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Evel
Evel Knievel Reporter
Kevin Smith wrote this article in September 1998 when Evel
Knievel was 59. Although it was a scoop at
the time, the world had all but forgotten Evel
Knievel, a man who once commanded headlines
and airtime in many countries of the world.
By Kevin Smith
Published August 2000
Evel Knievel has stared at death over the handlebars of his bike hundreds
of times. As the daredevil stuntman in white leather, he soared through the air
and come crashing down as the world watched and winced. But this time there is
nothing he can do to steer away from inevitable death. Not extra throttle, no
last-minute swerve. Evel Knievel, the last of the gladiators, is dying.
Not the death everyone expected. Not a bone shattering crash at some glamorous
location jumping over a shark tank, or double-decker buses or a long line of limousines.
Evel's life is being slowly taken away by liver disease, and unless he can get
a transplant, he will not survive. "It is a bitch," Evel said. "I
am not scared of it, nothing much scares me. But I just don't want to die."
Evel became a hero to the world not just because of his jumping
skill, or the spectacular falls but for his gutsy determination, the determination
that had him fall, break his body into several pieces, then dust himself off and
do it all over again. Fans marveled at how he survived those falls, and now it
appears he didn't. Blood tainted with hepatitis C was used
during one of the 14 surgeries that pieced him back together. Evel is not sure
which one. But it doesn't matter now. "Truth is, if I don't get a new liver,
I am going to die. Even with a new one, there is no guarantee.. My body may reject
it. And if it does work, it is just buying me some more time. Maybe seven years.
Hepatitis C is worse than AIDS. There is no cure. If I do
get a liver the disease will start attacking the new one as soon as it is put
in. It is a damn rattlesnake this thing." Now Evel carries
a pager which will alert him when a liver is found. But he doesn't kid himself
about his chances. He is just one of 10,000 anxiously waiting, and 25 percent
of those die before a donor is found. "It is not first come first served.
The livers are given out to the sickest. At one point I was what they call a B2,
which is real sick. When my health improved a bit my doctor told me to go and
visit my grandkids while I still had the chance." He
is still on that tear jerking tour of America, spending quality time with his
four children and seven grandchildren. "I don't know how long I got left,"
Evel said. "I thought I was a gonner a couple of times already." Twice
doctors have pulled him back from the brink. A staphylococcal infection, related
to the degenerating liver, has caused massive hemorrhages in his neck.
"I thought I was going to bleed to death. The veins in my throat
literally exploded. That was five years ago when they discovered the real problem
was my liver. That was when they told me to quit drinking. "But you know,
I am a stubborn man. I have been a big shot all my life. I thought I knew it all.
So I continued to drink. I have punished my liver I can tell you, and that just
helps hepatitis C even more." That punishment included
years of pain killers washed down with the Evel cocktail, the Montana Mary. A
lethal mix of beer, tomato juice and Wild Turkey whisky. In his heyday Evel did
little to dispel rumors that the secret ingredient was a couple of drops of sump
oil. "I haven't had a drink in years. I drink non-alcoholic
beer now. I can't risk a beer and I don't want one. "This disease is a bitch.
Some days, I just can't get out of bed. It saps your energy. Some days are good,
some are bad." There were the days when it was Evel who
was bad. A former safecracker, bank robber and miner, Evel never shied from a
challenge. The years of hard living and tough knocks have taken their toll on
the 59-year-old. His cocky swagger has been replaced by a slow limp. His knuckles
are misshapen and swollen. His movements are jerky and awkward.
"There are a lot of myths about my injuries. They say I have broken every
bone in my body. Not true.. But I have broken 35 bones. I had surgery fourteen
times to pin and plate. I shattered my pelvis. I forget all of the things that
have broke." And his luck hasn't got any better. Last
year he took a tumble on the golf course and broke his hip. And just last month
he slipped getting out of a Jacuzzi and cracked a rib. The cracks, the breaks,
all add to his arthritis aches and pains. But never one to miss a business opportunity,
Knievel now advertises an arthritis pain killer on national television in America.
That is just one of the Knievel endorsements. He has a new toy line coming out
in time for Christmas (1998). Evel Knievel signature motorbikes which retails
at $25,000 a time, t-shirts, signed photographs, kid's bikes. The list goes on.
Today (1998) Knievel is even more bankable just for his presence.
"They don't ask me to jump. I just turn up, smile, pose for the cameras
and they give me money. It is quite a career," he says. "In the old
days they, the promoters, wanted more and more from me. They wanted me to jump
or spill my blood and break my bones. Every time they wanted me to jump further,
and further, and further. Hell, they thought my bike had wings."
