When Yuria Tauchi first sashayed onto a dance floor at age three, she probably didn’t imagine trading pirouettes for piledrivers. Yet by 2016, the underground idol turned rookie wrestler—now known as Tam Nakano—had stepped from spotlights into steel ropes, and the world of Stardom would never be the same.
From Idol to Icon
Nakano’s early days with Actwres girl’Z felt like a hushed jazz in a smoky bar—pretty vocals hiding a restless fighter underneath. She trained under Stardom’s own Mayu Iwatani, debuting in July 2016. Her first loss to Saori Anou wasn’t a stumble; it was the birth of something hungrier, like a poet nursing cheap bourbon before tearing into the night.
Heel Turn & Heartbreak
By September 2017, Nakano joined the villainous Oedo Tai, trading pom‑pom routines for a painted sneer. Injury sidelined her soon after, but her tongue sharp as broken glass kept her ringside, introducing “Producer P,” a stuffed panda mascot with all the absurdity of an alley kitten in a barfight.
Rise of the Cosmic Angels
Nakano’s expulsion from Oedo Tai in early 2018 read like a Bukowski novella—betrayal and redemption scribbled in blood. She found new wings alongside Mayu Iwatani and Saki Kashima, capturing her first Artist of Stardom gold in September 2018. By late 2020, she had cast off Stars to form Cosmic Angels, a cult of glitter and guile that seized trios gold and painted Stardom with neon anarchy.
Blossoming into Champion
Her defining moment came March 3, 2021, at All Star Dream Cinderella: Nakano’s hair vs. hair showdown with Giulia for the Wonder of Stardom title. When the final bell tolled, Nakano’s scissors clipped more than tresses—they’d clipped the last threads of her rookie fears.
Over the next four years, Tam Nakano collected Wonder, Goddesses, and World of Stardom championships the way drunks collect empty bottles—trophy after trophy, each telling its own sordid tale of sacrifice and swagger. Her match against Saya Kamitani at All Star Grand Queendom 2025 didn’t just earn a legendary 5.25‑star rating—it was a final curtain call, a last glass slammed on the bar.
Legacy
Tam Nakano danced into Stardom as an idol and emerged as poetry in motion—a ring general who could chop hearts with a forearm and seduce souls with a pirouette. In a world of carbon‑copy athletes, she was—like Bukowski’s best—raw, relentless, unforgettable.