The original Hart Foundation began in 1985, when Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, already managed by Jimmy Hart, joined his brother-in-law Bret "Hitman" Hart to form a
villainous tag team. According to Bret, the tag team originated after he turned down the "Cowboy" Bret Hart
gimmick he was given, claiming that he did not really take a liking to it. He then suggested to WWF management that he would much prefer to be teamed up with Neidhart. Management first laughed at the idea, but months later just as Hart was about to quit, he was given what he wanted: he was allowed to become a villain and was partnered up with Neidhart and Jimmy Hart to form the Hart Foundation. The name "Hart Foundation" was already used to refer to the stable of wrestlers managed by Jimmy Hart, and in early matches the Neidhart/Hart team would be introduced as "members of the Hart Foundation". With the success of the new tag team, however, "The Hart Foundation" came to be associated solely with the Neidhart/Hart team and their manager, who all had 'Hart' in their family names. The Hart Foundation made its
pay-per-view debut at
WrestleMania 2 in 1986 as participants of a 20-man
battle royal which also included
NFL stars. The Harts gained their status as a mid-card team when feuding with
The Killer Bees (
"Jumping" Jim Brunzell and
B. Brian Blair). At ''
Saturday Night's Main Event VIII'', the Foundation faced the Bees in a tag team match, which the Bees won. The Hart Foundation continued to feud with the Killer Bees for the better part of 1986. The Hart Foundation then began a feud with Tag Team Champions The British Bulldogs (Davey Boy Smith and Dynamite Kid) in early 1987 over the title. and after Davis became a member of the Hart Foundation. On the March 14 ''
Saturday Night's Main Event X'', the Harts made their first title defense against
Tito Santana and
"Golden Boy" Danny Spivey, retaining the title after Danny Davis hit Santana with Jimmy Hart's
megaphone. Santana began to feud with Davis as a result of this action and, at this point, it was strongly suggested that Davis, as referee, had been to blame for Santana's loss of the WWF Intercontinental title to
Randy Savage with the help of a foreign object a year earlier (although in fact this had predated the start of Davis' "heel referee" angle). At this point, Santana joined the British Bulldogs in their feud with the Hart Foundation. The rivalry culminated in a six-man tag team match at
WrestleMania III where the Foundation teamed with Davis against the British Bulldogs and Santana. On the May 2 ''
Saturday Night's Main Event XI'', the Foundation defended their tag title against the British Bulldogs in a
Two out of three falls match. In the first fall, they got disqualified because of illegal double-teaming and in the second fall Smith pinned Neidhart. However, the Hart Foundation retained the title due to the disqualification result. On the October 27 edition of
Superstars, the Hart Foundation
dropped their title to
Strike Force (
Rick Martel and Tito Santana) after Neidhart submitted to a
Boston crab applied by Martel, ending their 10-month reign. Soon after, the Hart Foundation began making claims that Neidhart had never submitted and that they were robbed on national television (the match was shown on an edition of
Superstars of Wrestling). The two teams faced each other at
Survivor Series in a 10-team
Survivor Series elimination match. Strike Force captained a team of
fan favorites while the Hart Foundation captained a team of villains. Strike Force was eliminated by the Hart Foundation, but the Hart Foundation also got eliminated and in the end, the fan favorite team won the match. The feud culminated in a match for the WWF Tag Team Championship on the February 5
The Main Event I, as the Hart Foundation challenged Strike Force for the title, but lost the match. Bret Hart started a slow face turn at
WrestleMania IV in spring 1988. Hart and
Bad News Brown were the last 2 competitors in a 20-man Battle Royal and looked to be co-existing heels after eliminating the
Junkyard Dog. But Brown then double crossed Hart, hitting him with his
Ghetto Blaster finisher before throwing him over the top rope for the win. Immediately after being declared the winner and being awarded a huge trophy, Hart attacked Brown and smashed up the trophy starting his face turn. Neidhart eventually joined Bret's side in the feud with Brown causing a rift between the Foundation and manager Jimmy Hart. As a result, the Hart Foundation were increasingly
pushed as fully fledged fan favorites. In the summer of 1988, the Hart Foundation began a feud with WWF Tag Team Champions
Demolition (
Ax and
Smash) for the title. At the inaugural
SummerSlam in August 1988, they challenged Demolition for the WWF Tag Team Championship but ended up losing the match after Ax hit Hart with Jimmy Hart's megaphone leaving Smash to get the
pinfall. Jimmy Hart had "managed" Demolition alongside their regular manager
