Dark Side of the Ring executive producer and co-creator Evan Husney spoke with Fightful on a number of topics, including WWE Hall of Famer Mick Foley.
Husney said, โMick Foley is another person that weโve had a great relationship with over the years. He was kind of patient zero in a lot of ways, like things kind of could have gone a different way, sliding doors with Dark Side where he would have been the narrator for the show. That was the original sort of intention of the series. But he didnโt know us. We didnโt have street cred and so he was a little worried about some of the stories we were covering and how weโd handle them. Which I totally understand because we were green as grass back then. But itโs cool to come full circle with him now because we always wanted to do a story about him. Because Iโve always found him to be one of my favorite personalities in wrestling, not only just as a human being but to me. He operates on a plane of performance art or just the way that he thinks about the business and the way that he applied himself as a character and how deep he went and all the sacrifices he made for the sake of his art, his sort of theater of cruelty style of art, performance art has always been really fascinating to me.โ
On convincing Foley to be a subject for the show:
โSo we finally got the opportunity to convince him. He was a little gun-shy for several seasons about kind of being a subject on the show. But we were finally able to do it. The Hell in the Cell match, while itโs well-trodden territory, of course, for wrestling fans, that was such a huge deal for me as a kid,โ he said. โIโm sure a lot of people of my generation who saw it live, thatโs the thing we all talked about on the playground afterwards, was that match and what happened. Itโs just still the craziest thing, and itโs always the match that I show people whoโve never seen a wrestling match before because their jaws are usually on the floor.โ
On Foleyโs performance in Hell in a Cell:
โHowever you may feel about that style of wrestling, the story that is told in that ring and on that night, itโs a roller coaster ride unlike any other. This idea of, โWell, this guy might die in the ring.โ Of course, thereโs that. But to me, itโs just the brilliance of having him carted away in the stretcher, and then getting up and re-climbing the cage, which always gives me goosebumps. Itโs so amazing. But it was a challenge for us, โCan we make an entire episode out of a full match?โโ
On the Dark Side of the Ring episode having a longer runtime than the actual match:
โWe live, I think, in the Hell in the Cell match in this episode longer than the actual runtime of the matches, and that was kind of the whole point was, letโs just try and live in this match and get deep into the psychology of Mick Foley and what he was thinking versus what he had planned versus what other people knew and then letโs try and bring in as many people who were there and seeing it unfold. So it is kind of this like urgent, sports real-time sports documentary is kind of how it plays, which is really cool.โ
On talking to Francois Petit for the feature:
โIt was great to talk to people like Francois Petit, who was the sort of the โdoctorโ they had in the back whoโs more just like a physical therapist. But you donโt hear from him all that often, and I was just shocked when he told us that he also played Sub-Zero in Mortal Kombat in the first movie. I had no idea that thatโs who that was. So very cool, and heโs a cool character in the piece. But so I urge anybody who feels like theyโve heard the story before. This is a very cool look at this, and I think itโs a little deeper than most of the pieces youโve seen on it before.โ
You can check out Husney’s comments in the video below.
(H/T to Fightful for transcribing the above quotes)