Huracán Ramírez
Daniel García Arteaga, best known under the ring name Huracán Ramírez, was a Mexican luchador enmascarado and actor. García was neither the first, nor the last, wrestler to work under the name "Huracán Ramírez". He was given the name in the mid-1950s, when the wrestler who originally played Huracán in the 1953 film Huracán Ramírez decided to give up the role in the ring because he no longer wanted to obscure his face with the mask. Thus, García became the second wrestler to wrestle in the ring under the Huracán identity.
During his career, his true identity was a closely guarded secret except to his closest family and friends, more closely guarded that any other luchador of that period. Following his retirement the "Huracán Ramírez" name and mask has been used by others, primarily because García did not own the rights to the name and the mask.
García, as Huracán Ramírez, was considered one of the most talented luchadors of his time and one of the most iconic luchadors of all time alongside wrestlers such as El Santo, Blue Demon and Mil Máscaras. He invented and popularized a move called the/la Huracánrana, a move that is now commonly used by smaller, high flying professional wrestlers all over the world. During his career he worked as "Huracán Ramírez" in at least five of the eight movies in the Huracán Ramírez movie series, starting with the second one in 1962. He also played the part of Santo in a biographical movie produced by Santo's son El Hijo del Santo.
Personal life
Daniel García Arteaga was born on April 9, 1926, in Mexico City's El barrio bravo de Tepito district to Juan García and Encarnación Arteaga de García. Daniel was the fifth of six sons all together, Arturo, Rodolfo, Guillermo, Juan, Daniel and Miguel. His mother's family had a long history in Amateur wrestling and a large number of people from Tepito became well known boxers or martial artists. Three of his older brothers became professional wrestlers, Arturo was known under the ring name "La Panter Roja" and later "El Catedrático", Rodolfo wrestled as "Rudy García" and Guillermo worked under the name El Demonio Rojo. Originally Daniel García tried to become a full-time boxer, but due to his small stature, he was never successful.Daniel García married his first wife, Chaly Alvarenga from El Salvador, in 1957; a few years later they had a daughter named Sandra García Alvarenga. In 1969, he met his second wife Eulalia Fernández during a tour of Bolivia. She moved with García to Mexico City after their marriage, where she would work at the Bolivian Embassy in Mexico City for many years. Together they had one daughter, Karla García Fernández. Karla is married to professional wrestler Axxel, the grandson of El Santo.
Professional wrestling career
García's family finally allowed him to become a professional wrestler after having trained for it for years, letting him follow in the footsteps of his older brothers. He started out as the enmascarado character "El Buitre Blanco", a rudo character, the only time in his career that he worked as a rudo. He would at times also work as the unmasked "Chico García", named after his boyish looks.Huracán Ramírez (1953–1987)
García actually had a small, uncredited part in the 1953 movie Huracán Ramírez, where he played both "El Buitre Blanco" and "Chico García" in some of the wrestling scenes. When the wrestler who played the "Huracán Ramírez" role, Eduardo Bonada, wanted to stop wrestling under a mask, the Rodríguez' decided to quietly audition for a new wrestler to take over the mask in the ring. The audition included a number of wrestlers such as Octavio Gaona Jr., Memo Rubio, Marco Carta and Daniel García. The older Rodríguez picked García due to his high flying skills, while his son wanted to go with Marco Carta. In the end García was given the character. Garcia did not have to pay the Rodríguez' for use of the character in the ring, but he was also not entitled to any of the proceeds from the movies or any merchandise the Rodríguez family sold. He was formally introduced as "Huracán Ramírez" in 1953, working a match in Mexico City against one of the top rudos of the time, El Medico Asesino. García's smooth, high flying wrestling style quickly earned him the name El Príncipe de Seda and it including popularizing a move that became known as the Huracanrana, named after the character. His style of wrestling was so unconventional that fans often commented that he did not actually know how to wrestle, just jump around in the ring, which led García to adopt a ground-based wrestling style to