Background
Edmondo Zacchini was the oldest son of Ildebrando Zacchini, an Italian portrait artist and amateur gymnast, and brother of Hugo Zacchini.
Edmondo Zacchini was the oldest son of Ildebrando Zacchini, an Italian portrait artist and amateur gymnast, and brother of Hugo Zacchini.
Ildebrando brought his family up in a traveling circus. The family eventually formed their own circus, and Edmondo became a gifted clown, as well as doing acrobatics. During World War I, when food was hard to come by, Edmondo was walking through town when he was recognized by a townsman.
The man had enjoyed the act so much, that he gave Edmondo his pagnotta, a small loaf of bread that was, at the time, rationed by the bakery to one loaf per person.
Others came up, and each gave him their bread in appreciation for the acting From then on, when the townspeople saw him, they would say "There goes ".
Edmondo adopted it as his stage name. With this name, he became the most famous clown in Italy in the 1920s.
He developed his first human cannonball act in Cairo in 1922.
This cannon was a crude spring-powered contraption that hurled him 20 feet. The result of his first attempt was a broken legal He re-designed the device in a hospital in Cairo.
Later successful versions used compressed air.
Zacchini died in a hospital at the age of 87. He is buried in a mausoleum in the Showman"s Rest Cemetery, Tampa, Florida.