Knievel's feet are planted firmly on the ground the days. His last jump was in
1981. And he does miss the thrill. "People said I wasn't scared before a
jump. That is bullshit. I was scared. I'd have a shot of Wild turkey whisky before
each jump to calm myself. "I'd get this knot in my stomach and this lump
in my throat everytime. And I love that feeling. "People who go around wearing
'No Fear' t-shirts now are full of shit. Fear is high octane fuel for success.
You have got to know how to handle it, how to harness it. If you risk your life
you have got to have fear." Evel has been forced to find
new ways of getting his adrenaline rush now that his is a frail old man before
his time. He still rides his bike for enjoyment, and claims he can easily pull
a wheelie if he needed to. But it hardly gets his heart pounding let alone start
the knot in the stomach. Today, it is the pressure of high stakes gambling that
keeps him going. "The guy who built Caesar's Palace
once told me I was the biggest gambler Vegas had ever seen because I didn't gamble
with money. I gambled with my life," he said. But now he gambles with money.
Sauntering into the sports book gambling room of Bally's casino in Las Vegas,
the betting shop teller knows Evel well. He gets a respectful nod from all of
the regulars sitting watching the giant screens relaying live pictures of baseball
and American football. "I won $13,000 in here last night,"
he says as he lays another $1,300 on the slim chance that the L.A. Dodgers will
break their losing streak that night. "I like to gamble and I am good, but
I am no maniac. If I had just a dollar left, I would bet 50 cents. But not the
whole dollar. that kind of gambling is for sniveling failures. I'd never want
to have to snivel to someone because I couldn't pay them. I won $100,000 on a
game of golf once. I was playing Tyson Leonard at the Bay Tree golf course at
Myrtle Beach. I eagled the first hole, which surprised both of us. I have only
ever had a couple of eagles in my life. Then I didn't drop another shot over par
for the rest of the game. He paid up." So Evel is still able to rise to the
occasion. Golf is his new passion and he attacks it with the
same vigor that he used to reserve for racing up plywood ramps. It was on the
golf course that he met his current girlfriend Krystal Kennedy, 29 (in 1998).
Evel's long suffering wife Linda stood by him during the endless affairs and high
jinx of his life. But now they live separate lives. "She was bitching too
much, and I can't live with that," Evel explained. "You know, I wasn't
put on this earth to sit and listen to bitching all the time. I was put here to
have fun. "A woman is for loving and caring for. Who said they have to bitch?
I have got no time for all that." Evel's stance on women has been
tainted by years of having them fawn all over him. He estimates he has slept with
2,000 of them and says he has met only a few who could resist him. "I had
about two a week," he said without a hint of exaggeration. "My record
was eight in one 24-hour period. "It got to be a real problem. I had to see
a psychiatrist. I asked him why it was that women kept throwing themselves at
me and he explained it like this. He said, 'look, to start with you are not a
bad looking guy. Secondly, your identity is danger, women, their chemistry, are
attracted to danger. Then you are Evel by name, but not by nature, so you won't
harm them. Women unhappy at home looking for an affair are just drawn to you like
a magnet. You stick out lick a sore thumb. "I guess he was right. I
am not bragging. It was true. I had to have security guards keep women from my
hotel room." Even today, he still holds the same attraction
to women. In 1986 Evel's wicked ways made headlines again. After a night of drinking,
Evel led an amorous woman back to his hotel room. "I had no idea she was
the woman of the guy I had been drinking with," Evel said. Furious, Evel's
drinking buddy persuaded the hotel's front desk to give him a key to the room
where Evel was having his evil way with his lady. "He opened the door, punched
me in the nose and broke it. I sued the hotel for giving him the key and they
had to pay me $33,000." Such tales just add to the lore of Evel. Now
Evel has found happiness in the arms of 29-year-old Krystal, a former golfer for
Florida state university. "Boy, she is a good golfer. She is a great girl."
The age difference doesn't appear to bother either of them. "I don't see
what the fuss is about," Evel says when asked about it. "I have had
young women, I have had old women. So what?" Even now,
Evel has a flippant view of women, probably because he has found them so plentiful
over the years. "You know, women are the root of all evil. And I know, I
am Evel. "Look at Adam and eve. It wasn't Adam who picked up the apple, was
it? Ghengis Khan, brought down by a woman. "That ain't going to happen to
me. Maybe me and Krystal won't be together forever. You know, women seem to forget
who it is who buys the diamonds. "Women are like buses. Good
to ride on for 15 minutes. But they forget that if you get off, there will be
another one along in 15 minutes. And another one, and another one."
