In the cracked mirrors of lucha libre, everything has a reflection—sometimes distorted, sometimes improved, sometimes a bootleg. Sexy Star II didn’t ask for the name. She inherited it like a cursed tiara, already dulled from scandal and legacy, already soaked in the sweat of someone else’s heat. But now, she’s polishing it her own way—fierce, masked, and just a little bit unhinged. The old Sexy Star broke arms and headlines. This one breaks expectations and occasionally opponents’ ribs, if the moons are aligned and the crowd is bloodthirsty.
Born in Mexicali in 1999, Flawless Star—sorry, Sexy Star—was practically swaddled in ring tape. Her mother was Gatubela, a wrestler with claws and charisma; her father, El Traidor, carried a name fit for betrayal and a career short on mercy. Family reunions must feel like post-match interviews: sweaty, intense, and with more masks than faces.
From the outside, her life looked like destiny soaked in baby oil: trained by a squad of respected lucha savants—Tapatío Jr., Black Shadow Jr., Príncipe Negro, and Mr. Tempest. Which reads like the roll call of a B-list superhero squad with enough scars to write thrillers. They taught her how to fly, how to fall, and most importantly, how to fall without anyone realizing it was on purpose.
She hit the pro scene in July 2016 as La Hija de Gatubela, the daughter of the Catwoman. A name that purrs—but doesn’t necessarily pop. She clawed her way through Mexicali’s dusty indie shows, learning how to work a crowd that would rather throw beer than roses. Eventually, she shed the kittenish name and prowled under the alias Picadura Letal, or “Lethal Sting.” It sounded like the kind of thing you’d hear before a poison took hold. It didn’t stick, but the attitude did.
Enter: Sexy Star, Chapter Two
In May 2021, she debuted in Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide with a name that came preloaded with drama. The original Sexy Star had a legacy soaked in infamy—a woman who snapped an opponent’s arm in a shoot and vanished into a cloud of heat and denials. Rebooting that brand was like painting a swastika on a Ferrari and insisting it stood for “speed.” It took guts. Or desperation. Maybe both.
AAA didn’t care. They needed a female star with edge. And Sexy Star II had something her predecessor lacked: humility. She wrestled hungry, fast, and with a chip on her shoulder shaped like a middle finger. In 2022, she teamed with Komander at Triplemanía XXX, challenging for the mixed tag titles. They lost to Sammy Guevara and Tay Conti, but hey, you try wrestling America’s sexiest sociopaths and see how you do.
That same year, she captured The Crash Women’s Championship, proving that while she might be a sequel, she wasn’t a knockoff. There were fewer promos and more punches, fewer scandals and more shoulder blocks. By February 2023, she won the Reina de Reinas match at AAA’s Rey de Reyes, not just cementing her status but kicking dirt on the doubters who whispered that a second Sexy Star was doomed to ride in the sidecar of someone else’s wreckage.
Then came October 2024—a quiet departure from AAA, like a ninja in lipstick. No fanfare. No press release. Just the ghost of her boots echoing in the locker room.
Indie Darling, Danger Magnet
Outside the AAA walls, Sexy Star II’s career became nomadic and feral. She held the Kaoz Women’s Tag Team Championship with Black Widow, which sounds more like a Marvel crossover than a wrestling title. She wrestled in New Tradition Lucha Libre, and by all accounts, kicked tradition in the teeth.
Her style? Flashy but grounded. Not afraid to eat a boot. Her moveset has bite, but it’s her presence that slaps you first—eyeliner, mystique, and a gaze that could break glass. She’s not trying to seduce you. She’s trying to pin you to the mat and erase you from relevance. Sexy Star II isn’t a gimmick. She’s a torchbearer—flame high, middle fingers higher.
Of Lovers, Masks, and Ghosts
She’s romantically tied to Séptimo Dragón, another luchador who knows how to land on his neck for money. Together, they’re like a telenovela written by Quentin Tarantino: gorgeous, violent, and destined for trouble.
Underneath it all—beneath the name, the history, the velvet mask—is a wrestler unburdened by legacy, but always tangled in it. She didn’t ask to be Sexy Star II. It was like inheriting a haunted house and deciding to turn it into a rave. You either make it your own, or you get swallowed by the ghosts.
In interviews, she’s reserved. Behind the curtain, respected. In the ring, a controlled firestorm. Sexy Star II may not shoot interviews or arm locks like her predecessor, but she’s still lethal—in execution, not reputation.
The Future Is a Mask with Teeth
At 25, she’s barely begun. And yet, she’s already burned through promotions, collected hardware, and fought matches under the weight of an inherited mask with a bloody history. She’s climbed out from under the shadow of scandal and started casting one of her own.
In lucha libre, names are both armor and anchors. But Sexy Star II? She’s figured out how to float.
And maybe—just maybe—that mask finally fits her face.