Julia Severin
Alias: The Mighty Matriarch
Overall Record: 0 - 0
LAW Record: 0 - 0
Role: Face
General Appearance

This image is AI generated.
Alias: The Mighty Matriarch
Overall Record: 0 - 0
LAW Record: 0 - 0
Role: Face
General Appearance

This image is AI generated.
Biological Information:
Age: 45
Birthday: July 21st
Height: 5'9 (175 cm)
Weight: 162 lbs (73 kg)
Ethnicity: French
Combat Grade:
Offense: F
Defense: C
Speed: E
IQ: B
Experience: A
Potential: F
Wrestling Info:
Style: Technician
Having taught both Nix and Kara how to wrestle, Julia has an excellent understanding of the wrestling fundamentals. She's past her prime, meaning her physical abilities are not quite the same level as they once were, but she makes up for that with a great deal of technical skill and experience. Notably, she is excellent at escaping submission maneuvers as she is calm under pressure. However, it is noted that she often lost during her time because of her poor durability. She cannot handle a lot of physical punishment, even less so now that her physical peak is no longer there.
Signature Moves:
- Veteran's Vice: Uppercut
- Disciplinary Action: Stunner
- Timeout: Figure 4 Leglock
- Watch and Learn: Pedigree
Theme Song:
Spoiler
Personal Information:
Hometown: Paris, France
Personality Type (MBTI): ISFJ
Likes: Her Daughters, Wrestling, Wine-Tasting, Reading, Pastries
Dislikes: Dishonesty, Shitty Romantic Comedies
Personality:
Spoiler
Julia is a wise and mature woman whose passion for wrestling has defined her life. In her youth, she was impulsive and eager for adventure, constantly seeking new challenges in the ring. With age, she has learned temperance, understanding her limits while still honoring the fire that first drew her to the sport. To her, wrestling is more than physical competition — it is storytelling in motion, a blend of strength, emotion, and integrity. She prides herself on never sacrificing her character for the sake of victory, valuing honesty and heart above all else.
As a mother, Julia is patient and compassionate, though firm in her expectations. She has never tried to force her daughters to follow in her footsteps, instead encouraging them to pursue lives filled with their own passion and purpose. While she sometimes misses the freedom of her youth, she channels that energy into guiding her children with wisdom and discipline. Beneath her calm and principled exterior, however, lies a fiercely protective spirit — and anyone who threatens her family will face her wrath.
As a mother, Julia is patient and compassionate, though firm in her expectations. She has never tried to force her daughters to follow in her footsteps, instead encouraging them to pursue lives filled with their own passion and purpose. While she sometimes misses the freedom of her youth, she channels that energy into guiding her children with wisdom and discipline. Beneath her calm and principled exterior, however, lies a fiercely protective spirit — and anyone who threatens her family will face her wrath.
Lore:
Spoiler
Julia Severin was born in Paris, France, raised in a city that understood performance in a way few other places did. As a child, she fell in love with professional wrestling. To her, it was literature written in impact: heroes forged in hardship, villains undone by arrogance, redemption earned in full view of a crowd. She began training young, stubborn and unpolished, and in her early career she lost far more often than she won. Promoters underestimated her. Audiences forgot her name. Still, she returned to the ring every time. Victory was gratifying, but endurance was sacred. She built a quiet reputation for honesty in competition, refusing shortcuts or theatrics that compromised her sense of self.
At 18, a modeling job brought her to Los Angeles, where she met Matthew LeBlanc—an American with ambition and forward momentum. Their romance moved quickly; in hindsight, almost too quickly. They were married not long after, and soon, their twin daughters were born: Nixanne first, Karella twenty minutes later. Motherhood steadied Julia in ways wrestling never had. The divorce that followed Matthew’s departure was quiet and decisive. Julia rarely speaks of it—not out of bitterness, but discipline. Some losses, she believes, are not meant for performance. She relocated to San Francisco and rebuilt her life around structure: a home rooted in order, emotional clarity, and unspoken strength.
With Nix, Julia found a reflection—not a duplicate, but an echo of herself. Nix absorbed wrestling the way Julia always had: as emotional structure and storytelling. Quiet, observant, and inwardly intense, she understood that the ring revealed truth rather than manufactured glory. Julia never pushed her toward it, yet Nix gravitated there on her own terms, balancing physical rigor with academic discipline. When Nix chose to attend UC Berkeley and later work as a librarian, Julia saw no contradiction in it. Strength and scholarship were never opposites. Wrestling nights remained ritual between them, a shared language requiring few words.
When Nix met Troy in college, Julia immediately recognized the guarded distance her daughter kept. She understood that instinct—it was the same self-preservation Julia herself had learned the hard way. Yet from the beginning, she sensed something steadier in Troy, something grounded and deliberate that differed from the restless momentum that had once drawn her to Matthew. After the night he stayed with Nix following a painful defeat, Julia noticed the change. It wasn’t dramatic, just quieter—an easing of tension, a willingness to let someone stand beside her without diminishing her. Julia approved, as she often did, without announcement. And as Nix continued stepping into rings against stronger opponents, fully aware she might lose and choosing to fight anyway, Julia saw her own philosophy carried forward: to care without restraint, to fall without shame, and to return without hesitation.
