WRESTLING NEWS
12 Wrestlers Who Look Very Different Without Makeup
By DAISY RUTH
A timeless legend, Sting has almost always appeared on television with his face covered in his iconic black-and-white face paint.
STING
He made an exception during his induction into the 2016 WWE Hall of Fame. While looking much different, he still seemed more recognizable than other wrestlers who use face paint.
Hawk and Animal were known for their trademark face paint, inspired by the 1981 "Mad Max" sequel "The Road Warrior." They wore it each time they entered the ring.
THE ROAD WARRIORS
Many fans had never seen them without their "war paint" until their 2011 induction into the WWE Hall of Fame, for which only Animal was present, given Hawk's death in 2003.
It's hard to imagine the Ultimate Warrior without his face paint. Throughout the years, he wore many iterations of the colorful and attention-grabbing face paint.
ULTIMATE WARRIOR
While being inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2014, the WWE star delivered his acceptance speech without his iconic face paint, looking completely unrecognizable.
Ever since her 2016 debut in TNA, Rosemary has sported a macabre facepaint. Her intricate makeup and various demon-inspired looks even populate her Instagram account.
Rosemary
The Impact Wrestling star has also appeared in several independent movies, such as "Monster Brawl" and "Exit Humanity," looking completely different without her facepaint.
While many wrestlers have portrayed Doink the Clown since 1992, the most famous was Matt Borne, who appeared in clown face paint and played tricks on other wrestlers.
DOINK THE CLOWN
Without the white face paint and green wig, you likely wouldn't be able to pick Borne out of a crowd as the man behind Doink.