In an industry that thrived on archetypes, Winona Littleheart was the feathered mirage that walked straight into the madness of pro wrestling’s golden era—and later stumbled into its dark, sticky underbelly with a mohawk and the scent of sulfur in her wake.
Born Winfred Childree on September 5, 1955, she entered the wrestling business as so many women of her era did—through the back door, the side gate, and then the front ring apron. She was the stepdaughter of “Dirty” Dick Barkley, and if that sounds like the name of a man who taught life in hard slaps and cheap whiskey, you wouldn’t be far off. She was trained not with tutelage but with toughness. The old-timers didn’t teach you how to work—they just taught you how to survive.
On New Year’s Day, 1976, in the Omni Coliseum in Atlanta, Georgia, she made her debut in a ten-woman battle royal. Imagine it: fringe vest, feather in her hair, the classic “Native American” gimmick that Moolah’s girls were forced to wear like identity shackles. She was dubbed Winona Littleheart, the kind of name that sounds like it belongs to a sweet, doomed folk song—and in some ways, it was.
But Littleheart could wrestle. Really wrestle. Before long she was jumping territory to territory—Amarillo one week, Calgary the next, working Judy Martin in one town and taking a Greyhound to face Leilani Kai in another. She was fast, sharp, and sold like a storm. In October of 1980, she was awarded the NWA United States Women’s Championship, beating Judy Martin in a match nobody outside of the arena remembers, but which told every damn story a crowd of truckers, line cooks, and teenagers needed.
She spent time in Moolah’s camp, which is to say she served her sentence. If you want the details, read a book—Moolah’s grip on women’s wrestling was tighter than an armbar and just as bruising. But through all the smoke and the stale motel sheets, Winona hung on. She trained Wendi Richter. She took the greenhorns and polished them with grit. She never said no to a town, a date, or a bump.
And then, like many in the business, she cracked—creatively, at least.
After breaking away from the WWF and the Moolah monopoly in 1985, she returned to Florida, rebranded as “Cindy Lou,” a hometown girl lost in the swampy morality tale Kevin Sullivan was weaving in the Tampa territory. In the storyline, Sullivan abducted Cindy Lou and transformed her into “The Lock”—because he kept her under lock and key. She became a snarling, painted demon in his “Army of Darkness,” with a mohawk and madness in her eyes. Gone was the feathered babyface. This was pure nightmare fuel.
The Lock feuded with Fallen Angel and later teamed with Luna Vachon, a woman who shared her commitment to chaos. Together, they were “The Daughters of Darkness,” prowling the ring like two sisters sprung from the pit of an abandoned mental ward. They weren’t just ahead of their time—they were so far out ahead they might’ve been mistaken for outlaws in an era of square pegs and tight skirts.
Wrestling fans didn’t know what to make of them. That’s the thing with women like Littleheart—they weren’t built for the cardboard cutouts, and the system didn’t know what to do with authenticity unless it could be exploited, sexualized, or sold on a lunchbox.
Even after her WWF run—where she challenged Leilani Kai for the Women’s Championship during Kai’s brief reign in 1985—she never stopped working. Memphis, Vegas, the indies. She won tag gold with Luna Vachon in the now-forgotten Women’s Championship Wrestling, a precursor to the LPWA. They feuded with Candi Devine and Debbie Combs. They tore through towns that don’t exist anymore.
By 1988, she was in David McLane’s Powerful Women of Wrestling, now managed by someone named Genie Beret. The arenas were smaller. The crowds older. But The Lock still snarled. She still dove headfirst into the madness because it was the only thing she’d ever known. She once sang back-up vocals on a Nasty Savage metal album. That wasn’t a gimmick—that was her real voice in the pit.
Then she was gone. Retired. Faded into the kind of anonymity only wrestling can create—a complete erasure of body, brain, and biography.
She died on May 9, 2020. The industry barely blinked. No official tribute. No ten-bell salute. Just a few social media posts from those who remembered the blood, the fringe, the shriek of a woman who used her body as both instrument and armor.
But here’s the thing about Winona Littleheart—she mattered.
She was a bridge between eras, a woman who wrestled before there were Diva searches or hashtags or Revolution pay-per-views. She did the grind, did the miles, took the hits, and lived the gimmick when it wasn’t a choice—it was the only way to get booked. The reason women can headline WrestleMania today is because Winona Littleheart bled on the floor of a St. Louis VFW hall in 1981 in front of fifty people and a guy who barked at her to “smile more.”
She wasn’t polished. She wasn’t a Barbie. She didn’t need to be. She was the soul of every girl who refused to stay on the apron.
In a different era, she might’ve been a world champion, a face of a brand, a reality show star. But in hers? She was a warrior. A specter. A bruised song that never got finished.
She was Winona Littleheart.
She was The Lock.
And for a time—just long enough to matter—she was the baddest woman you’d never heard of.