Early career (1964–1973) At the age of 18, Roussimoff moved to Paris and was taught professional wrestling by a local promoter, Robert Lageat, who recognized the earning potential of Roussimoff's size. He trained at night and worked as a mover during the day to pay living expenses. In 1968 he defeated Franz van Buyten for the
FFCP World Heavyweight Championship Roussimoff also began making a name for himself wrestling in Germany, Australia, New Zealand, and Africa. During his time in Japan, doctors first informed Roussimoff that he suffered from
acromegaly. Promoters eventually ran out of plausible opponents for him and, as the novelty of his size wore off, the gate receipts dwindled. and wrestled numerous times in 1971 for
Verne Gagne's
American Wrestling Association (AWA) as a special attraction.
Touring special attraction (1973–1984) In 1973,
Vincent J. McMahon, founder of the
World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF), became Rousimoff's agent. to keep him from becoming overexposed in any area. Roussimoff was one of professional wrestling's most beloved
babyfaces throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. As such,
Gorilla Monsoon often stated that Roussimoff had not been defeated in 15 years by pinfall or submission prior to
WrestleMania III. He had lost matches outside of the WWF: a loss to
Adnan Al-Kaissie in Baghdad, Iraq in 1971, two draws and a countout loss to
The Sheik in Toronto in 1974 after a fireball was thrown in Andre's face, knockout to
Jerry Lawler in Memphis in 1975 and a count out to Lawler in Louisville in 1977, draw with
Bobo Brazil at a battle royal in Detroit in 1976,
Ronnie Garvin in Knoxville in 1978,
Stan Hansen by disqualification in Japan in 1981,
Kamala by countout in Toronto in 1984 and
Canek in Mexico in 1984 and submission losses in Japan to
Strong Kobayashi in 1972 and
Antonio Inoki in 1986. He also had sixty-minute time-limit draws with two of the three major world champions of the day,
Harley Race in Houston in 1979 and
Nick Bockwinkel in Chicago in 1976. (top) and André the Giant during the Superdome Showdown professional wrestling event on 2 August 1980, in New Orleans In 1976, at the second
Showdown at Shea, Roussimoff fought professional boxer
Chuck Wepner in an unscripted boxer-versus-wrestler fight. The wild fight was shown via telecast as part of the undercard of the
Muhammad Ali versus Antonio Inoki fight and ended when he threw Wepner over the top rope and outside the ring and won via count-out. In 1980, he feuded with
Hulk Hogan, when, unlike their more famous matches in the late 1980s, Hogan was the villain and Roussimoff was the hero, wrestling him at Shea Stadium's third
Showdown at Shea event and in Pennsylvania, where after Roussimoff pinned Hogan to win the match, Hogan bodyslammed him much like their legendary WrestleMania III match in 1987. The feud continued in Japan in 1982 and 1983 with their roles reversed and with Antonio Inoki also involved. One of Roussimoff's feuds pitted him against the "Mongolian Giant"
Killer Khan. According to the storyline, Khan snapped Roussimoff's ankle during a match on 2 May 1981 in
Rochester, New York by leaping off the top rope and crashing down upon it with his knee-drop. In reality, he had broken his ankle getting out of bed the morning before the match. Their feud continued as fans filled arenas up and down the east coast to witness their matches. On 14 November 1981 at the
Philadelphia Spectrum, he decisively defeated Khan in what was billed as a "Mongolian stretcher match", in which the loser must be taken to the dressing room on a stretcher. The same type of match was also held in Toronto. In early 1982 the two also fought in a series of matches in Japan with Arnold Skaaland in Roussimoff's corner.
