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STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE
Lord James Blears, president of the Pacific Wrestling Federation, is seen in this file photo.
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DENNIS ODA / MARCH 19, 2001
James “Tallyho” Blears talks about his World War II experience.
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STAR-ADVERTISER ARCHIVE
James Blears and Gene Kiniski. N.W.A. World Tag Team Champions from 1952 to 1956. are seen in this file photo.
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James Blears, a legendary wrestling champion, local promoter and World War II survivor who was nearly killed by his Japanese captors, has died.
Blears died of natural causes Thursday night at Kuakini Medical Center, his son Clinton Blears said. He was 92.
“He lived a good life,” Clinton said. “He always told jokes. He gave us the gift of being able to tell stories because he was a story- and a joke teller.”
Blears, a professional wrestler known as Lord “Tally-Ho” Blears, told the Honolulu Star-Bulletin in 2001 that he would eat a can of peaches every March 29 in homage to his fellow captives who perished and to remind himself of the preciousness of life and resilience. He said he ate peaches because it was the first food sailors gave him after they plucked him from the Indian Ocean, following his escape from his Japanese captors in 1944.
Blears was a 21-year-old radio officer on a Dutch merchant ship that had been sunk by a Japanese submarine near the end of World War II. The Japanese brought aboard the survivors and were shooting or decapitating many on the foredeck. Blears said he escaped by kicking a Japanese officer and pulling his hand out of a rope, then jumping overboard.
In Hawaii, Blears was an announcer for multiple sporting competitions including the Waikiki Rough Water Swim and the Quiksilver in Memory of Eddie Aikau big-wave surf contest. He was also a skilled waterman, surfer and canoe paddler.
He is the father of former professional surfer Laura Blears.
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