For a man supposedly at death's door, Evel appears to be making
a lot of long term plans. He hasn't given up on life yet. He is collaborating
with Hollywood hunk Matthew McConaughey on the film "Pure Evil.". Then
there is the Daredevil Cafe, a sort of Hard Rock Cafe for bike riders, which should
become a reality in Las Vegas next year. Strolling around
Vegas, a town which clearly suits him, he still acts like he is in his heyday.
He remembers each jump and can recall every minute detail. The names of his support
team, the speed at which hit the ramp. What he can't remember
is what he has to do the rest of the day. "I have Alzheimer's too,"
he said as he explained a series of sticky notes stuck to the dashboard of his
truck. "If I don't have these I forget everything." But his mind easily
recalls the glory days of Vegas when money came easily and the women were even
easier. "I knew Elvis. I knew Frank Sinatra, I used to
drink with Lee Marvin," he said. "Funny. If you had been asked back
then to place your money on who would still be alive today, it wouldn't be the
stuntman you put your money on, would it? You wouldn't have put you money on me."
But unlike Elvis, Evel isn't as recognizable today. The name still
commands respect, but after being out of the headlines for 20 years, his face
no longer is recognizable. Everyone remembers the devil-may-care young man straddling
his bike, not a shuffling graying old man. "Hi, I'm Evel
Knievel," he says in his slow drawl as he hands the keys of his oversized
four-wheel drive to the valet parker. From the expression on the valet parker's
face you can tell he is impressed, but he still stares at Evel's face for some
kind of confirmation that it really is him. Walking through he casino, few realize
that the man with the gaudy gold jewelry and ostrich leather jacket was once the
toast of the town. Not even his gold hubcap sized belt buckle with the initial
"K" in bold gives the game away. But Evel still walks down the center
of the hallway, expecting the crowds to part before him as they once did.
Occasionally Evel leans heavily on his famous black cane. Embedded
on the tip is a gold medal with the image of him on his motorbike beneath the
words "Evel Knievel - Last of the Gladiators." But even when the gladiator
does go, his name will remain. His son Robbie "Kaptain"
Knievel followed in his dad's tire treads and has actually beaten Evel's jumping
record. "Some people say it is easier now. His bike weighs about 200lbs less
than the one I jumped with. The suspensions today are fantastic. But you know,
you still have to have the guts to jump. You still have to be able to pull the
trigger. I lost that. I got to the stage where I couldn't pull the trigger any
more.I am not going to take anything away from Robbie. He is a great rider,"
he said. Even though his son has carried on the family trade,
he has never captured the imagination of the world like his dad. And at 36, he
won't be jumping for much longer. "You reach the stage where you can't pull
the trigger any more. That is when you have to get out." And Evel would be
happy to retire the name to the history books. "When
I was visiting my grandkids last month the youngest Jesse, he's just seven, came
up to me and said, 'Granddad, you know it is going to be up to me a my brother
Josiah to keep the family name going. "He was wearing his bicycle helmet
and sitting on an Evel Knievel bike. I just rolled my eyes and said, 'Jesus.'
Visiting his grandchildren and his hometown of Butte, Montana,
Evel has been taking stock of his life as his health begins to slip away. He says
he has few regrets. "There were a couple of women I should have screwed that
I didn't, there were a couple of ramps I wish I had hit a bit faster. But apart
from that. I have had a good life." It is a life which
took him from poverty and a life of crime to the heights of stardom and riches,
and back down to earth again with a bump. He earned a fortune from his stunts
and endorsements, but blew the lot. "It is said I earned $30 million in one
year, but spent $31 million. That is probably true."
Evel still lives well, but it is nothing compared to the life he once had. Two
Lear jets, a fleet of luxury cars. Homes in Florida, Montana and Las Vegas. they
have all gone. Now he is down to an apartment in Florida, one Aston Martin, a
four-wheel drive and his collection of motorbikes. It is little to show for a
fortune amassed. "My Knievel toys made $300 million.
I had the top selling pinball machine. My Evel Knievel action figure outsold both
GI Joe and Barbie combined. But, yeah, most of the money has gone. The IRS claim
I owe them $21 million. They can kiss my ass. And I told them if they send someone
around to get it I won't be responsible for what happens to him. "Money is
for spending and enjoying. And I sure did enjoy it.
"Some people can only dream of such a life. I lived it. I was watching television
the other day, a biography on the history channel of Aristotle Onasis. They talked
about his wealth, his riches, and I wasn't impressed. I had bigger boats than
he did, bigger yachts. I had more Rolls-Royces, more Ferraris. I had more racehorses
than he did. I screwed more women than he did. And they were better looking too."