World Wrestling Federation (1984–1991) Feud with the Heenan Family (1984–1987) versus
King Kong Bundy and
Big John Studd in
tag team match at
Madison Square Garden in October 1985 In 1982, Vincent J. McMahon sold the World Wide Wrestling Federation to his son,
Vince McMahon As McMahon began to expand his newly acquired promotion to the national level, he required his wrestlers to appear exclusively for him. McMahon signed Roussimoff to these terms in 1984, although he still allowed him to work in Japan for
New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). Roussimoff feuded with
Big John Studd over which of the two men was the "true giant" of wrestling. Roussimoff slammed Studd to win the match and collect the
$15,000 prize, then proceeded to throw cash to the fans before having the bag taken from him by Studd's manager,
Bobby "The Brain" Heenan. At
WrestleMania 2 on 7 April 1986, Roussimoff continued to display his dominance by winning a twenty-man
battle royal which featured top
National Football League stars and wrestlers. He last eliminated
Bret Hart to win the contest. Following a final tour with New Japan Pro-Wrestling in mid-1986, and a win in Austria over
CWA World champion
Otto Wanz, Roussimoff began appearing exclusively with the World Wrestling Federation. After WrestleMania 2, Roussimoff continued his feud with Studd and
King Kong Bundy. Around this time, Roussimoff requested a leave of absence to tend to his health, since the effects from his acromegaly were beginning to take their toll, as well as to tour Japan. He had also been cast in the film
The Princess Bride. To explain his absence, a storyline was developed in which Heenan—suggesting that Roussimoff was secretly afraid of Studd and Bundy, whom Heenan bragged were unbeatable—challenged Roussimoff and a partner of his choosing to wrestle Studd and Bundy in a televised tag-team match. When Roussimoff failed to show, WWF president
Jack Tunney indefinitely suspended him. Later in the summer of 1986, upon Roussimoff's return to the United States, he began wearing a mask and competing as the "Giant Machine" in a stable known as
the Machines. —as "a new tag-team from Japan" and claimed not to know the identities of the wrestlers, even though it was obvious to fans that it was Roussimoff competing as the Giant Machine. Heenan, Studd, and Bundy complained to Tunney, who eventually told Heenan that if it could be proven that Roussimoff and the Giant Machine were the same person, Roussimoff would be fired. Roussimoff thwarted Heenan, Studd, and Bundy at every turn. Then, in late 1986, the Giant Machine "disappeared" and Roussimoff was reinstated. Foreshadowing Roussimoff's heel turn, Heenan expressed his approval of the reinstatement but did not explain why.
Alliance with Bobby Heenan and Ted DiBiase (1987–1989) (foreground) during parts of his feud with
Hulk Hogan. Roussimoff agreed to
turn heel in early 1987 to be the counter to the biggest "
babyface" in professional wrestling at that time,
Hulk Hogan. On an edition of ''
Piper's Pit'' in 1987, Hogan was presented a trophy for being the
WWF World Heavyweight Champion for three years; Roussimoff came out to congratulate him, shaking Hogan's hand with a strong grip, which surprised the Hulkster. On the following week's ''Piper's Pit'', Roussimoff was presented a slightly smaller trophy for being "the only undefeated wrestler in wrestling history." Although he had suffered a handful of
countout and
disqualification losses in WWF, he had never been pinned or forced to submit in a WWF ring. Hogan came out to congratulate him and ended up being the focal point of the interview. Apparently annoyed, Roussimoff walked out in the midst of Hogan's speech. A discussion between Roussimoff and Hogan was scheduled, and on a ''Piper's Pit'' that aired 7 February 1987, the two met. Hogan was introduced first, followed by Roussimoff, who was led by longtime rival Bobby Heenan. Speaking on behalf of his new protégé, Heenan accused Hogan of being Roussimoff's friend only so he would not have to defend his title against him. Hogan tried to reason with Roussimoff, but his pleas were ignored as he challenged Hogan to a match for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship at
WrestleMania III. Hogan was still seemingly in disbelief as to what Roussimoff was doing, prompting Heenan to say "You can't believe it? Maybe you'll believe this, Hogan" before Roussimoff ripped off the T-shirt and crucifix from Hogan, with the crucifix scratching Hogan's chest, causing him to bleed. Following Hogan's acceptance of his challenge on a later edition of ''Piper's Pit
