The Flying WallendasCircus PerformersBorn: c. 1900 Birthplace: Various Best known as: High-wire-walking circus family The Flying Wallendas were perhaps the most famous high-wire act of the 20th century. They worked without a safety net and were known for their high-wire headstands, bicycle rides, and such dangerous stunts as the seven-person human pyramid. The act was created in 1922 by family patriarch Karl Wallenda, and began touring with the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus in 1928. (Their original name was The Great Wallendas; the "Flying" nickname came later.) The family has endured various tragedies over the years, including a famous 1962 pyramid crash in Detroit which left two performers dead and one paralyzed. Karl Wallenda died in a 1978 fall from the wire in San Juan, Puerto Rico. In 1998 the sixth generation of the Wallendas returned to Detroit and performed the seven-person pyramid again, this time successfully. Various members of the family have continued performing into the 21st century. Copyright © 1998-2006 by Who2?, LLC. All rights reserved. More on Flying Wallendas from Fact Monster:
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