LOS ANGELES — After graduating college in 1992, Joan Marie Laurer took odd jobs, entered fitness contests and eventually trained to become a flight attendant. Then she discovered the athleticism and theatricality of the mostly male pro-wrestlers on TV and decided she, too, could leap from the turnbuckles.
Within a few years, the 5-foot-10-inch musclebound beauty was outfitted in leather and sparkles and nationally known as Chyna, pro-wrestling's first female superstar, taking on both women and men in the ring.
Seemingly just as quickly, her wrestling career was over, and Laurer struggled to remain in the spotlight — posing for Playboy, revealing her struggles with addiction on reality TV and making several adult films.
On Wednesday, police found the 46-year-old dead in her Redondo Beach apartment. They were responding to a 911 call from a friend who said the former World Wrestling Entertainment performer failed to answer her phone for a few days.
Investigators didn't immediately release a cause of death but noted there were no indications of foul play. Police initially reported the death as a possible overdose, Los Angeles County's Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter said.
An autopsy was planned in the next few days, he said, but it could be weeks before the toxicology results are known.
Laurer wrote in her 2001 autobiography, "If They Only Knew," that she watched wrestlers on television before she became one. And she would shake her head at how the women were presented as a mere side show
"Wrestling. 'I can do that!' I remember shouting at the TV," she wrote.