, the two were part of a 20-man over-the-top-rope battle-royal on 14 March edition of Saturday Night's Main Event X'' at the
Joe Louis Arena in Detroit. Although the battle royal was won by
Hercules, Roussimoff claimed to have gained a psychological advantage over Hogan when he threw the WWF World Heavyweight Champion over the top rope. The match, which was actually taped on 21 February 1987, At WrestleMania III, he was billed at , and the stress of such immense weight on his bones and joints resulted in constant pain. This took place in the territorial days of American wrestling three years before WWF began national expansion, so many of those who watched WrestleMania III had never seen the Giant slammed (Roussimoff had also previously allowed
Harley Race,
El Canek and
Stan Hansen, among others, to slam him). By the time of WrestleMania III, the WWF went national, giving more meaning to the Roussimoff–Hogan match that took place then. The feud between Roussimoff and Hogan simmered during the summer of 1987, as Roussimoff's health declined. The feud began heating up again when wrestlers were named the captains of rival teams at the inaugural
Survivor Series event. During their approximately one minute of battling each other during the match, Hogan dominated Roussimoff and was on the brink of knocking him from the ring, but was tripped up by his partners, Bundy and
One Man Gang, and would be counted out. Roussimoff went on to be the sole survivor of the match, pinning
Bam Bam Bigelow before Hogan returned to the ring to attack André and knock him out of the ring. Roussimoff later got revenge when, after Hogan won a match against Bundy on ''Saturday Night's Main Event
, he snuck up from behind and began choking Hogan to the brink of unconsciousness, not letting go even after an army of seven face-aligned wrestlers ran to the ring to try to pull him away; it took Hacksaw Jim Duggan breaking a piece of wood over his back (which he no-sold) for him to let go, after which Hogan was pulled to safety. As was the case with the SNME'' battle royal a year earlier, the series of events was one of the pieces that helped build interest in a possible one-on-one rematch between Hogan and Roussimoff, and to make it seem that Roussimoff was certain to win easily when they did meet. Meanwhile, Rousimoff returned to Germany in December 1987 for another match with Wanz, which he lost by countout. In the meantime,
the "Million Dollar Man" Ted DiBiase failed to persuade Hogan to sell him the WWF World Heavyweight Championship. After failing to defeat Hogan in a subsequent series of matches, DiBiase turned to Roussimoff to win it for him. He and DiBiase had teamed several times in the past, including in Japan and in the WWF in the late 1970s and early 1980s when both were faces at the time, but this was not acknowledged during this new storyline. The earlier attack and DiBiase's insertion into the feud set up the Hogan-Roussimoff rematch on
The Main Event, to air 5 February 1988, on a live broadcast on NBC. Acting as his hired gun, Roussimoff won the WWF World Heavyweight Championship from Hogan (his first singles title) in a match where it was later revealed that appointed referee
Dave Hebner was "detained backstage", and a replacement (whom Hogan afterwards initially accused of having been paid by DiBiase to get plastic surgery to look like Dave, but was revealed to have been his evil twin brother,
Earl Hebner), who made a three-count on Hogan while Hogan's left shoulder was off the mat. After winning, Roussimoff "sold" the title to DiBiase; the transaction was declared invalid by then-
WWF president Jack Tunney and the title was declared vacant. This was shown on WWF's
NBC program
The Main Event. At
WrestleMania IV, Roussimoff and Hulk Hogan fought to a double disqualification in a WWF title tournament match (with the idea in the storyline saying that Roussimoff was again working on DiBiase's behalf in giving DiBiase a clearer path in the tournament). Afterward, Roussimoff and Hogan's feud died down after a steel cage match held at
WrestleFest on 31 July 1988, in Milwaukee. Hogan was the winner. derived from Roussimoff's
fear of snakes. At the inaugural SummerSlam pay-per-view held at
Madison Square Garden, Roussimoff and DiBiase (billed as
The Mega Bucks) faced Hogan and WWF World Heavyweight Champion
"Macho Man" Randy Savage (known as
The Mega Powers) in the main event, with
Jesse "The Body" Ventura as the special guest referee. During the match, the Mega Powers' manager,
