Long before hashtags tried to repackage women’s wrestling into something “revolutionary,” there was Judy Martin—built like a furnace, eyes like steel, and hands that had felt the pulse of a thousand fights. She didn’t come out to fireworks or trendy slogans. She came to work. And work in her world meant pain, sweat, and often, a cold shoulder from the suits upstairs.
Judy Martin wasn’t a Diva. She was a damn wrestler.
Dirt, Blood, and Moolah’s Factory of Pain
Born Judith Hardee in Houston, Texas, Martin found wrestling the way some folks find God—on the side of the road after taking a few wrong turns. She approached Blackjack Mulligan and Dick Murdoch after a match, probably the only woman in the building who didn’t want an autograph but a damn opportunity. That took guts, or maybe just Texan stubbornness.
The Fabulous Moolah took her in. And like most women who came up through Moolah’s dungeon of broken promises, Martin was molded through fire. She trained alongside Joyce Grable and Leilani Kai, learning to bump on concrete, work hurt, and smile through the politics. Her first tour was in Japan, which wasn’t a tea party either. Over there, they didn’t treat women like eye candy—they expected them to hit like car crashes. Martin did just that.
Tag Team Glory and a Glamorous Hustle
By the early ’80s, Martin was carving out her place in the WWF’s women’s division, teaming with Candy Malloy and Donna Christanello before fate paired her with fellow warrior Leilani Kai. Together, they became The Glamour Girls—a name soaked in irony, because the only thing glamorous about them was the bleach in their hair and maybe the sequins stitched onto their trunks.
They didn’t smile for the camera. They snarled into it.
In 1985, they were handed the WWF Women’s Tag Team titles from Velvet McIntyre and Desiree Petersen—“handed” being a generous word for “shuffled around backstage politics like poker chips.” Vince McMahon didn’t care about long-term storytelling for women back then. The belts were props, and Martin knew it. But that didn’t stop her from treating every match like it meant something.
Their feud with the Jumping Bomb Angels in 1988 was a goddamn revelation—stiff, fast, and real. At the first Royal Rumble, they put on a clinic in a two-out-of-three falls match that proved women could wrestle circles around the boys. But when Martin and Kai won the belts back in Japan, no one in the U.S. cared. Management quietly shelved the division like an embarrassing photo album.
Holding the Line When the Curtain Was Falling
Martin kept swinging long after the division was declared dead. She went after Rockin’ Robin for the Women’s Championship in 1989, fighting like hell for a title in a company that had already moved on to bodybuilders and beauty contests. When the WWF finally buried the women’s division, Judy Martin didn’t cry. She just found the next ring.
She moved to the AWA and then the LPWA, chasing titles and giving younger wrestlers someone to learn from—or get flattened by. The Glamour Girls reunited under the sleazy watch of Adnan El Kassey and found themselves scrapping with the likes of Misty Blue Simmes, Heidi Lee Morgan, and a parade of forgettable teams who brought glitz but not grit.
Even in WCW, where the women were mostly window dressing and Madusa ruled the ashes, Martin showed up. She took bumps. She sold. She lost, sure, but she always looked like she belonged—which is more than you can say for most of the silicone silhouettes paraded out on ’90s television.
The Last Veteran Standing
In the ’90s, she found herself in backrooms and flea market rings, dueling with fellow vet Susan Green over the PGWA title. In one match, her partner pinned the wrong person in a mixed tag, and Martin walked away with a championship she technically hadn’t won. That’s wrestling, baby—logic optional.
When Green came calling for her belt back, Martin did the right thing: she showed up, took the match, and let her opponent pin her clean. Old-school to the bitter end.
Martin wrestled until 1999, putting in over 20 years in an industry that forgets women faster than it forgets bad gimmicks. When it was over, she didn’t do the comic-con circuit. She didn’t beg for a Hall of Fame ring. She went into law enforcement. Later, she transcribed medical records. She got out clean—no arrests, no bankruptcies, no rehab stints, no podcasts where she cries about the old days.
The Moves That Hurt and the Ones That Mattered
Her “Drip Dry” powerbomb was no joke. It didn’t fly off the top rope or involve acrobatics, but it hurt. So did the “Judy Drop,” a fireman’s carry slam that looked like it might crush ribs if timed wrong. And her double chickenwing? That move was a prison sentence for your shoulders.
She was strong, deliberate, and mean when she needed to be. She didn’t rely on theatrics. She relied on torque.
The Lawsuit and the Exit Wound
In 2016, she joined a class-action lawsuit against WWE, accusing them of hiding the long-term brain trauma that comes with the territory. She was one of many names—mostly forgotten stars from the past, screaming into a void that only lawyers could hear. The case was thrown out. WWE, as usual, walked away clean. Judy Martin walked away disappointed, but not surprised.
The Legacy They Don’t Talk About
She wasn’t there for the glamour, no matter what the tag team name said. She was there because she loved it—loved the ring, the grind, the blood under her fingernails. Judy Martin came from an era when women’s wrestling was a handshake, a cigarette, and maybe 20 bucks if the promoter wasn’t crooked. She was a bridge between the old carnival style and what we now call the “women’s evolution.”
And yet, they never inducted her into the Hall of Fame. Maybe because she didn’t have the glossy resume. Maybe because she didn’t play the game. Or maybe because Judy Martin wasn’t about making nice—she was about making noise.
So here’s to her: a bruiser in lipstick, a pioneer in the shadows, and a woman who never let the business chew her up—because she learned to bite back.
