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The promotions slogans are, "Masked wrestlers, comedians and idol wrestlers will bring a new wind to the professional wrestling world" [4] and "I want to deliver dreams to children!". [ 9 ] The promotions features wrestlers from various occupations who see wrestling as a second career and aims to produce idols and entertainers who want to make ...
Pages in category "Japanese female professional wrestlers" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 274 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Amarei often competed in the Japanese independent scene as a joshi special talent. In All Japan Pro Wrestling, she made her first appearance on the second night of the AJPW New Year Giant Series 2024 from January 3, where she teamed up with Chika Goto to defeat Miku Aono and Natsuki. [16]
Due to TJPW being under the same CyberFight flagship, Raku has competed in various of DDT Pro Wrestling's events. She made her first appearance at DDT Tokyo Idol Festival 2018 on August 3, where she teamed up with her Up Up Girls stablemates Hikari Noa, Pinano Pipipipi, Miu Watanabe, and Danshoku Dino to defeat Hyper Misao, Makoto Oishi, Yuki Kamifuku, Akari Saho, Aya Kajishima, Mayu Yoshikawa ...
Chiaki Kanahama (金濱 千明, Kanahama Chiaki), better known mononymously by her ring name Chiaki (CHIAKI (プロレスラー), Chiaki), is a Japanese professional wrestler currently performing in the Japanese promotion Dream Star Fighting Marigold where she is a former Marigold Twin Star Champion alongside Nagisa Nozaki.
JWP Joshi Puroresu was founded in early 1992, when Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (JWP), ravaged by internal politics, split up into two camps, dubbed the "shooters" and the "entertainers", [6] and eventually folded on January 18.
All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling was the only women's professional wrestling promotion prior to 1986. All Japan Women's was experiencing a boom period due to the Crush Gals of Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo as was Onyanko Club, a Japanese idol music group. Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling was imagined to be a wrestling version of Onyanko Club. [3]
JDStar (also spelt Jd'), was a women's professional wrestling promotion based in Tokyo, Japan. In the wake of the joshi puroresu boom of the early 1990s, several different groups opened with distinct approaches. The Jd'Star promotion, with its subtitle, "Beauty Athlete," summed up the company's approach.