Of all his accomplishments, it is one footnote Evel wants
made clear when his obituary is read around the world. Kevin
Smith is a British journalist writing out of Los Angeles. He started Splash News,
a celebrity news service, when he arrived in America in 1990.Splash provides celebrity
news, features and photographs to magazines and newspapers in 34 countries around
the world.
More Evel
Evel
Knievel is listed with the Guinness Book of Records for the injuries he has sustained.
Here is a break down of those injuries. Fractured skull,
broken nose, teeth, jaw, left and right clavicles, sternum, right arm, left arm,
upper back (twice) lower back (twice) pelvis crushed, pelvis fractured (three
times) right hip ball and socket replaced, right knee, right shin, toes right
femur broken five times, left and right wrists, all ribs fractured at least once. March 1962: Falling during a motorbike
race, Evel breaks his shoulder and collar bone January 1, 1968:
Evel Knievel's most famous fall. Attempting to clear the fountains at Caesar's
Palace, Las Vegas, he lands awkwardly. His rag-doll somersaults leave him in a
coma for 29-days with a shattered pelvis, fractured hip, and smashed right femur.
Surgeons rebuild his leg with a two foot long, three inches wide strip of steel.
May 30 1971: Both femurs are snapped after he tumbles clearing
13 Pepsi trucks in Yakima, Washington. March 3, 1972:
Cow Palace, San Francisco. Broken back and concussion. May 31 1975:
Wembley Stadium, London. Evel crashes after clearing 13 double decker buses.
Despite a broken pelvis, he gets on his feet to reach the microphone and announce
he will never jump again. 1996: Jumping again, Evel fails
during a practice run over a tank of killer sharks at Chicago Amphitheater. Concussion
and two broken arms. A cameraman loses an eye from a flying piece of shrapnel.
January 1998: Golf. A tumble near a bunker means Evel finally
has to succumb to a hip replacement. July 1998: Jacuzzi.
Slipping on a wet railing, he falls and breaks a rib
1938 Oct 17: Robert Craig Knievel
is born in the mining community of Butte, Montana. 1952:
In school, Robert Knievel holds records for push-ups and sit-ups. Goes on
to pole vault, ski jump and play for local hockey team. He boxed, and raced
stock cars and motorcycles. 1953: Hustles in bars as a
professional arm wrestler. Worked as pit face worker in copper mine. Arrested
for kidnapping his future wife Linda. Arrested for stealing hubcaps. The
name Evil Knievel is born. A prison guard jokes that he has local gangster "Awful
Knofeel and "Evil Knievel the hub cap thief in the same cell. The name was
later legally changed to Evel to avoid upsetting religious fans. Stint in
the army. 1962: Salesman for Combined Insurance Company
for America. Held record for most polices sold in one week. Left when it was discovered
most were sold to inmates at a local mental asylum. 1964:
Crime spree across America with bank robbing gang. worked as their safe cracker.
One member of team was caught and sentenced to 15 years. 1965:
Knievel the showman is born. Trying to attract attention to his motorcycle
dealership, he leaps off a ramp and clear a mountain lion, but lands on a box
of rattlesnakes, scattering the venomous snakes and the spectators. Evel goes
on to tour America with his motorcycle stunt show. 1968:
Cleared the 150 foot long fountains at Caesar's Palace, Las Vegas, but crashed
upon landing. 1973: Evel's best jump. L.A. Coliseum. He
clears 50 cars stacked four deep. 1974: Evel's ill-fated jump
over Snake River Canyon. After watching two test rocket bikes plunge into the
deep Idaho ravine, Evel launches himself as the world looks on. But the drogue
parachute deploys on take off and he lands back on the same side he took off from.
Despite blood pouring from his ears and eyes from the g-forces, the public feels
cheated and Evel never recaptures the mystic. 1977: Evel
batters publicist Sheldon Saltman with a baseball bat. Evel said stories of drug
use in a book Saltman wrote are lies. "I broke his arms so he couldn't write
anymore lies. I should have killed him," Evel said. Evel serves just six
months of three years. The arrest ruins his image as the All American hero forever.
Evel vanishes from public life with a bottle of beer in his hand. 1992:
Evel leaves. wife Linda. 1992: Evel meets his current love,
29-year-old Krystal Kennedy. 1993: Evel diagnosed with hepatitis
C. 1995: Caught with a selection of guns and knives in his car,
Evel does 200 hours community service 1998: Evel
told he has months to live. 2000: This last major interview
with Evel is reprinted in the-vu. Evel still lives. You
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