Ask almost any daredevil, stunt performer or extreme sports athlete since the 1970s who provided their greatest inspiration and the name Evel Knievel inevitably leaps to mind. In his career as a motorcycle-jumping daredevil, Knievel dreamed big, performed fearlessly—and had the 433 broken bones to prove it. (Or so says the Guinness Book of World Records.) Below, is a list of adrenaline-fueled boundary pushers who have followed in his death-defying footsteps, from a former Google engineer who made a world-record freefall from the edge of the stratosphere to a Brazilian surfer who rode (and survived) an 80-foot-tall monster wave. The risks may change, but the irresistible urge to take them lives on.
1970s
Evel Knievel: The Godfather of Daredevils
Formally known as Robert Craig Knievel Jr., Evel Knievel almost single-handedly revived the daredevil business in the 1960s and ‘70s with a genius for publicity, a knack for jumping motorcycles over cars and other objects and a seemingly limitless tolerance for broken bones. The American public got its first major glimpse of Knievel in 1967, when he drove his motorcycle off a ramp at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas in attempt to leap the casino’s fountains. He stayed airborne for 140 feet but came down hard, breaking multiple bones. Many jumps (and hospital stays) later, he attempted his most daring and publicized jump, flying a rocket-powered cycle 1,600 feet across the Snake River Canyon in Twin Falls, Idaho, in 1974. Unfortunately, a parachute on the craft deployed prematurely, causing it to stop short and float down into the canyon, leaving Knievel with some minor scrapes. Evel Knievel retired in 1976 but not before his last major jump, clearing 14 Greyhound buses at an Ohio theme park without breaking a single bone.
Philippe Petit: Man on a Wire
The French-born high-wire artist, who later moved to the United States, first came to worldwide attention in 1971 when, at age 21, he strung a wire between two towers at Notre Dame cathedral in Paris and walked across, 223 feet off the ground. He topped that in 1974, when he performed the same feat, 1,350 feet in the air, in a 45-minute walk back and forth between the twin towers of the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan. Although he was quickly arrested and charged with disorderly conduct and criminal trespass, the city, perhaps bowing to a public charmed by the young daredevil’s audacity, agreed to drop the charges in return for an encore performance in Central Park. Since then he has walked wires around the world and been featured in both an Academy Award-winning documentary, Man on Wire, and a fictionalized account, The Walk. “I prepare by reducing the unknown to nothing, but also by knowing my limits, he told The New Yorker in 1999. “If I think I am a hero who is invincible, I will pay for it with my life.” Happily, as of this writing, he is still alive.