NURSE PAYNE
From
A maximum security daycare facility
Known associates
- The Brute
- "Lovely One"
Trademark moves
- Administering aid
- Soothing the savage Brute with "Lovely One" (his favourite soft toy)
Bio:
Graduating suma cum laude from the Florence Nightingale Memorial Combat Medic Institute, Nurse Payne had always harboured a burning desire to work with the underprivileged and medically afflicted. A born "angel of mercy", Nurse Payne saw it as her sacred duty to minister to those who had lost their way or needed a special helping hand.
A proponent of a radical approach of non-invasive, holistic psychiatric care, Nurse Payne developed a technique christened "positive association therapy", whereby violent impulses could be peacefully restrained in a subject by associating positive feelings with an everyday object (say, a child's soft toy), thus alleviating the need for the normal regime of medication and overt physical restraint. She decided to call it the Diametrically Opposed to Normal Treatment - Positive Association Negates Intensive Care approach (or D.O.N.T.P.A.N.I.C for short).
Such a skillset made Nurse Payne the natural choice when KPW management were searching for just the right person to temper the more violent side of The Brute. For her part, Nurse Payne leapt at the opportunity to utilise the Brute as a special test subject for her "positive associational therapy" and introduced him to "Lovely One", a little teddy bear which served as the focus for quelling The Brute's more violent impulses.
Accompanying her favourite patient to ringside with "Lovely One", Nurse Payne ensures that The Brute is conveyed to and from ringside with minimal danger and discomfort to either himself or the fans. This level of care ensures that The Brute can concentrate on his favourite occupational therapy - professional wrestling! Like the velvet glove to the Brute's iron fist, this unlikely pair epitomise the phrase "beauty and the beast"!
Nurse Payne is forever at The Brute's side, ready to tend to any cuts and bruises caused by head-first collisions with turnbuckles or chewing on ring ropes!