prove that he could wrestle, and that he just chose to work a different style. By the early 1960s, García had become synonymous with the character, making the "wrestling character" so popular that the Rodríguez decided to produce more "Huracán Ramírez" movies, this time with García performing the wrestling scenes. From 1962 to 1973, García appeared in five "Huracán Ramírez" movies. Two movies produced later on focusing on a boxing character called "El Torito" did feature the "Huracán Ramírez" character in a minor role, but García has indicated that he did not actually wear the mask for those two movies. Due to his wrestling style and the popularity of the film series, Huracán Ramírez became one of the top tecnicos in Empresa Mexicana de Lucha Libre at the time, regularly working against some of the top rudos such as Medico Asesino, Ray Mendoza, El Solitario, El Enfermero, Karloff Lagarde, René Guajardo, Coloso Colosetti, Dorrell Dixon, Murciélago Velázquez and El Santo. Following El Santo's tecnico turn in 1963, the two formed a regular tag team inside the ring and became lifelong friends outside the ring.García was one of the first wrestlers ever, and the first Mexican born wrestler, to fight against a boxer, defeating a French boxer known as "El Tigre Francés" in a scripted match. One of his major victories came on June 12, 1964, when he defeated the masked Espanto III in a Luchas de Apuesta, or "bet match" where the loser of the match would be forced to unmask. Following his loss, Espanto III removed his mask and revealed that his real name was Luis Miguel Vázquez Bernat. He won the Mexican National Welterweight Championship from Rizado Ruiz on April 3, 1965. A couple of months later he added another championship to his list of accomplishments as he won the NWA World Welterweight Championship from Karloff Lagarde. The title match was just one of many matches the two would have over the years as they developed a long running rivalry. García would win two additional championships, although documentation is unclear on which, but he was promoted as a "Four belt Champion" during one of his many international tours, a claim that was legitimate. He lost the NWA Welterweight title back to Lagarde on September 24, 1965. He lost the Mexican National Welterweight Championship to Alberto Muñoz on February 2, 1966. In 1968 he defeated El Enfermero in a Luchas de Apuestas match, forcing El Enfermero to remove his white mask and announce that his real name was Antonio Navarro Camargo. He regained the Mexican National Welterweight Championship in 1969 and would trade it back and forth with Karloff Lagarde as their rivalry stretched into 1972 and beyond. Over the years he participated and won a number of Luchas de Apuestas matches, winning the mask of wrestlers Halcón de Oro, Moloch, Halcón Dorado, Scorpio, La Tarántula, Blue Angelo, Cadaver II, La Sombra and Los Hermanos Muerte. He also won the hair of several unmasked wrestlers, defeating Carnicero Grimaldo, Delfin, Espectro I and El Greco in Luchas de Apuestas matches.
Over the years, García traveled all over the world and wrestled as Huracán Ramírez, including Japan, the United States, Europe and a lot of tours of South America including such countries as Guatemala, Panama, Bolivia, Colombia and Ecuador. In some countries such as Ecuador and Bolivia, Huracán Ramírez was more popular and more well known than even El Santo. In 1969, he worked a tour of Bolivia free of charge, drawing crowds to a series of shows benefiting the victims of a September 26, 1969 plane crash that killed all 74 passengers and crew, including an entire team from Bolivian first division soccer club, The Strongest. During the benefit tour, García was introduced to his future wife. In 1974, wrestling promoter Francisco Flores broke away from EMLL to form his own company called Lucha Libre Internacional, later known as the Universal Wrestling Association. Huracán Ramírez was one of the first wrestlers he signed to a contract, using the popularity of the character to establish the company. Over the years Huracán Ramírez regularly teamed with El Santo, as well as with Rayo de Jalisco for trios matches. The trio of Ramírez, Santo and Rayo de Jalisco was wrestling against Los Misioneros de la Muerte when Santo had a heart attack during the match. It was only through García's quick actions and medical assistance that El Santo survived the day. The same heart condition would later take El Santo's life, and when he was buried, David García, wearing the Huracán Ramírez mask, was one of Santo's pall bearers.