Cassandro, cross-dressing luchador has fought battles in and out of the arena

'Cassandro' the movie about El Paso's amateur wrestler whose real name is Saúl Armendáriz, will open in most theaters Sept. 15. It will stream on Prime Video Sept. 22.

The movie tells the story of the gay amateur wrestler who went through a lot of hardship before gaining international stardom after he created the “exotico” character Cassandro. Exoticos are male wrestlers who dress in drag.

Mexican actor Gael García Bernal plays the role of Cassandro. He was won acclaim for his Spanish and English work. He appeared in the movies 'Y Tu Mamá También' and 'Coco.' He received a Golden Globe award for his role in 'Mozart of the Jungle,' an Amazon series.

Victory members can see the movie early on Sept. 12 at the Alamo Drafthouse in El Paso.

The luchador went on to earn two titles — NWA World Welterweight and UWA World Lightweight champion. He is often referred to as the “Liberace of Lucha Libre.”

In an April 15, 2012, article for the Times, Paul Imison interviewed the wrestler about his career:

Glitter and pain

Openly gay, cross-dressing luchador has fought battles in and out of the arena

MEXICO CITY – Like any other great performer, he never really leaves the stage.

Cassandro is one of the best-known exoticos — cross dressing luchadors, or wrestlers — in Mexico, with nearly a quarter-century of high-flying grappling under his belt and a resume that includes tours of the United States, Europe and Japan. He was also Mexico’s first openly gay luchador, a brave move in the theatrical but overwhelming in the “man’s man” world of professional wrestling.

Born and raised in El Paso of Mexican descent, Cassandro (Saul Armendariz) learned the ropes just across the border in Juárez. Now 41, he has been wrestling professionally since he was 17.

April 15, 2012: Backstage at the "Los Exoticos" show March 10 at Arena Azteca Budokan In Ciudad Neza.
April 15, 2012: Backstage at the "Los Exoticos" show March 10 at Arena Azteca Budokan In Ciudad Neza.

Emphasis on skill and dives

Although he performs around the world for various promotions, Cassandro is a proud proponent of the dare-devil Lucha style — wrestlers of generally smaller stature than their U.S. counterparts, with an emphasis on skill and breathtaking dives over power or physique.

Lucha Libre, is of course, the spectacular variant of pro wrestling that originated in the 1930s in Mexico, where the majority of performers don superhero-style masks and closely guard their true identities. It became a pop-culture phenomenon thanks to the advent of television in the 1950s. Mexico’s greats luchador of all time, El Santo (The Saint), became a national icon, featured in a string of successful comic books and movies as well as the squared circle.

The classic image of the masked luchador is now as emblematic of Mexico as tequila, mariachis and Day of the Dead — seen everywhere from soccer crowds to Independence Day parades.

All luchadors look amazing when they step in the ring, but exoticos tend to turn it up a notch. The dresser in Cassandro’s Mexico City hotel room is fit to burst with moisturizer, makeup and other beauty tools.

2016: The world-renowned Mexican luchador Cassandro, who was raised in El Paso.
2016: The world-renowned Mexican luchador Cassandro, who was raised in El Paso.

No outfit worn more than twice

An artist in more ways than one, he explains how he designs his own ring gear, often incorporating the flag of whichever country he is touring and never wears the same outfit more than twice. “I give them away to fans,” he says.

He proudly displays a ring jacket he had made for a recent string of shows in Canada.

Mexico is often viewed as the home of machismo, and though times are changing — Mexico City legalized gay marriage in 2009 — homophobia still exist in everyday society.

However, Cassandro doesn’t feel that his sexuality has hampered his career, in which he became the first exotico to hold a title in one of Mexico’s top wrestling promotions, the UWA World Lightweight Championship in 1992.

More: 'Cassandro' movie, based on El Paso pro wrestler, to release in September

It’s part of the show

“Of course, I’ve had drinks thrown at me, people in the crowd wanting to take a shot at me, but that happens to all the luchadors, gay or not,” he explains. “It’s part of the show; you’re there to be either loved or hated.

“But the reactions I get, even in Mexico, are mostly positive. I have fans of both sexes and all ages. Women will yell at me to come over and kiss their husbands, which I do. It’s part of the craziness of the show.”

If anything, the biggest problem in the early days was with some of his colleagues.

“Wrestling is obviously a contact sport, and early on there were some guys who didn’t want to work with me,” Cassandro said. “It meant I had to work 10 times as hard to show them I was their equal in the ring. Wrestling may be choreographed, but there are a lot of egos and jealousy involved.

“Twenty years later, all the guys in Mexico know who I am and they just respect me for how good I am in the ring.”

Unlike most other luchadors, Cassandro doesn’t wrestle with a mask — all the better to show off his chiseled looks and pink-dyed mane.

April 1, 2012: Cassandro prefers to give interviews in full makeup and ring attire. His "look" is key to a luchador's character.
April 1, 2012: Cassandro prefers to give interviews in full makeup and ring attire. His "look" is key to a luchador's character.

Hair vs Hair

In Lucha Libre, the traditional way to settle a rivalry between two wrestlers is a “lucha de apuesta,” in which the loser has to remove his mask — the ultimate humiliation — but exotios often put their flowing locks on the line instead. A respected veteran, Cassandro usually wins such bouts, but he did lose a Hair vs Hair match to the son of the legendary Santo, known as El Hijo del Santo, in Los Angeles in 2007.

One of Cassandro’s favorite and riskiest moves is a stunning dive off a second-floor balcony onto an opponent lying prone on the arena floor. Asked how you execute such a maneuver without getter hurt, he laughs: “You don’t.”

He has seven pins in his left leg from surgery, he has a dislocated shoulder, and at the time of this interview he was about to see a doctor about surgery on the other knee.

However much it’s a show, wrestling can be as physically grueling as any other professional sport.

April 15, 2012: Cassandro and colleagues attend Mass at Mexico City's Basilica de Guadalupe.
April 15, 2012: Cassandro and colleagues attend Mass at Mexico City's Basilica de Guadalupe.

Smile like a performer

“Like any job, you do it even when you don’t want to do it,” he said. “You might be having the worst day of your life, our body hurts, you’re exhausted; but if you’re book to wrestle, you walk through those curtains and smile, like any performer.”

Currently a free agent, he wrestles for a variety of promotions when the jobs come along (“Sometimes I’m booked a month in advance; other times six”), and he can work up to seven nights a week.

As elsewhere in the entertainment industry, the unorthodox lifestyle and emotional necessity of having to get up for a show each night has led many pro wrestlers into boozy, druggy temptation. Cassandro is open about the alcohol and drug addictions he suffered until 2003.

He has a tattoo on his back with his “sober date” beneath the image of a lighthouse, which he says symbolizes the path ahead.

Today, Cassandro takes consolation in San Judas Tadeo and the Virgin of Guadalupe and wears a crucifix around his neck. Like many other recovering addicts, he seems to have overcome his demons and made peace with the hand that life has dealt him.

Butat age 41, that body — however heavenly — won’t take the punishment forever. His next knee surgery will keep him out of the ring for at least nine months.

“Wrestling has given me so much. It’s enabled me to lead a wonderful life — I’d do it forever, and I’ll miss it when I can’t,” he says.

“But I wouldn’t want to be one of those guys who carry on until they’re broken down and can’t walk away from the spotlight.”

He shouldn’t have to. He’s already gone back to school and graduated as a massage therapist and chiropractor for the day when he finally has to hang up those treasured tights.

Trish Long may be reached at tlong@elpasotimes.com or 915-546-6179.

This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: Cassandro movie highlights cross-dressing luchador's battles in,out arena