She came from Scituate, Massachusetts, but in the ring she was pure Hollywood: tall, tough, and wrapped in the heat of a villain’s grin. At 6-foot-1 and 160 pounds, Brittany Brown was a walking contradiction — part throwback, part trailblazer, the kind of woman who didn’t just work the circuit, she ran it.
For nearly three decades, Brown played the roles wrestling needed — champion, trainer, promoter, enforcer — but she never stopped being herself. If you were a rookie in Killer Kowalski’s gym, she was the one who slapped the ego out of your mouth. If you were a promoter, she was the one who walked in with her boots laced and her terms written in red ink. And if you were lucky enough to wrestle her? She left your pride in a headlock and your ribs bruised with receipts.
This was Brittany Brown: the Boston Bad Girl. A name built on grit, not gimmick.
Moolah Made, Kowalski Forged
She started training in 1984 under The Fabulous Moolah and Donna Christanello — the queens of pain from the South Carolina school of hard bumps. But Brown wasn’t just another product. She had ambition stitched into her tights. After her foundation with Moolah, she went north to Boston and trained under the unforgiving eye of Killer Kowalski. That’s where she got mean. That’s where she got good.
For over a decade, she held the IWF Ladies Championship, carving her legacy across Kowalski’s International Wrestling Federation. She wasn’t handed belts. She earned them — city by city, town by town, trading elbows and suplexes with names like Wendi Richter, Leilani Kai, and Brandi Wine. She wasn’t just a working champion. She was a working woman in a man’s sport, and she never blinked.
Broken Neck, Unbroken Spirit
Most wrestlers get one shot at this life. Brown got two. She broke her neck — one of only three women on record to do so and return — and kept wrestling for years. She wasn’t built for sympathy. She was built to survive.
Her toughness wasn’t performative. It came out of real moments: like the time at a Killer Kowalski birthday show when a crooked finish was hijacked, fists nearly flew, and Brown had to step between the chaos to stop a backstage fight from turning into a full-blown riot. She was part wrestler, part referee, part locker room sheriff.
More Than a Wrestler
She didn’t just wrestle — she built. In 1999, she co-founded the World Wrestling Alliance, an ambitious New England promotion that featured WWF dojo talent and Tough Enough alumni before most fans even knew what a performance center was. Long before “developmental territory” was a buzzword, Brown was running her own.
And when she wasn’t booking the card or taping up for another main event, she was training the next generation — men and women alike — at Kowalski’s school. She was part of the foundation of the New England wrestling scene. Just ask the wrestlers who walked through her doors and limped out better.
The Other Stage
But Brown’s spotlight wasn’t confined to the squared circle. Before the titles and the bumps, she had been tapped by Freddie Mercury at 15 to appear in a Queen music video — a chance meeting that turned into a lifelong connection. Through the ’80s and ’90s, she made cameos in videos for Aerosmith, The Eagles, Bad Company, and Guns N’ Roses. From 1993 to 1997, she was partnered with Steven Tyler. The worlds of rock and wrestling often collide. In Brittany Brown, they lived in perfect harmony — swagger, volume, and presence.
By 2025, she was back behind the mic, spinning music as the newest DJ on FunLand Radio. From suplexes to soundboards, she’s never stopped performing.
A Hall of Famer in Every Sense
Brown’s list of accolades reads like a career that spanned twice the years. She held titles in almost every independent promotion she touched: NWA New Jersey Ladies Champion, WWWA Women’s Champion, NEPW, EPW, NAWA, and more. She was inducted into the Cauliflower Alley Club in 1994 alongside legends like Sherri Martel and Pedro Morales. She later became the first female officer under Lou Thesz’s presidency — a symbol not just of respect, but of trust.
In 2013, she was enshrined in the New England Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame, and in 2022, she received the ISPW Lifetime Achievement Award.
The Boston Bad Girl Never Left
Brittany Brown didn’t retire with fanfare. She stepped away in 2013 the same way she entered in 1985 — on her own terms. Quiet, focused, resilient. Wrestling never made it easy for women. She never asked it to.
She was a throwback to the barnstorming bruisers of the territory days — a little too stiff, a little too smart, a little too realfor an industry that sometimes prefers flash over fire.
But Brown’s fire never went out. It’s in the wrestlers she trained. It’s in the promotions she built. It’s in every fan who saw her walk the aisle with the sneer of a heel and the soul of a workhorse.
She may be off the marquee, but the Boston Bad Girl never truly leaves the ring.
Not when the ring still echoes her name.
