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WWE’s resident mortician ‘Paul Bearer’ dead at 58

Moody 
William Moody, the real-life undertaker who became famous by portraying Paul Bearer, a mortician who managed some of pro wrestling's biggest stars, died Tuesday at 58 in a Mobile, Ala., hospital.
The hospital did not release a cause of death. TMZ.com reported that Moody told friends in the days before his death he was suffering from a blood clot.
Moody hit the peak of his career when he joined the WWE in 1991, took the name Paul Bearer and became
The Undertaker's manager. Bearer's face was painted a pasty white and he would carry an urn with him to ringside.
He was known for a demonic laugh and the catch phrase, "Oh, yes!" He hosted a show on WWE broadcasts known as "The Funeral Parlor."
Moody got into the wrestling business in the late 1970s, first competing on smaller shows around the country while serving in the Air Force.
His first major success, though, came when he was joined Florida Championship Wrestling in 1984 under the name Percival "Percy" Pringle III. He had worked under the Pringle name for several years previously, but didn't get over as a star until joining FCW.
Moody's greatest notoriety came after joining the WWE. He told of a 1990 meeting with WWE owner Vince McMahon and executives Pat Patterson and J.J. Dillon in which the Paul Bearer character was first conceived.
Moody's wife, Diana, predeceased him in 2009. He is survived by sons Michael and Danie

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