In an industry that has seen snake charmers, dead men, and corporate authority figures wielding sledgehammers, the arrival of The Peacock—Dalton Castle—wasn’t just unexpected. It was baffling. A man in full plumage, flanked by human furniture in gold masks and boy shorts, prancing to the ring as though Liberace had a baby with Ken Patera and sent it to theater camp.
Yet beneath the satin robes and sequin-stitched fanfare, Dalton Castle is no mere curiosity act. He’s a walking contradiction—a glam rock colossus who can German suplex a house, an amateur wrestling champion in a feather boa, a Shakespearean fool who speaks in suplexes. While others came to sports entertainment to drop promos or steal catchphrases, Castle showed up to drop jaws and bodies with equal elegance.
From Greco-Roman to Greco-Gaga
Brett Giehl was born in Greece, New York—a fitting birthplace for a man who would one day embody flamboyant athleticism as if descended directly from a lineage of Olympians and Las Vegas headliners. A legitimate amateur wrestler, Giehl represented Team USA in international Greco-Roman competitions and built a resumé of mat-based credibility. Then, somewhere between the NCAA All-State Team and Beach Nationals, he discovered something more powerful than grappling holds: a persona.
Call it evolution. Call it mid-career peacocking. Giehl reemerged from the amateur circuit cocoon not as just a wrestler, but as Dalton Castle—a sequined mutation of Freddie Mercury and Kurt Angle with the voice of a radio DJ and the thighs of a leg press machine.
Enter the Boys
Dalton Castle is never alone. Accompanying him at nearly every event are The Boys, a rotating cast of androgynous manservants who fan him, pose with him, and serve as psychological artillery against opponents who don’t know whether to fight or flirt back. It’s absurd, it’s artful, and it’s precisely the kind of campy spectacle that pro wrestling hasn’t seen since Gorgeous George met the mirror.
Castle’s first television audience was Ring of Honor (ROH) circa 2015, where his entrances instantly outshined most of the actual matches. But make no mistake—this wasn’t cosplay. Castle’s blend of legit grappling, suplex mastery, and dramatic flair made him one of ROH’s most unique and compelling acts. He wasn’t trying to be a wrestler who could entertain. He was an entertainer who could wrestle your spine into a new tax bracket.
Golden Days and Bad Backs
The apex of Castle’s career came in December 2017 when he defeated Cody Rhodes to win the ROH World Championship. In an era where the indie circuit was beginning to churn out clones of kick-happy super athletes with six-pack abs and zero personality, Castle offered a different kind of champion—one who leaned into character work with such commitment, you’d think he was auditioning for a Vegas residency between title defenses.
But the very flamboyance that defined Castle also became his Achilles’ tail feather. Chronic back injuries—likely brought on by years of suplexing 280-pound men while wearing spine-ruining costuming—began to plague his reign. By July 2018, Castle dropped the title to Jay Lethal and soon after was off television nursing vertebrae that had been through more drama than a Bravolebrity reunion show.
Feathers, Fights, and Falling Apart
Yet Castle is not a man who disappears quietly. Even with a body held together by athletic tape and glam rock vengeance, he returned again and again—sometimes serious, sometimes psychotic, occasionally sans Boys, but never boring. He feuded with Matt Taven, fought Samoa Joe for the Television Title, and even participated in an intergender custody battle for his own entourage (spoiler: he lost them to Johnny TV after a match stipulation gone sideways, and they were subsequently mauled by a bear—yes, really).
He’s appeared in AEW, ROH, and briefly in TNA, always toeing the line between ridiculous and regal. If wrestling had an Oscar for Best Commitment to the Bit, Castle would have walked the red carpet in a technicolor cape, flexing while reading a sonnet about the glory of being fabulous.
The Power Peacock’s Enduring Flight
The future remains as flamboyant and unpredictable as Castle himself. In July 2024, he suffered a freak torn bicep injury during a match against Roderick Strong, and was ruled out for the rest of the year. That didn’t stop him from appearing in surreal vignettes teasing his return—one involving new Boys, possible hypnosis, and the unmistakable twinkle of revenge in his eyes.
Castle’s greatness lies not in his win-loss record, but in his unrelenting commitment to being different. In a wrestling landscape that often rewards sameness and stoicism, Dalton Castle chose feather boas and fanfare. He made flamboyance lethal and gave legitimacy to pageantry. He proved that muscles can sparkle, and that charisma, when matched with athleticism, can create a spectacle more enduring than any five-star match rating.
He’s not just a wrestler. He’s an act. A lifestyle. A cautionary tale in glitter. The last surviving vaudevillian in a world full of cage fighters.
And when he returns? Be prepared. Because somewhere, out there, Dalton Castle is rehearsing his entrance with a new crop of shirtless serfs and a vengeance that smells faintly of cologne and glitter glue.
“The world doesn’t need more wrestlers,” Castle once said. “It needs more peacocks with a suplex fetish.”
He wasn’t wrong.
