Piece Comment

Review of 'The Mad Russian': Reflections of a Cold War Wrestling Villain


An offbeat story with a well worded and voiced narration, this piece would be suitable for several different broadcast slots because it could fall under the heading of immigrant story or sports personality profile, or a personal diary type feature.
The piece is well paced and has a couple of terrific bits of sound such as a wrestling crowd driven to a frenzy at having to listen to the Soviet national anthem. And the central character is an interesting one - a Croatian who dedicated a part of his life to play a much hated Soviet Russian.
I do feel however that more juice could have been squeezed from the main character himself. I would have liked more of the story in his words, a couple more anecdotes or pictures of that time. I don't know anything about wrestling and it made no sense for me to hear that coming from the Eastern Bloc, wrestling in the US was for him a very different affair. His son appears briefly and then he' s gone without us having a chance to see him being the fan and guardian of his father's name that he's just been billed as.
The crux of this story it seems to me - what makes it so special - is that here's this seemingly pretty nice guy who made a living out of getting people to really and truly hate him. But this is not played up enough. By story's end I was gasping for some psychological insight into who Nicolai was. It's not enough to hear him say "it was a job" or "I did it to get paid". This is where I really want that little detail that will make me think oh - so that's what it did to you?. How did he cope with years of being hated, especially as he obviously didn't believe in the political slant he was publically adopting. What specifically made him feel ok enough was enough? How does he feel about those years now?
But I don't want to sound too harsh - it's a good piece, an interesting and engaging listen and it's following a character strong enough to draw even an outsider's attention.