More from Aaron Henkin
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Prem traded music superstardom in Nepal for a job waiting tables in America...
Inside the Capoeiristas' Circle
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A profile of a centuries-old martial art with roots that go back to Angola, Africa
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a VERY sweet holiday story...
"We Mobin'": Mics, Plus Beats, Minus Walls
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If music is made on the street, why record it in a booth?
enlightenment by shotgun: coping with ALS
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one man's accelerated perspective on life...
The Other End of the Line: Profile of a 911 Operator
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a look at life on the phone at the Baltimore City Police Department's 911 call center
Crime and Redemption: A Wise Guy's Tale
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A gangster-turned-informant reflects on his life of crime and his quest for redemption
Learning to Sing
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a choral program teaches children the universal language of music...
Bluma Shapiro: Portrait of a Holocaust Survivor
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Bluma Shapiro is a grandmother of four... and a survivor of the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Piece Description
This is a story about the unusual immigrant experience of Nikolai Volkoff. He was one of the most despised villains in the history of professional wrestling, infuriating his opponents and inciting Cold War-era wrestling crowds with his singing of the Soviet national anthem. Volkoff always fascinated me when i was a kid growing up watching Saturday morning wrestling, and I was floored when a friend told me he heard a rumor that the old wrestler was living in Baltimore county, working as a code enforcement inspector with the housing department. I did some digging around, got in touch with him, hung out with him off & on for about 6 months, and this radio story was the result...
5 Comments
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Review of 'The Mad Russian': Reflections of a Cold War Wrestling VillainAaron Henkin is a multiple threat: he conducts excellent interviews, he writes well for himself, his reading style is crystal clear with lively phrasing, his voice is attractively deep without being so into itself that it lulls you to sleep - and then he goes and provides pristine production values including subtle dramatization. Finding all those chops in one producer is very, very rare. This story, about an ex-pro wrestler from Eastern Europe, was carefully made over a bit of time - and has a high level of human interest. I thought it was ever so slightly long - but the quality is so high it's going to make the air sound good. |
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Review of 'The Mad Russian': Reflections of a Cold War Wrestling VillainAn 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.
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Broadcast History
This piece aired originally on 03.03.06 on WYPR's radio arts program, The Signal
Timing and Cues
The story ends with a singing of the Soviet National anthem that brings the piece to a total of 15:28 minutes.
Here's a host intro that could work:
"We're going to rewind the clock 21 years, to a point in America?s history that nowadays seems like a lifetime ago. Baltimore radio producer Aaron Henkin brings us this next story? about a man who went through one of the most unusual immigrant experiences you could possibly imagine?"





Kerry Seed
Posted on April 11, 2006 at 02:54 PM | Permalink
Review of 'The Mad Russian': Reflections of a Cold War Wrestling Villain
In the tradition of NPR's Todd Holzman, Baltimore-based producer Aaron Henkin uses sport (never mind that this "sport" is professional wrestling) to look behind the music (USSR national anthem) at the fascinating and moving story of one of the WWF's greatest heels, Nicolai "The Mad Russian" Volkoff.
Listeners will hear archival tape of televised matches mixed with the reflections of the meditating, vegetarian Volkoff of today. Henkin contrasts the chutzpah of a young man that would ask arenas full of stark raving rasslin' fans in the 1980s to sing the USSR's national anthem with the Volkoff's true feelings: he hated communism and fled to this country to escape Stalinist persecution.
At 15:27, this piece feels about three minutes too long, but listeners will love Henkin's thoughtful blend of action and cold war history, through the eyes of a man who was arguably one of America's most visible cold warriors.