Miss Elizabeth, distracted the Mega Bucks and Ventura when she climbed up on the ring apron, removed her yellow skirt and walked around in a pair of red panties. This allowed Hogan and Savage time to recover and eventually win the match with Hogan pinning DiBiase. Savage forced Ventura's hand down for the final three-count, due to Ventura's character historically being at odds with Hogan, and his unwillingness to count the fall. Concurrent with the developing feud with the Mega Powers, Roussimoff was placed in a feud with
Jim Duggan, which began after Duggan knocked out Roussimoff with a two-by-four board during a television taping. Despite Duggan's popularity with fans, Roussimoff regularly got the upper hand in the feud. Roussimoff's next major feud was against
Jake "The Snake" Roberts. In this storyline, it was said Roussimoff was afraid of snakes, something Roberts exposed on ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he threw his snake, Damien, on the frightened Roussimoff; as a result, he suffered a
kayfabe mild heart attack and vowed revenge. During the next few weeks, Roberts frequently walked to ringside carrying his snake in its bag during Roussimoff's matches, causing the latter to run from the ring in fright. Throughout their feud (which culminated at
WrestleMania V), Roberts constantly used Damien to gain a psychological edge over the much larger and stronger Roussimoff. In 1989, Roussimoff and the returning Big John Studd briefly reprised their feud, beginning at WrestleMania V, when Studd was the referee in the match with Roberts, this time with Studd as a face and Roussimoff as the heel. During the late summer and autumn of 1989, Roussimoff engaged in a brief feud, consisting almost entirely of
house shows (non-televised events), and one televised match on 28 October 1989, at Madison Square Garden with then-
WWF Intercontinental Champion The Ultimate Warrior. Roussimoff began to wear face paint with a similar design to The Warrior and began called himself "The Ultimate Giant" when he appeared on
The Brother Love Show. The younger Warrior, the WWF's rising star, regularly
squashed the aging Roussimoff in an attempt to showcase his star quality and promote him as the "next big thing".
Colossal Connection (1989–1990) In late 1989, Roussimoff was joined with fellow
Heenan Family member
Haku to form a new tag team called the
Colossal Connection, in part to fill a void left by the departure of
Tully Blanchard and
Arn Anderson (
the Brain Busters, who were also members of Heenan's stable) from the WWF, and also to continue to keep the aging Roussimoff in the main event spotlight. He lost to
The Ultimate Warrior in 20 seconds at a house show in Cape Girardeau, Missouri on 11 December 1989. His last single match was a loss to The Ultimate Warrior on March 3, 1990, at a house show in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Colossal Connection immediately targeted WWF Tag Team Champions
Demolition (who had recently won the belts from the Brain Busters). At a television taping on 13 December 1989, the Colossal Connection defeated Demolition to win the titles. Roussimoff and Haku successfully defended their title, mostly against Demolition, until
WrestleMania VI on 1 April 1990, when Demolition took advantage of a mistimed move by the champions to regain the belts. After the match, a furious Heenan blamed him for the title loss and after shouting at him, before Heenan slapped him in the face; an angry Roussimoff responded with a slap of his own that sent Heenan staggering from the ring. Roussimoff also caught Haku's kick attempt, sending him reeling from the ring as well, prompting support and turning Roussimoff face for the first time since 1987. Due to his ongoing health issues, Roussimoff was unable to wrestle at the time of WrestleMania VI and Haku actually wrestled the entire match against Demolition without tagging him in. On weekend television shows following WrestleMania VI, Bobby Heenan vowed to spit in Roussimoff's face when he came crawling back to the Heenan Family. He wrestled one more time with Haku, teaming up to face Demolition on a house show in Honolulu on 10 April, Roussimoff was knocked out of the ring and The Colossal Connection lost via count-out. After the match, Roussimoff and Haku would fight each other, marking the end of the team. His final WWF match of 1990 came at a combined WWF/All Japan/New Japan show on 13 April in Tokyo, Japan when he teamed with
Giant Baba to defeat Demolition in a non-title match. Roussimoff won by pinning
Smash.