Kara was different—brighter in motion, sharper at the edges. Where Nix internalized discipline, Kara tested it. Julia’s lessons about wrestling as emotional storytelling never landed the same way with her younger daughter. Kara craved momentum over reflection. Julia recognized something familiar in that defiance—an echo of Matthew’s need to outrun expectation. She remained strict but patient, allowing Kara to push against boundaries without fracturing the foundation beneath her. When Kara left for New York after high school, chasing her own independence in smaller promotions and uncharted territory, Julia quietly ached for her daughter. She supported her regardless. Love, to her, was not possession—it was faith in return.
5 years later, when Kara came back—not defeated, but finished with what she had gone to find—Julia welcomed her home without spectacle. No speeches. No judgment. Just the same steady presence she had always offered both daughters. She never needed them to mirror her philosophy or inherit her career. She only needed them to live fully, honestly, and on their own terms.
As both of her daughters step into LAW, Julia follows—not as a shadow, but as a constant. She remains the steady, watchful presence, the pillar they can rely on. From the crowd, she sees her lessons unfolding in real time: Nix’s quiet resilience, Kara’s fearless momentum, both shaped in different ways by the same foundation. And if the moment ever demands more than silent support—if the circumstances force her hand—Julia is more than prepared to remind the arena that she has not fully hung up her boots, and that the story she began so years ago is not so easily finished.
At 18, a modeling job brought her to Los Angeles, where she met Matthew LeBlanc—an American with ambition and forward momentum. Their romance moved quickly; in hindsight, almost too quickly. They were married not long after, and soon, their twin daughters were born: Nixanne first, Karella twenty minutes later. Motherhood steadied Julia in ways wrestling never had. The divorce that followed Matthew’s departure was quiet and decisive. Julia rarely speaks of it—not out of bitterness, but discipline. Some losses, she believes, are not meant for performance. She relocated to San Francisco and rebuilt her life around structure: a home rooted in order, emotional clarity, and unspoken strength.
With Nix, Julia found a reflection—not a duplicate, but an echo of herself. Nix absorbed wrestling the way Julia always had: as emotional structure and storytelling. Quiet, observant, and inwardly intense, she understood that the ring revealed truth rather than manufactured glory. Julia never pushed her toward it, yet Nix gravitated there on her own terms, balancing physical rigor with academic discipline. When Nix chose to attend UC Berkeley and later work as a librarian, Julia saw no contradiction in it. Strength and scholarship were never opposites. Wrestling nights remained ritual between them, a shared language requiring few words.
When Nix met Troy in college, Julia immediately recognized the guarded distance her daughter kept. She understood that instinct—it was the same self-preservation Julia herself had learned the hard way. Yet from the beginning, she sensed something steadier in Troy, something grounded and deliberate that differed from the restless momentum that had once drawn her to Matthew. After the night he stayed with Nix following a painful defeat, Julia noticed the change. It wasn’t dramatic, just quieter—an easing of tension, a willingness to let someone stand beside her without diminishing her. Julia approved, as she often did, without announcement. And as Nix continued stepping into rings against stronger opponents, fully aware she might lose and choosing to fight anyway, Julia saw her own philosophy carried forward: to care without restraint, to fall without shame, and to return without hesitation.
Kara was different—brighter in motion, sharper at the edges. Where Nix internalized discipline, Kara tested it. Julia’s lessons about wrestling as emotional storytelling never landed the same way with her younger daughter. Kara craved momentum over reflection. Julia recognized something familiar in that defiance—an echo of Matthew’s need to outrun expectation. She remained strict but patient, allowing Kara to push against boundaries without fracturing the foundation beneath her. When Kara left for New York after high school, chasing her own independence in smaller promotions and uncharted territory, Julia quietly ached for her daughter. She supported her regardless. Love, to her, was not possession—it was faith in return.
5 years later, when Kara came back—not defeated, but finished with what she had gone to find—Julia welcomed her home without spectacle. No speeches. No judgment. Just the same steady presence she had always offered both daughters. She never needed them to mirror her philosophy or inherit her career. She only needed them to live fully, honestly, and on their own terms.
As both of her daughters step into LAW, Julia follows—not as a shadow, but as a constant. She remains the steady, watchful presence, the pillar they can rely on. From the crowd, she sees her lessons unfolding in real time: Nix’s quiet resilience, Kara’s fearless momentum, both shaped in different ways by the same foundation. And if the moment ever demands more than silent support—if the circumstances force her hand—Julia is more than prepared to remind the arena that she has not fully hung up her boots, and that the story she began so years ago is not so easily finished.
Relationships:
- Matthew LeBlanc (Ex-Husband)
- Nixanne "Nix" Severin (Older Daughter)
- Karella "Kara" Severin (Younger Daughter)
- Troy Mikkelsen (Prospective Son-in-Law)
- Aya Al-Amari (Longtime Rival)
Fun Facts:
- Both of her daughters adopted and developed her moves into their own finishers.
- While she was pregnant with Nix and Kara, she worked in a customer service job because she couldn't wrestle.
- She is the reason Nix enjoys books so much; her favorite author is Leigh Bardugo.
- She is fully bilingual and capable of speaking both French and English to a native level.
- She has recently been getting into Feng Shui, rearranging her furniture in weird ways.
- She is an excellent cook and apparently makes a killer Beef Bourguignon.
- Kara once threw a football at her which broke her glasses and almost broke her nose.
Match History:
L.A.W. Matches
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Non-L.A.W. Matches
Sorry! Nothing yet.