There’s a theater to pro wrestling. The glitz, the grandstanding, the heartbreak in high heels. And no one embraced the role of antagonist like Nina Samuels, the glittering viper of the British circuit. Born Samantha Allen in the backstreets of London’s drama and grit, she didn’t just play the villain—she became the whole damn stage.
You see, Samuels didn’t stumble into wrestling. She pirouetted into it like a diva fed up with chorus lines and desperate for blood. Her story began in 2014 with British Empire Wrestling, where she showed up not as a prodigy, but as a problem. In her debut match, she teamed with Kirsty Love against Dragonita and Shanna—names that read like the roster of a fever dream lucha indie show. She took her lumps, learned her cues, and kept coming back.
She strutted through BEW like a debutante at a riot, eventually locking horns with Leah Owens for the Revolution Championship. On 3 June 2017, at the International Grand Prix, she tangled with Christi Jaynes and a pre-Tank Girl Shotzi Blackheart. You could smell the inkling of greatness on her. Then came EVE—a promotion as much punk rock cabaret as it is wrestling—and Samuels leaned into the chaos like it owed her rent.
Her 2018 EVE debut saw her team with Meiko Satomura and Shanna, losing to Emi Sakura, Erin Angel, and Nixon Newell. But losing was just rehearsal. By May, she won the Wildcard Ladder Match at Wrestle Queendom and by November, she cashed in that chaos contract to blindside Charlie Morgan and pin her for the EVE Championship. Classic Nina. Always fashionably late. Always stealing the spotlight with a slap.
Then came the big time—WWE. NXT UK. 2018. The brand was shiny, new, and bursting with potential. Samuels stepped in like a stage actress at a film audition—too much charisma, not enough sugar. She bowed out in the first round of the NXT UK Women’s Championship Tournament to Dakota Kai, but Nina wasn’t here to win your tournaments. She was here to win your attention.
In 2019, she beat Lana Austin and tangoed with Toni Storm for the gold. She entered a battle royal with her trademark aloof elegance, as if everyone else was dressed for a bar fight and she’d shown up for high tea with brass knuckles.
But her finest hour was her feud with Xia Brookside in late 2020. Samuels faked knee injuries, attacked from behind, and even got rolled up mid-ruse. But she kept the upper hand. It was vaudeville violence—a pantomime of vengeance. In one unforgettable match, she struck Brookside with her handbag and won. Let that sink in. A damn handbag. Nina Samuels turned a prop into a proclamation.
Their war escalated into humiliation: a loser-becomes-personal-assistant match. Samuels lost. For a month, she fetched water and ran errands for Brookside, her pride wrapped in sequins and sarcasm. It was comedy gold and wrestling irony. The villainess serving the ingénue.
She would have the last laugh, eventually. She always did. But by August 2022, the curtain dropped. WWE released her, along with others, as NXT UK entered cryogenic sleep in preparation for its future European rebirth.
Now back on the indie circuit, Samuels still floats like a venomous waltz—equal parts elegance and chaos. She doesn’t need the WWE machine. She’s Nina Samuels, darling. She is the machine. Her matches are episodes. Her promos are soliloquies. And her career? A theatrical tragedy with one hell of a second act still to come.
In a world of grunts and suplexes, Nina Samuels brought silk and venom. And the spotlight, no matter where she goes, always seems to follow.
