in a kind of passionate hope and yearning." Davis, "it was as if 100 million minds had become one mind dominated by one emotion - and that almost a religious one. "Abruptly, across America," wrote Lindbergh biographer Kenneth A. It gives us the rush of unreason, the fix of adventure, some of us need in an increasingly tame world. That's not so unusual given the way Americans follow and even sometimes imitate the exploits of their daredevils. But maybe it was worth it, because now Dan Cameron Rodill reports that at least three theaters around the country are interested in his play. When the police fished him out, all his ribs were broken and his lung was collapsed. The jump was Rodill's final desperate ploy to gain attention for his unproduced work. The line blurs in this American cycles from Harry Houdini in 1902 to Evel Knievel in 1974, holding up a $6-million check and saying, "The greatest competitor in life is death," to a fellow named Dan Cameron Redhill in 1977, woebegone playwright leaping from the Brooklyn Bridge. If Lindbergh is a hero, must Phillipe Petit be a fool? (No, this is no stunt, this is an achievement, something to stir the soul.Įxcept what is the difference, finally, between a scared 25-year-old boring through dark and unknown skies across an uncharted ocean and say, someone who decides to jump off a New York City skyscrapper into a child's 12 1/2-inch wading pool - thereby paragraph in the of World between Lindbergh and someone who In 1974 the two towers of the World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan and cavorts on it for 30 minutes before calling it a day? Stunts are performed by people trying to get into Ripley's Believe It or Not. America's greatest hero, keeper of her boldest, most shining feat. The man, of course, is mad, a hopeless dreamer. The very thought makes me rise to contend again with the moon - sweeping over oceans and continents, looking down on farms and cities, letting the planet turn below. And yet - if one could carry fuel enough. New York to Paris - it sounds like a dream. Louis and Chicago one night half a century ago, watching Peoria blink awake beneath him, feeling the rush of cold black air against his face and flying suit, has a sudden, wild, intoxicating thought. So a "single lonely boy," as his biographer called him, flying the mails between St. Sometimes there is a thin, watery line between heroes and fools, between daredevils and the lunatic fringe. He was seriously dehydrated, but he had set a distance record. That's where a German freighter found him floating in his gondola-turned-catamaran. His name was Ed Yost and he got as far as 200 miles east of the Azores. Non one has even made it all the way though a year ago last week someone almost did. The recorded tries run the gamut - from pioneer aeronaut Thaddeus Lowe's attempt in 1859 (in a monstrous 200-foot-high affair appropriately named the City of New York) to millionaire Malcolm Forbes' aborted effort in 1975 (in a Dube Coldberal contraption of 13 individually filled ballonons). Somehow it all seemed in keeping with the art of ballooning, which is about two parts art and good faith, and about 98 parts blind stupid luck.ĭepending on how you count, this is history's either 14th or 15th attempt across the Atlantic by free balloon. Norman Mailer wasn't there chronicling the vent for the ages, as he was for Apollo 11, though one did see the town constable and any number of old "Mainers" in thermal hunting jackets, baseball caps, and Mr. The place is rung with fiery oaks and maples. Their launch site, not quite a Cape Canaveral, was a dewy meadow at the foot of serene Frenchman's Bay. The two daredevils lifted off in "The Eagle" yesterday at 5:35 p.m., in a crush of huzzahs from comrades and family and the collected citizenry of Bar Harbor, pop, 3,800. It doesn't make sense, but then the dreams of heroes and fools seldom do. If all goes even reasonably as planned, two Colorado businessmen, Dewey Reinhard, 47, and Steve Stephenson, 44, will hit the good green earth of mother England sometimes this weekend, probably Sunday, after having confined them-selves for the better part of a week in a 7-by-15-foot basket suspended from a bag of helium. They are out there somewhere now on that blue limitless prairie, these two would-be Lindberghs in a balloon, commending themselves to God and the wind.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |