South Bay’s Melissa Cervantes, aka Thunder Rosa, spotlights lucha libre at Comic-Con Museum

Melissa Cervantes has traveled the world as her professional wrestling character Thunder Rosa. Those travels brought the former San Diegan back home this week to the Comic-Con Museum.
She appeared Thursday for the opening of a new exhibit on the colorful, high-flying world of Mexican wresting, also known as lucha libre.
The Balboa Park museum kicked off “Sangre, Sudor y Mito: The Art and Tradition of Mexican Lucha Libre,” which includes a look at its impact on popular arts and culture.
The exhibit, which translates to “Blood, Sweat and Myth,” explores the origins of lucha libre, tracing it to Mexican traditions and myths.
“We are superheroes in a way when we get in the ring,” said Cervantes. “The character, the stories that are being told, I think that’s what makes it very, very effective to everyone.”
She was born and raised in Tijuana, but spent her teen years in the South Bay, attending Montgomery High School in Otay Mesa and Southwestern College in Chula Vista. She got into wrestling later, making her debut in Sacramento in 2014.
Today, Cervantes is a star – she’s been a heel before but she’s now a face, meaning the good guy or white hat – and former world champion of one of the top national promotions, All Elite Wrestling.
The exhibit includes some of her colorful wrestling outfits, but also focuses a wide lens on the history of lucha libre.
There are collections of masks worn by famous Mexican wrestlers and examples of lucha libre’s popularity in comics, movies and action figures. One room offers crayons and drawing paper so children can create their own masks.
“This exhibit captures the spirited energy and culture of lucha libre and how it bridges storytelling across generations and unites the community,” said the museum’s Executive Director Rita Vandergaw.
The sport is particularly popular in San Diego, with the area’s proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border.
“They love lucha libre,” said Cervantes, of local fans.
It’s the colors, the folklore and the acrobatics, she said. But also, the stories told by the wrestlers create a personal connection with fans.
“It has a very symbolic, deep meaning that resonates profoundly within the Mexican soul,” added Gaspar Orozco, the cultural attaché of the Mexican consulate in San Diego, who participated in a panel discussion at the Comic-Con Museum.
Cervantes said the exhibit is important “for people to see what lucha libre is and what it represents for our culture and also how mainstream it has become.”
The exhibit is set to continue through Jan. 31, 2026.
Note: Photo inset – Melissa Cervantes, aka Thunder Rosa in the world of lucha libre, appears at San Diego’s Comic-Con Museum for the opening of an exhibit focused on Mexican wrestling. (Photo by Luis Monteagudo Jr.)
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