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Not What You Meant?  There are 24 definitions for Jazz.

Carlene Begnaud

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Carlene Begnaud Flag of the United States
Statistics
Ring name(s) Jazz
Jazzmine
Billed height 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m)
Billed weight 140 lb (64 kg/10 st)
Born August 27 1973 (1973-08-27) (age 34)
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Resides Lafayette, Louisiana, United States
Billed from New Orleans, Louisiana
Trained by Rod Price
Sylvester Ritter
Debut 1998

Carlene Moore Begnaud (born August 27, 1973 in New Orleans, Louisiana) better known as Jazz is an American professional wrestler and two-time former WWE Women's Champion . Begnaud has previously worked for the original ECW and WWE's RAW and ECW brands.[1]

Contents

Personal Life

She is married to Rodney Begnaud, who also competed as Rodney Mack.[2]

Career

She was approached about training to become a wrestler and went to a wrestling school in Louisiana run by Rod Price and had her first wrestling match against Jacqueline. Moore was just six-months into her training with Rod Price when she got a job with Extreme Championship Wrestling.

Extreme Championship Wrestling

Considered one of the first female wrestlers to thrive in a male-dominated company lacking an active Women's Division (along the lines of Chyna in the WWF and Madusa in WCW), Jazzmine (as she was then known) was a part of a tight-knit group, consisting of then up-and-coming superstars such as Jason and Justin Credible. She later became pushed around because of her gender, leading to a feud with Jason. In most occasions in facing Jason, she won emphatically and continued to be a regular face in ECW. She appeared on a random basis before leaving the company for good in early 2000, just under a year before ECW was shut down due to bankruptcy.[3]

World Wrestling Entertainment

2001-2002

Having worked a number of house shows as try-outs during September 2001, Begnaud, now wrestling as Jazz, signed a two-year contract with the World Wrestling Federation. She made her formal debut in the company at the Survivor Series in a Six-Pack Challenge Match for the WWF Women's Championship, which had been vacated by Chyna after her departure from the company.[4] Ultimately, Trish Stratus came away with the victory and the championship that night. Several weeks later, Jazz attacked Stratus and Mighty Molly during a title defense. This led to a feud between Stratus and Jazz which led to Jazz defeating Stratus on the February 4, 2002 edition of RAW to win her first Women's Championship.[5] The feud went on for several months with Jazz making successful title defenses against Stratus, Lita and Ivory. However due to a torn ACL, Jazz dropped the title back to Stratus in a Hardcore-Rules match on the May 13, 2002 edition of RAW, which also involved Bubba Ray Dudley and Steven Richards.[6]

2003-2004

Jazz returned in early 2003 and involved herself in the feud between Stratus and Victoria. During this time, she took on the managerial services of Teddy Long, which led to another WWE Women's Championship reign after defeating Stratus at Backlash 2003.[7] She kept the title for several months but once more was forced to drop the title due to injury, losing it in a battle royal to Gail Kim on June 30.[8] She returned from injury in early 2004, but for the most part, she mostly wrestled on WWE HEAT and did not take part in any major feuds. Later that year, she became manager and valet for her real-life husband Rodney Mack before being released by WWE on November 4 2004.

Independent circuit

From January 16, 2005 she started working on the independent circuit and appeared at the unofficial ECW reunion show, Hardcore Homecoming. In late 2005, Jazz and Rodney Mack opened Dirtysouth Championship Wrestling, an independent promotion based in Louisiana. Jazz won the new DCW Louisiana State Title on June 3 2006. Jazz also went on to perform in Women's Extreme Wrestling, where she won the company's World Heavyweight Championship in May 2005 in a Fatal Four M'enage Quatro Match against Angel Orsini, Mercedes Martinez, and Simply Luscious when the previous champion, Tai "Killer Weed", was forced to relinquish the title due to an injury. While still WEW champion, on June 24, 2005, Jazz defeated April Hunter to win NWA Cyberspace's Women's championship.

Return to WWE

On May 4 2006, it was confirmed on WWE's official website that Jazz would be a part of the new ECW brand. Jazz made her first appearance as part of the new ECW during the WWE vs. ECW Head to Head show on June 7, where she faced the WWE Women's Champion Mickie James in a losing effort.[9] However, Jazz did not continue an on-screen role in the brand and only made a few appearances at ECW house shows before returning to Dirtysouth Championship Wrestling in September. Though in ECW, she stayed under contract with WWE until January 18, 2007 when she, along with her husband and several other wrestlers were released by WWE.[10]

Independent circuit

In May 2007, Jazz and Rodney Mack were booked by the Queens of Chaos promotion in France. They wrestled in front of 72,000 people which is the 2007 record for a wrestling show. A documentary will be released in 2008 from the event.

In wrestling

Jazz applying the Jazz Stretch to Trish Stratus
Jazz applying the Jazz Stretch to Trish Stratus

Championships and accomplishments

References

  1. ^ www.accelerator3359.com/Wrestling/bios/jazz.html. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  2. ^ http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=106752497
  3. ^ Jazz's Official Women of Wrestling Profile. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  4. ^ Survivor Series 2001 Results. WWE.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  5. ^ Women's Championship History: Jazz's First Reign. WWE.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  6. ^ Raw Results: May 13, 2007. Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  7. ^ Women's Title History: Jazz's Second Reign. WWE.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  8. ^ Women's Championship History: Gail Kim's First Reign. WWE.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  9. ^ ECW results: June 7, 2006. Prowrestlinghistory.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  10. ^ WWE releases Superstars. WWE.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  11. ^ Jazz's Profile. Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved on 2007-07-09.

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Carlene Begnaud from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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