Difference between revisions of "Ella Zuila"

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[[Ella Zuila]] (died 1926) was a famous Australian public entertainer.  
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[[Ella Zuila]] (died 1926) was a famous Australian acrobat and public entertainer.  
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
  
Known as the "Female Blondin", the "Australian Funambulist" and the "Heroine of the High Wire",  she was particularly known for her acts on the high wire. Besides walking and cycling across (backward and forward), she also added other acts, such as wheeling a child over the wire in a barrow, walked it in stilts and with a full-body blindfold, and catching her husband, [[George Royal]], when he was fired from a cannon, while hanging from her knees.   
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Variously billed as the "Australian Daredevil", the "Female Blondin", the "Australian Funambulist" and the "Heroine of the High Wire",  she was particularly known for her acts on the high wire. Besides walking and cycling across (backward and forward), she also added other acts, such as wheeling a child over the wire in a barrow, walked it in stilts and with a full-body blindfold, and catching her husband, [[George Royal]], when he was fired from a cannon, while hanging from her knees.   
  
  
  
 
Her career ended after a tragic fall in Dublin, on August 26, 1904, her injuries preventing her from ever  performing again. She died in 1926.
 
Her career ended after a tragic fall in Dublin, on August 26, 1904, her injuries preventing her from ever  performing again. She died in 1926.
 
 
  
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==

Latest revision as of 07:03, 10 November 2021

Ella Zuila (died 1926) was a famous Australian acrobat and public entertainer.

Biography

Variously billed as the "Australian Daredevil", the "Female Blondin", the "Australian Funambulist" and the "Heroine of the High Wire", she was particularly known for her acts on the high wire. Besides walking and cycling across (backward and forward), she also added other acts, such as wheeling a child over the wire in a barrow, walked it in stilts and with a full-body blindfold, and catching her husband, George Royal, when he was fired from a cannon, while hanging from her knees.


Her career ended after a tragic fall in Dublin, on August 26, 1904, her injuries preventing her from ever performing again. She died in 1926.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

Sources

Publicity poster, posted on Alamy (Image ID:T950RE) on 20 July, 2017[1]


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