For many years and over 30,000 performances, the duo never had a single mistake involving the the lions, tigers, elephants, or other creatures used in their acts. Unfortunately this all changed in the worst possible way on October 3rd, 2003 when Roy’s own birthday celebration ended in tragedy.  The show went as planned until Roy led out one of the act’s biggest attractions; the 380 pound white Bengal tiger named Mantacore. Upset by something, the massive cat broke his routine and became aggressive towards his master. In the blink of an eye Roy found himself being dragged off stage with Mantacore’s teeth around his neck. He was rushed to the hospital and managed to survive despite his severe loss of blood, however Roy was never quite the same and the incident ended his stage career forever. During a show in Providence, Rhode Island, a certain act known as the “Human Chandelier,” in which 8 women suspended by their hair twirled around while hanging 35 feet from the ground, malfunctioned when a steel fastener holding the performers aloft snapped and sent them plummeting to the floor. 9 women were rushed to the hospital and left in critical condition, one of which was a dancer on the ground when the chandelier fell. Luckily all of the performers survived, and a few were even able to return to work later that year. Richter first performed this daredevil stunt at the age of 14, becoming the first in the world to do so. She accumulated a number of injuries over the course of her circus career, however the worst of which ended up not being related to her human cannonball act at all. In 1891 while performing a show in New Mexico, Richter was thrown from a collapsing support pole from 40 feet in the air, missing the safety net and landing beneath one of the falling metal poles. The crowd panicked, with many describing the accident as horrifying to witness. Richter spent the next many months at a hospital in a full body cast. She had survived, but a broken back prevented her from ever returning to the circus. Although Macarte had practiced the act countless times, he was always a nervous performer, and on January 3rd of 1872 he decided to have a few drinks before his show to help him steel his nerves. Whether or not it was this decision that cost him his life can’t be known, but what is certain is that around half way through his performance things suddenly took a very bad turn. Starting with a single aggressive lion, it only took seconds for the rest of the big cats to join in,  pouncing on Macarte and tearing into any exposed flesh they could. Onlookers watched in terror as other circus employees attempted to get the vicious animals away from their screaming tamer. By the time they did manage to save him it was too late; the man had lacerations covering his entire body and the flesh had been torn to the bone on his legs, hips, and chest. Macarte remained conscious until the removed him from the cage, but passed away from his injuries before he could make it to the hospital. 

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