In an industry where inflated egos often outweigh inflated physiques, Scott Charles Bigelow—known to the world as Bam Bam Bigelow—was a burning meteor of chaos, charisma, and catastrophic head trauma. With a 390-pound frame and a tattooed skull that looked like Satan’s NASCAR decal, Bigelow didn’t just enter the ring—he detonated into it.
Born in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, and forged in the smoky back alleys of pro wrestling’s preposterous underbelly, Bigelow wasn’t your average big man. No, he was your average apocalypse on two legs—a flannel-shirted King Kong with a gymnastic minor.
A Monster is Born—But in Jersey
Bigelow’s origin story reads like a rejected Marvel character pitch: high school wrestling standout, arm-wrestling junkie, bounty hunter, shot in the back in Mexico, imprisoned for six months, and then—obviously—decides to become a professional wrestler. Because when life hands you bullets and jail time, you body-splash fate right back.
He trained at Larry Sharpe’s Monster Factory (an establishment which has produced more monsters than a mid-2000s SyFy channel lineup) and debuted at Studio 54 in 1985—because nothing screams “career longevity” like pile-driving someone between disco balls.
WWF: Welcome to the Fire Pit
In 1987, Bigelow rolled into the WWF and every villainous manager salivated like raccoons at a waffle house dumpster. The “Battle for Bam Bam” storyline was essentially a televised custody battle for a 400-pound baby who could moonsault. He finally settled under the red mane of Oliver Humperdink, a manager whose mustache could be used to clean carburetors.
WWE treated Bigelow as a human wrecking ball—until he wasn’t. He debuted at Survivor Series and was eliminated last for Hogan’s team, because even legends needed a nap break. He got bounced out of WrestleMania IV early, tangled with Ted DiBiase, and after a short stint of staring at Andre the Giant’s chest, he left WWE in a huff, citing knee injuries and, perhaps more accurately, ego bruises.
The Japanese Renaissance: Vader and Sushi Suplexes
Bigelow’s stint in New Japan Pro-Wrestling was a masterclass in big man violence. Teaming with Big Van Vader—because one gargantuan psychopath simply wasn’t enough—Bigelow became half of the “Big, Bad, and Dangerous” tag team. They made sushi out of the Steiner Brothers and won the IWGP Tag Titles. In Japan, Bigelow was respected like a sumo priest with a Harley engine—largely because he could do moonsaults and not shatter the ring.
The WrestleMania Clown Show
When he returned to WWF in the early ’90s, Bigelow got saddled with Luna Vachon, a voice box made of gravel and demonic possession, and started feuding with Doink the Clown. Yes, that Doink. Imagine explaining to an ancient Roman gladiator that modern warriors wear fire-retardant singlets and fight angry birthday clowns. Bigelow did it with a straight face.
But redemption came at WrestleMania XI, when Bigelow headlined against NFL superstar Lawrence Taylor. In one of pro wrestling’s most bizarre PR stunts, the 400-pound headbutting machine carried LT through a competent main event while the crowd waited for someone’s ACL to explode. LT won, of course—because this was 1995 and Vince McMahon loved celebrities more than his roster—but Bigelow earned everyone’s respect. Until he got “fired” by Ted DiBiase on Monday Night RAW two weeks later.
ECW: Violence Finds a Soulmate
In 1997, Bigelow stumbled into the bloody church of Extreme Championship Wrestling—a land of broken tables, unpaid checks, and dangerously low ceilings. He joined The Triple Threat, turned on Shane Douglas, won the ECW World Heavyweight Title, and threw Spike Dudley into the sixth row.
This wasn’t just performance. It was performance art for sociopaths. In a match against Taz, Bigelow took the Tazmission so hard they both fell through the ring. Not metaphorically. Literally. They vanished into the canvas like they were pulled into hell by angry ring gremlins.
He would go on to feud with RVD, Sabu, and gravity. He was the kind of guy who looked like he belonged on a Harley, but moved like he’d borrowed a trampoline from Rey Mysterio.
WCW: The Fire Fizzles
Bigelow cashed in on Ted Turner’s blank checks and joined WCW in 1998. There, he bounced between hardcore brawls, tag team stables (Jersey Triad), and fighting Goldberg in matches that felt like two bulls with CTE charging a fog machine. He won the WCW Hardcore Title briefly—until he lost it to Brian Knobbs in a feud that lasted five eternities and one concussion.
By 2001, Bigelow’s body had absorbed more steel chair than most scaffolding. WCW folded. WWE didn’t call. TNA considered him but he was still being paid by Time Warner. So Bigelow returned to the indies—smashing low ceilings in bingo halls while fans whispered, “Is that really Bam Bam?”
Legacy of the Fire Beast
Bigelow never made the WWE Hall of Fame—because sometimes the industry forgets those who carried it on flaming shoulders. He died in 2007, just 45 years old, in a sad, familiar story involving heart disease and drug traces. He left behind three children, nineteen tattoos, and a legacy of chaos that only a few ever truly understood.
He wasn’t just “the Beast from the East.” He was the only man who could moonsault the laws of physics, terrify clowns, and headline WrestleMania without a six-pack.
Bam Bam Bigelow didn’t burn out or fade away. He just left a scorch mark on the squared circle—and it’s still smoldering.
