what to think of someone. A lot of it is open for interpretation.Two people can watch the same thing and think someone is a villain or hero.”
It’s a compelling watch, and particularly so for anyone who is a fan of professional wrestling.
Supplemental Information
Latest News
AJ Styles says WWE needs to capitalize on Chad Gable’s newfound momentum
AJ Styles is pushing for WWE to do more with one specific wrestler. On his Phenomenally Retro... Read More
The Scoop
NEWS Speaking on his podcast this week, Rikishi revealed that he finally feels like WWE is listening to his ideas and vision for the future of his family... Read More
Carlito talks departing WWE, time in Judgment Day, Bron Breakker spear, and more
Former WWE Superstar Carlito sat down with Chris Van Vliet in Indianapolis, IN to discuss ... Read More
Spotlight in History
- 1959 The Golden Giant became the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
- 1966 Johnny Valentine def. Fritz Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Title
- 1980 The Fabulous Freebirds (Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts) def. Junkyard Dog & Buck Robley for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Titles
- 1989 Jeff Jarrett & Mil Mascaras def. Super Zodiac & Cactus Jack for the WCCW World Tag Team Titles
- 2017 The Rising (Matt Durden & Riker) def. Team Dean Machine (Christopher Dean & Jerry Dean) for the BPPW Oklahoma Tag Team Titles
- 2023 Koko became the CPW Heavyweight Champion
- 2023 The Regime (Derek James & Logan Knight & Merc & Skylar Slice/Sgt. Slice) def. The Roll Modelz (Malik Mayfield & Olivier Vegos) for the CPW Tag Team Titles
- 2023 Mr. Nasty def. Mascara Purpura for the CPW 918 Title
- 2023 Red James def. Mr. Nasty for the CPW 918 Title
Week of Sun 06-07 to Sat: 06-13
- 06-07 1969 Jose Lothario def. Johnny Valentine for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Title
- 06-07 2008 Ky-ote Johammed def. Dane Griffin for the 3DW Violent Division Title
- 06-07 2008 Mo'Body Gillespie def. Ky-ote Johammed for the 3DW Violent Division Title
- 06-07 2013 Bobby Starr def. Steven Sterling for the ComPro Showtime Title
- 06-07 2013 Ignition def. Super Skunk Ape, Jr. for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Title
- 06-07 2013 The Canadian Red Devil def. Michael York for the ComPro Heavyweight Title
- 06-07 2014 Steven Sterling def. Sam Stackhouse for the ComPro Showtime Title
- 06-07 2014 Jake O'Brien def. The Canadian Red Devil for the ComPro Heavyweight Title
- 06-07 2014 Terry Montana def. Ignition for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Title
- 06-07 2014 Havoc def. Buster Cherry for the SWCW All-American Title
- 06-07 2014 Rick Russo def. David Kyzer for the SWCW Luchadore Title
- 06-07 2014 Kevin James Sanchez def. Kareem Sadat for the SWCW Hardcore Title
- 06-07 2014 Kareem Sadat def. Kevin James Sanchez for the SWCW Hardcore Title
- 06-07 2014 Terry Pantera became the BPPW Junior Heavyweight Champion
- 06-07 2025 Frankie Lee def. K. J. Gold for the RDW Iron Man Title
- 06-08 1959 Frankie Kovacs & Jerry Miller def. Pretty Boy Collins & Duke Scarbo for the TSW Louisiana Tag Team Titles
- 06-08 2013 L. J. McDaniels became the SWCW Hardcore Champion
- 06-08 2013 Hurricane Ross def. Billy Ray for the NAW Heavyweight Title
- 06-08 2019 Michael Duplanti def. Anarchy [2nd] for the NAW Lightweight Title
- 06-08 2019 Big Smooth def. Hurricane Ross for the NAW Heavyweight Title
- 06-08 2024 Billie the Kiid became the NAW Indigenous Land Champion
- 06-08 2024 Daniel Aaron Michalles def. Pastor Brent for the WAH Hunger Dojo Title
- 06-08 2024 Eddie LeVaughn def. Romeo Reese for the WAH Heavyweight Title
- 06-08 2024 Michael Duplanti became the NAW Openweight Champion
- 06-08 2024 Speeding Bullet (Mike Gunnz & Stephen Nitro) def. The Texas Outlaws (Bobby Burns & Manico) for the NAW Tag Team Titles
- 06-09 1959 The Golden Giant became the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
- 06-09 1966 Johnny Valentine def. Fritz Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Title
- 06-09 1980 The Fabulous Freebirds (Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts) def. Junkyard Dog & Buck Robley for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Titles
- 06-09 1989 Jeff Jarrett & Mil Mascaras def. Super Zodiac & Cactus Jack for the WCCW World Tag Team Titles
- 06-09 2017 The Rising (Matt Durden & Riker) def. Team Dean Machine (Christopher Dean & Jerry Dean) for the BPPW Oklahoma Tag Team Titles
- 06-09 2023 Koko became the CPW Heavyweight Champion