Mr. Fuji for the match as part of the ongoing Hart Foundation split. On the October 29 ''
Saturday Night's Main Event XVII'', they faced Demolition in a rematch for the title but lost due to outside interference by
The Fabulous Rougeau Brothers (
Jacques and
Raymond), old rivals of the Hart Foundation and, until a few months previously, a fan favourite team. In the late fall of 1988, Jimmy Hart signed the Rougeaus who, in the storyline, claimed 25 percent of the Hart Foundation's contract. The Hart Foundation continued their feud with the Rougeaus, and formed an alliance with
"Hacksaw" Jim Duggan. At the
Royal Rumble in early 1989, Duggan and the Hart Foundation defeated
Dino Bravo and the Rougeaus in a two out of three falls match to end the feud. The Hart Foundation continued to feud with wrestlers managed by Jimmy Hart through 1989. At
WrestleMania V, they defeated
Rhythm and Blues (
The Honky Tonk Man and
Greg "The Hammer" Valentine) with the use of Hart's megaphone. They also defeated several tag teams during this time. At
SummerSlam 89, they faced the Tag-Team Champions
The Brain Busters (
Arn Anderson and
Tully Blanchard) in a non-title match. When the match was made, the Busters, managed by
Bobby "The Brain" Heenan, were not champions and were not obliged to give the Harts a title shot. The Hart Foundation lost the match pushing them further away from regaining their titles. In the fall of 1989, the Hart Foundation split for a while and both wrestled as singles for the first time in almost four years. Hart had a series of matches against
Mr. Perfect, while Neidhart began a feud with
The Warlord. However, by the end of November 1989, Hart and Neidhart resumed their partnership and were booked into a series of tag team matches with fellow fan-favorite tag team
The Rockers (
Shawn Michaels and
Marty Jannetty). This was unusual at the time as fan favorites rarely faced each other in the ring; also, although no hostilities between the two were apparent at this time, it marked the genesis of what would become a long-running rivalry between Hart and Michaels. Most of these early Hart Foundation-Rockers matches ended in time-limit draws. On the April 28, 1990, ''
Saturday Night's Main Event XXVI'', they faced
The Rockers in a tag team match, which resulted in a double disqualification after WWF Tag Team Champions Demolition interfered. As a result of the interference, Demolition feuded with both the Rockers and the Hart Foundation. At
SummerSlam 90, the Hart Foundation faced Demolition in a two out of three falls match for the tag title. By this time Demolition member Ax was suffering from health problems so a third member of Demolition (
Crush) was introduced with the storyline being that the Hart Foundation didn't know which two members they would face until Demolition entered the arena. The two chosen were Crush and Smash. In the first fall, Hart was pinned by Crush but the Hart Foundation won the second fall by disqualification after Crush attacked the referee. Ax then made his way to the ring and interfered in the third fall until the
Legion of Doom (
Animal and
Hawk) came to ringside and attacked Demolition, the distraction allowed Hart to pin Crush and the Hart Foundation won. As a result, the Hart Foundation got their second WWF Tag Team Championship (despite the second fall being decided by disqualification). During their second reign as champions, the Harts met the Rockers again, this time in a series title and non-title matches. On October 30, 1990, Jannetty and Michaels did actually defeat the Hart Foundation in a two out of three falls match in
Fort Wayne,
Indiana to seemingly win the title. However, the WWE (WWF) has never officially recognized The Rockers' champion status. During the match the top rope broke by accident making the match a disjointed affair that would require serious clean up before it could be shown on TV. The Rockers actually defended the WWF Tag Team title against
Power and Glory (
Paul Roma and
Hercules) on November 3, 1990. Shortly after November 3 it was decided to not air the title change and that the title would revert to the Hart Foundation. In his book Michaels claims that the Hart Foundation had politicked to keep the title. Michaels claim is contradicted by other claims, including one that the WWF had actually fired Neidhart, and another that his contract had ended and an agreement to re-sign hadn't been reached which forced the title change, but that after the match the two sides came to an agreement and Neidhart was brought back with the broken ring rope used as the reason to nullify the match. The Hart Foundation split after WrestleMania VII, and Bret then focused on his singles career. •
Pro Wrestling Illustrated • Ranked No. 37 of the top 100 tag teams of the
PWI Years (2003) •
World Wrestling Federation/WWE •
WWF Tag Team Championship (
2 times) •
WWE Hall of Fame (
Class of 2019) == The New Foundation ==