WCWA Wrestling Star Wars (January 1989) was a professional wrestlingsupercard show that was held on January 27, 1989. The show was produced and scripted by the Dallas, Texas-based World Class Wrestling Association (WCWA) professional wrestling promotion and held in their home arena, the Dallas, Texas. Several matches from the show were taped for WCWA's television shows and broadcast in the weeks following the show. The show was the second to last Wrestling Star Wars show and the 31st overall show in the "Star Wars" event chronology. The January 1989 Star Wars was the only show in the series to be held in the Dallas Sportatorium, as they usually took place at the Reunion Arena in Dallas or the Fort Worth Convention Center in Ft. Worth, Texas. The show drew 3,300 spectators in the approximately 4,500-seat arena.
WCWA Wrestling Star Wars (March 1989) was a professional wrestlingsupercard show that was held on March 12, 1989. The show was produced and scripted by the Dallas, Texas-based World Class Wrestling Association (WCWA) professional wrestling promotion and held in the Will Rogers Coliseum in Ft. Worth, Texas instead of the Reunion Arena where WCWA usually held their Star Wars shows in Ft. Worth. Several matches from the show were taped for WCWA's television shows and broadcast in the weeks following the show. The show was the 32nd and last Wrestling Star Wars show in the "Star Wars" event chronology.
Records only document two results from the show as they were later broadcast on television. The Star Wars shows generally consisted of eight or more matches, but records are unclear on the card for the last Star Wars. In the first of two documented matches Eric Embry defended the WCWA World Light Heavyweight Championship against the 300+ pound Botswana Beast in a match where the weight limit for the championship had been waived. Embry retained the championship. In the second confirmed match of the night Kerry Von Erich and Jeff Jarrett won the WCWA World Tag Team Championship from Robert Fuller and Jimmy Golden in what could have been the main event of the show.
^Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). "(Texas) Dallas: NWA American Tag Team Title". Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. p. 271. ISBN0-9698161-5-4.
^"WCCW @ Fort Worth". Wrestling Data. March 12, 1989. Retrieved December 21, 2019.