Sporadic appearances (1990–1991) Roussimoff returned in the winter of 1990, but it was not to the World Wrestling Federation. Instead, Roussimoff made an interview appearance for
Herb Abrams' fledgling
Universal Wrestling Federation on 11 October in Reseda, California. (the segment aired in 1991). He appeared in an interview segment with
Captain Lou Albano and put over the UWF. The following month on 30 November at a house show in Miami, Florida, the World Wrestling Federation announced his return as a participant in the 1991 Royal Rumble (to be held in
Miami two months later). Roussimoff was also mentioned as a participant on television but would ultimately back out due to a leg injury. His on-air return finally took place at the WWF's
Super-Stars & Stripes Forever USA Network special on 17 March 1991, when he came out to shake the hand of
Big Boss Man after an altercation with
Mr. Perfect. The following week at
WrestleMania VII, he came to the aid of the Boss Man in his match against Mr. Perfect. Roussimoff finally returned to action on 26 April 1991, in a six-man tag-team matchup when he teamed with
The Rockers in a winning effort against
Mr. Fuji and
The Orient Express at a house show in Belfast, Northern Ireland. On 11 May 1991 he participated in a 17-man battle-royal at a house show in
Detroit, which was won by
Kerry Von Erich. This was Andre's final WWF match, although he was involved in several subsequent storylines. His last major WWF storyline following WrestleMania VII had the major heel managers (Bobby Heenan,
Sensational Sherri,
Slick, and
Mr. Fuji) trying to recruit Roussimoff one-by-one, only to be turned down in various humiliating ways (e.g. Heenan had his hand crushed, Sherri received a spanking, Slick got locked in the trunk of the car he was offering to Roussimoff, and Mr. Fuji got a pie in his face). Finally,
Jimmy Hart appeared live on
WWF Superstars to announce that he had successfully signed Roussimoff to tag-team with
Earthquake. When asked to confirm this by
Gene Okerlund, Roussimoff denied the claims. This led to Earthquake's attacking Roussimoff from behind (injuring his knee). Jimmy Hart would later get revenge for the humiliation by secretly signing
Tugboat and forming
the Natural Disasters. This led to Roussimoff's final major WWF appearance at
SummerSlam 1991, where he seconded
the Bushwhackers in their match against the Disasters. Roussimoff was on crutches at ringside, and after the Disasters won the match, they set out to attack him, but the Legion of Doom made their way to ringside and got in between them and the Giant, who was preparing to defend himself with one of his crutches. The Disasters left the ringside area as they were outnumbered by the Legion of Doom, the Bushwhackers and Roussimoff, who struck both Earthquake and Typhoon (the former Tugboat) with the crutch as they left. His final WWF appearance came at a house show in Paris, France, on 9 October 1991. He was in Davey Boy Smith's corner as the Bulldog faced Earthquake; Smith hit Earthquake with Roussimoff's crutch, allowing Smith to win.
All Japan Pro Wrestling; Universal Wrestling Association (1990–1992) After WrestleMania VI, Roussimoff spent the rest of his in-ring career in
All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) and Mexico's
Universal Wrestling Association (UWA), where he performed under the name "André el Gigante". He toured with AJPW three times per year, from 1990 to 1992, usually teaming with
Giant Baba in tag-team matches. Roussimoff made a couple of guest appearances for Herb Abrams'
Universal Wrestling Federation, in 1991, feuding with
Big John Studd, though he never had a match in the promotion. In his last U.S. television appearance, Andre appeared on
World Championship Wrestling's (WCW)
Clash of the Champions XX special that aired on
TBS on 2 September 1992, where he gave a brief interview. During the same event, he appeared alongside
Gordon Solie and was later seen talking with him during the gala celebrating the 20th anniversary of wrestling on TBS. He did his final tour of Mexico in 1992 in a selection of six-man tag matches alongside
Bam Bam Bigelow and a variety of Lucha Libre stars facing among others
Bad News Allen and future WWF Champion
Yokozuna. Roussimoff made his final tour with AJPW from October to December 1992; he wrestled what became the final match of his career on 4 December 1992, teaming with Giant Baba and
Rusher Kimura to defeat
Haruka Eigen,
Masanobu Fuchi, and
Motoshi Okuma. == Acting career ==