1.
On December 8, 2004, “Dimebag” Darrell Abbott – formerly the legendary heavy metal band Pantera and was generally considered one of the best guitarists of all time – a club show with his new band damage plan. Just 90 seconds after her first song, Nathan Gale, 25, a six foot three, 250+panel man with a shaved head, through the crowd and on the stage. The fans looked horrified at how Gale raised a pistol in the point blank area and shot down into the forehead.
2.
In 2016, Irma Bule, 26, was an Indonesian pop singer who specializes in Dangdut, a popular genre in her country. As a mother of three children, she was not yet a nationally known singer, but had a followers in the Karawang region of West Java. For performers such as bule who still wanted to sang in rural areas, it was not particularly lucrative and only 20 US dollars per concert (plus tips from the crowd). However, if you performed on stage with a snake, the payment increased to 25 US dollars. Another Dangdut singer, Yeyen, told the local media. “If there are snake dancers, there will be more audience. That’s why we have snake dancers.”
3.
In the category “Yikes! That would never fly today!” We have William Ellsworth Robinson, an American magician of Scottish descent who fascinated the audience with the persona of “Chung Ling Soo”, a Chinese magician. To sell the lie, he never spoke English on stage and wore facial color as a Chinese. It’s bad enough, but it gets worse – his entire act was stolen almost entirely to an actual Chinese magician named Ching Ling Foo. (He didn’t even try to hide the theft – he only changed two letters from his name!) The two magicians had a great rivalry, and frankly there is probably a film, but this post is about dying in front of their fans, so …
4.
On June 10, 2016, 22-year-old Christina Grimmie and Talented young singer, who had occupied third place in season 6 from season 6 The voice -I had just completed a performance in Orlando, Florida and had a meet-and-greet in the venue. She was in a good mood when she worked through the line of fans, signed autographs and recorded selfies. However, the joyful night took a terrible turn when 27-year-old Kevin James Loibl was his turn to meet Grimmie. One fan behind Loibl:
5.
When Cleveland Indian’s Shortstop Ray Chapman arrived on the Polo site in New York on August 17, 1920, he had a hell of a season and hit .303 with 97 runs. However, that was not from the character. Chapman had twice twice. It was rumored that Chapman, who was now married to a pregnant woman, retired at the end of the season to concentrate on his family. Tragically, he was hit in his head with a fastball when he faces the U -Board jug of Yankees, Carl Mays. This was before the battery helmet and the ball of Chapman’s head hit with a disgusting Durk. The influence was so strong that the ball jumped into the game, and Mays first threw him because he believed that he must have hit Chapman’s racket. A dazed Chapman got up, asked someone to call his wife, and added: “I’m fine; say May’s May’s not worried.” Then he collapsed and was taken to the hospital, where he died the next day.
6.
Barbara Weldens, 35, was an emerging French singer-songwriter who had already won several prestigious music prices. Her fans loved their emotional texts, their urgent voice and their theater stage presence – often barefoot. On July 18, 2017, Weldens performed in a packed church during the Léo Ferré Festival. After Weldens ended a particularly powerful song, he smiled and called the applause of the crowd and suddenly collapsed. At first some spectators thought that it was part of the show – a dramatic flowers. But Weldens did not move. Paramedics arrived quickly, but it was too late. An autopsy found that welding had been supplied with electricity; As usual, she carried out barefoot, and when her foot contacted an incorrect piece of electrical devices, he sent electricity through her body.
7.
Owen Hart might have been born in a legendary wrestling dynasty (his father was hard; his brother was Bret “Hitman” hard), but he was his own star and in the center of some of the largest 90s -action strands of the WWF (now the WWE). On May 23, 1999, during the WWF event on the Rand Pay-Per-View in Kansas City, Missouri, his life ended (and these action lines). Hard should make a dramatic entrance when his superhero person, the blue blazer, was lowered into the ring by lowering the arena savings. Tragically, a malfunction occurred, and a long stretch of extension 78 on the upper rope fell hard. He was taken to the hospital, but did not declared dead long after his arrival; The cause of death was the inner bleeding through blunt force trauma, which led to a separate aorta.
8.
Tommy Cooper was a highly towering figure in the British comedy – both literally (he was a big guy who was 6’4 ” ‘stood) and figuratively. He was famous for his bumblebee. Basically, his whole Shtick was that his magic tricks always went wrong, which, what happened on April 15, 1984, happened particularly terribly during a live broadcast of a variety show. Cooper went on the stage to thundering applause, began to appear and then broke back into the curtain. The audience broke out with a laugh, provided it was part of the crime. But it wasn’t. Cooper was no longer on the stage floor for several painful seconds. The host, Jimmy Tarbuck, told the show producer: “This is not (part of the act).” Well, “he said:” You know how he is. “He put it in … and … I said, no … that’s not him!” The cameras continued to roll – Sending Coopers death live to 12 million viewers.
9.
Nick Zoric was a 29-year-old Canadian freestyle ski driver, who quickly increases in the dangerous high-speed ski crossing, which raced downhill with obstacles in motocross style (and was referred to as “Nascar on the skis”). On March 10, 2012, a ski cruiser event became. When he approached the finish line at full speed, Zoric flew the last jump – but something went wrong. Instead of landing cleanly, he turned the course and banged into the safety net and a fixed border structure that had just behind the finish. He met the barrier with brutal strength and disappeared into a snow spray. When the snow was clearing, Zoric was mobileless.
10.
The Japan’s Sankai Juku Dance Company was famous for her version of Butoh, a rebellious dance movement that gave both western culture and traditional Japanese art the middle finger. Sankai Jukus version was different … gentle and more poetic. She made her American debut at the Olympic Arts Festival in Los Angeles in 1984 and then toured the country and finally stopped in Seattle on September 10, 1985. There they planned to list a piece with the title “Jomon Sho”, in which four dancers hang from a building that are tied to their ankles, they should dance while slowly being reduced to the ground, a process that should last 30 minutes, but after only a few minutes – 80 feet in the air – one of the company’s older dancers, Yoshiyuki Takada, franked his rope …
11.
The British actor and comedian Sid James was famous for the leading role in the Continue Films (a massive British comedy franchise, which was published from 31 films between 1958 and 1992). But his life ended on April 26, 1976 – in front of a complete Sunderland Empire Theater – when he played on stage in the comedy piece The mating season. According to Costar Olga Lowe, the performance continued as usual. “I arrived, said my first lines and he answered as usual. Then I sat on the sofa with him. I said my next line and he didn’t answer.” James had suffered a heart attack and sunk together on the couch. “I thought it was a gag,” added Lowe. “Well, you would be with Sid. He was such a rascal … ten minutes earlier he had been the same old laughing Sid.” As soon as the gravity of the situation was used, the curtain was falling. James was 62.