Evel Knievel

Evel Knievel

Active - 1977 - 2018  |   Born - Oct 17, 1938 in Butte, Montana, United States  |   Died - Nov 30, 2007   |   Genres - Sports & Recreation, Thriller, Adventure

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Biography by AllMovie

A man who ultimately attained a reputation as the most accomplished "stunt" motorcycle rider of the late 20th century, Evel Knievel was born Robert Craig Knievel in Butte, MT, in 1938. He gravitated toward motorcycle-riding as a teenager, and soon developed an affinity for doing tricks on his cycle. Also during his adolescent years, Knievel took to athletics, excelled in ski-jumping, and played for a short period of time on the Charlotte Clippers team of the Eastern Hockey League. Knievel's enduring claim to fame lay in the arena of motorcycle-jumping, however, and he earned the moniker "Evel" for his extreme, death-defying cycle feats -- which found him soaring from a ramp over parked automobiles with jumps that reached a distance of 45 feet or more.

At least two major incidents cut short Knievel's career, one in 1968 (when he gravely injured himself attempting to jump over fountains at a hotel in Las Vegas) and one in 1975, when he broke his pelvis in an ill-advised attempt to leap over 13 buses at Wembley Stadium. In later years, Knievel's son Robbie inherited the career of his father, and reportedly set records that Evel was unable to make. The elder Knievel died at age 69, of complications from diabetes and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, in late November 2007.

Knievel made an unsuccessful attempt to launch himself as a big-screen action hero with the outing Viva Knievel! (1977), directed by Gordon M. Douglas and co-starring Gene Kelly. It was critically panned but subsequently attained a following as a camp classic. He also participated in a number of documentaries about his own exploits.

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Factsheet

  • After his parents separated, he and his brother were raised by his grandparents.
  • First daredevil jump was to drum up business at his motorcycle shop.  He jumped over 40 parked cars and crashed into a box of rattlesnakes at the end.
  • Famously crashed at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas on New Year's Eve, 1967, and ended up in a coma for a month.
  • During his Snake River Canyon jump in 1974, his parachute deployed early, causing him to drift to the bottom of the canyon floor. He suffered only minor injuries.
  • Hometown Butte celebrates "Evel Knievel Days" every July.