Episode 51: Death-Defying Acts with Amy Meyer episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 18, 2019 · 36 MIN

Episode 51: Death-Defying Acts with Amy Meyer

from The Theatre History Podcast

Would you watch a pregnant woman attempt to walk a tightrope without a safety net? Many people in London decided to do just that in 1863, and their curiosity turned to horror when the tightrope walker, Selina Powell, fell to her death. The accident prompted an outcry that even drew in Queen Victoria herself. Amy Meyer joins us this week to talk about accidents like the one that befell Powell. What drew audiences to such a risky spectacle? What did society make of woman performing such dangerous acts? The answers she's found point to our own appetite for risk and danger—almost always at someone else's expense—in our own favorite entertainments.

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Episode 51: Death-Defying Acts with Amy Meyer

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This episode is 36 minutes long.

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This episode was published on November 18, 2019.

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Would you watch a pregnant woman attempt to walk a tightrope without a safety net? Many people in London decided to do just that in 1863, and their curiosity turned to horror when the tightrope walker, Selina Powell, fell to her death. The accident...

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