She came howling out of the Florida swamps like some unholy cocktail of punk rock, voodoo, and war paint, snarling like a chain-smoking banshee who’d been locked in the back room of professional wrestling’s haunted mansion and finally kicked the damn door off its hinges.
Luna Vachon wasn’t a diva. She was the death rattle of the word. While other women in the ’90s sashayed to the ring in sequins and silicone, Luna came marching in with half a mohawk, the snarl of a dog chewing through a rusted fence, and the haunted eyes of someone who’d seen too much blood in both the ring and the mirror.
Born Gertrude Vachon in 1962, Luna didn’t just inherit a legacy—she wrestled it down by the throat. Adopted into the madcap world of the legendary Vachon family, she carried the scars of tragedy like tattoos etched into her psyche. Her father was a suicide, her stepfather was Butcher Vachon, and her uncle was Mad Dog. You don’t get out of that kind of family tree without a few limbs broken—and Luna didn’t. But she climbed it anyway.
She was supposed to stay out of the ring. André the Giant himself tried to steer her away, probably recognizing a kindred spirit, a misfit destined to eat glass for breakfast and chase the applause like a junkie chases the dragon. But Luna wasn’t wired for normal. By sixteen, she was training under The Fabulous Moolah, soaking up bumps like whiskey in a shot glass.
Her early gimmick? A soft-spoken reporter named Trudy Herd. But that wouldn’t last long. After a slap from Kevin Sullivan ignited something primal in her, Trudy died and Luna Vachon was born in the darkness of Florida Championship Wrestling’s Army of Darkness stable. She shaved half her head, painted her face like a biker’s nightmare, and screamed into the void. She wasn’t playing a character. She was the character. Wrestling’s madwoman in the attic had arrived.
Luna was a misfit before misfits had marketing teams. In an era when women’s wrestling was either Barbie doll cosplay or afterthought sideshow, Luna was a fistfight in a padded cell. She managed monsters, bled in ECW, pinned men in Memphis, and chased ghosts in Puerto Rico, Japan, and anywhere else that would pay her in beer, bruises, and back-end cash.
In 1993, she hit the WWF and the rest of the world got their first real look at the apocalypse in pigtails. She burst into WrestleMania IX like a shot of absinthe in a wine spritzer—eyes wild, voice gravelled by whiskey and rage. Aligned with Shawn Michaels, feuding with Sherri, and eventually becoming Bam Bam Bigelow’s snarling “main squeeze,” she added chaos to an industry already swimming in it. While others wore gowns, she wore scars. While others smiled for the camera, Luna bit it.
Her real feud wasn’t with Sherri or Sable. It was with the business. The suits wanted beauty queens. She gave them a banshee in a bulletproof bra. She was punished for being too real, too raw, too unwilling to play nice with the silicone parade. Sable got the spotlight. Luna got the stretcher.
Backstage, she was chaos wrapped in leather. She fought tooth and nail for every inch of respect and often ended up suspended for it. She was the best part of the Oddities and the beating heart of every locker room she walked into, but the system didn’t know what to do with a woman who didn’t fit the mold. So they threw her away—twice.
She came back, each time a little more broken but still swinging. You couldn’t kill Luna Vachon. You could only hope she didn’t set the place on fire on her way out.
Outside the ring, her life was a Bukowski poem scrawled on a motel wall. Addiction. Redemption. Bipolar disorder. Hustler. Playboy. A tow truck driver in Florida. A grandmother. A Make-A-Wish icon. Married three times, but maybe only truly wed to the business that broke her heart and then buried her in silence.
She died in 2010 at the age of 48. Found by her mother. Cause of death: overdose. The kind that sneaks in through the back door while the dreams are still clinking glasses in the living room. WWE paid for rehab, but couldn’t pay for understanding.
Years later, they inducted her into the Hall of Fame. Posthumously, of course. That’s how they always do it with the rebels. With the freaks. With the madwomen who made too much noise when it wasn’t profitable.
Luna Vachon never held the WWF Women’s Championship, but she held something more dangerous: the respect of those who bled. She was a trailblazer lit on fire and left to burn while the world filmed the smoke. She was every scar that pretty girls in wrestling weren’t supposed to have. She was the cackling ghost in the women’s locker room mirror, whispering: “You don’t have to be pretty, sweetheart. You just have to survive.”
And for 22 years, she did exactly that. Goddamn right, she did.