The Phnom Penh Post

Wallenda siblings complete daunting tightrope stunt

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SIBLINGS from a famed circus family – the Flying Wallendas – walked a wire strung 25 stories over New York’s Times Square on Sunday, in a hairraisin­g balancing act performed across five city blocks.

“If you can make it in New York you can make it anywhere – so let’s make it in New York,” Nik Wallenda, 40, told his sister Lijana before they began the fearsome feat.

The undertakin­g, which was broadcast live, saw the duo start the wire walk on opposite sides, slowly moving towards each other holding balancing poles as a throng of onlookers gawked from below.

When the siblings met, Lijana sat on the 396m wire strung between skyscraper­s so her brother could step over her, before standing back up and finishing the walk.

Tensions were running particular­ly high as it was the 42-year-old Lijana’s first such attempt since 2017, when she and four others fell more than 9m while rehearsing an eightperso­n pyramid on a wire.

The near-fata l incident lef t her seriously injured, including brea k ing most bones in her face.

During the approximat­ely 36 minutes the acrobats took to complete the nerve-wracking stunt. Nik – who in 2012 traversed Niagara Falls on a wire and the Little Colorado River Gorge close to the Grand Canyon a year later – offered words of encouragem­ent to his sister via earpiece microphone­s, as she audibly prayed and sang.

New York allowed the siblings to attempt Sunday’s walk on the condition that they wear safety harnesses, a mandate Nik had said added physical weight and stress to the challenge.

In 2013 the city had declined him permission to cross a wire anchored between the Empire State and Chrysler buildings.

Sunday’s never-before-attempted stunt is yet another feather in the cap of the Wallendas, a family famous for jaw-dropping endeavours executed from dizzying heights – without safety nets.

The clan’s performanc­es date back generation­s to the Austro-Hungarian empire and debuted in the US in 1928, as part of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus.

In 1978 Karl Wallenda – Nik and Lijana’s great grandfathe­r, who brought the family act stateside – tumbled to his death at age 73 while attempting a wire walk in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

New York has long attracted daredevils seeking to make headlines: Harry Houdini escaped a crate in which he was chained and thrown in the river over a century ago, and Evel Knievel soared on his motorcycle over ten vehicles in 1971.

In 1974, Frenchman Philippe Petit famously walked a tightrope between the tops of the Twin Towers of the former World Trade Center, 400m above the pavement.

“Dream big people. Nothing’s impossible,” Nik said.

 ?? EUGENE GOLOGURSKY/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? Lijana Wallenda and Nik Wallenda walk a high wire over Times Square during the Highwire Live In Times Square with Nik Wallenda on Sunday in New York City.
EUGENE GOLOGURSKY/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Lijana Wallenda and Nik Wallenda walk a high wire over Times Square during the Highwire Live In Times Square with Nik Wallenda on Sunday in New York City.

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