- 06-09 2023 The Regime (Derek James & Logan Knight & Merc & Skylar Slice/Sgt. Slice) def. The Roll Modelz (Malik Mayfield & Olivier Vegos) for the CPW Tag Team Titles
- 06-09 2023 Mr. Nasty def. Mascara Purpura for the CPW 918 Title
- 06-09 2023 Red James def. Mr. Nasty for the CPW 918 Title
- 06-10 1979 Bruiser Brody def. Mark Lewin for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
- 06-10 1985 Tim Brooks def. Scott Casey for the WCCW Television Title
- 06-10 2006 Dexter Hardaway became the AACW Mid-American Light Heavyweight Champion
- 06-10 2023 MLP became the XDWF New GenX Champion
- 06-11 1984 Chris Adams became the WCCW Television Champion
- 06-11 2009 Sage became the SWCW Art of War Champion
- 06-11 2011 Jake O'Brien def. Robbie Awesome for the MERC Patriot Title
- 06-11 2011 The Ring Intruders (Jon Cross & Fuel) became the SRPW Tag Team Champions
- 06-11 2011 Jake O'Brien became the SRPW Patriot Champion
- 06-11 2011 Kareem Sadat def. Rick Russo for the SWCW Hardcore Title
- 06-11 2011 Tim Storm def. Michael Faith for the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Title
- 06-11 2022 Pastor Brent & Andrew Fenix def. The Rejecs LM (Elijah Sparks & Dr. Corvus) for the WAH Tag Team Titles
- 06-11 2022 Connor Smith def. Romeo Reese for the WAH Spotlight Title
- 06-11 2022 Umbra def. Koko for the WAH Living Hope Title
- 06-11 2022 Dan Webber def. Paul Puertorico for the WAH Heavyweight Title
- 06-12 1982 The Spoiler def. Frank Dusek for the WCCW Television Title
- 06-12 2009 El Latino became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Light Heavyweight Champion
- 06-12 2021 Brawler Morrison def. Blade [2nd] for the UWO Heavyweight Title
- 06-13 1960 Tony Borne def. Bull Curry for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
- 06-13 1969 Chuck Karbo became the TSW North American Champion
- 06-13 1978 Karl Krupp became the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
- 06-13 1998 The Bad Boys (Splash Jackson & Bull Schmitt) def. The Texas Outlaws (Dan Wilder & Bernard Funk) for the OPW Oklahoma Tag Team Titles
- 06-13 2008 Brent Albright def. Slam Shady for the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Title
- 06-13 2008 High Society (Al Farat & Thomas Trump) became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Tag Team Champions
- 06-13 2008 Josh Michaels became the ACW Heavyweight Champion
- 06-13 2009 The Canadian Red Devil became the ComPro Showtime Champion
- 06-13 2015 Seth Angel & Adrian Dell def. Nemesis (Bobby Starr & Damien Morte) for the ComPro Tag Team Titles
- 06-13 2015 Killista def. Paul Puertorico for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Title
- 06-13 2015 Rolling Thunder def. Michael Duplanti for the NAW Heavyweight Title
- 06-13 2015 Paige Turner def. Erica for the IZW Queens Title
- 06-13 2015 Michael Wolf def. Jake O'Brien for the ComPro Heavyweight Title
- 06-13 2015 Jake O'Brien def. Michael Wolf for the ComPro Heavyweight Title
- Mark Wilson Jun 9th Today!
- Jamie Jun 9th Today!
- Jim Barnett Jun 9th Today!
- Dutch Savage Jun 9th Today!
- Dick Listener Jun 9th Today!
- Jeff Wolfenbarger Jun 9th Today!
- Dick Dunn Jun 10th
- Largus RagnaBrok Jun 10th
- Magnum T. A. Jun 11th
- J. D. Richards Jun 11th
- Mathmagician Jun 11th
- King Parsons Jun 11th
- Stan Pulaski Jun 12th
- Baby Blimp Jun 12th
- Rolling Thunder Jun 12th
- D'Licious Jun 12th
- Deuce Rodriguez Jun 12th
- Zac Royal Jun 12th
- Lady Sensacion Jun 12th
- Geronimo Jun 13th
- Chandler Hopkins Jun 13th
- Bill Ash Jun 13th
- John Pfanz Jun 13th
- Alex Shepard Jun 13th
- Dustin Heritage Jun 13th
- Neo Genesis Jun 13th
- Mikey D Jun 13th
- Buzz Sawyer Jun 14th
- Trey the Bae Jun 15th
- Sean Ryan Jun 15th
- Lilith Grimm Jun 15th
- Paul Linam Jun 15th
- Brad Armstrong Jun 15th
- Jaxon Stone Jun 15th
- Chuck Hinds Jun 16th
- Leslie Lorenzo Jun 16th
- Paul Jones Jun 16th
- Ultimate Warrior Jun 16th
- Jef Tiger Jun 16th
- Shawn Matthews III Jun 16th
- Ted Arcidi Jun 16th
- Brock Landers Jun 16th
- Ray Martinez Jun 17th
- Mario Galento Jun 17th
- Talos Jun 17th
- Rob Justice Jun 17th
- Andy Dalton Jun 18th
- Cam the CODA Jun 18th
- Johnny Angel Jun 18th
- Bruiser Brody Jun 18th
- Bad Boy Jun 18th
- Sashimi Deluxe Jun 18th
- Abe Jacobs Jun 18th
- Miguel Padilla Jun 19th
- Top Dollar Bill Jun 19th
- Kodi Ocean Jun 19th
- Mike Two Jun 19th
- Billy the Kid Jun 19th
- Canadian Red Devil Jun 19th
- Wahoo McDaniel Jun 19th
- David Kyzer Jun 20th
- Koko B. Ware Jun 20th
- Professor Ito Jun 20th
- Jon Cross Jun 20th
- Rick Russo Jun 21st
- Jeff the Ref Jun 21st
- Phantom Star Jun 21st
- Super Star Jun 21st
- Milton Winkelman Jun 21st


