Several wall riding acts evolved simultaneously in the United Kingdom in the late 1920s. Northern Speedway star
Clem Beckett developing his own wall and dome riding sideshows at races and fairs; Beckett was well known to fellow Lancastrian
George Formby who included pastiches of Beckett and a mock wall of death routine in his stage act and later in his films
No Limit and
Spare a Copper. The first wall of death in the British Isles appeared in
Southend during June 1929 at the
Kursaal Amusement Park, one of the world's first amusement parks, and featured motorcycles on a 20 ft wooden wall. The first riders were husband and wife, Billy and Marjorie Ward who had previously been touring with the show in South Africa where they were seen by Malcolm Campbell. In the
UK, Kursaal and
George 'Tornado' Smith became synonymous with the sideshow. By the mid-1930s, there were 50 such shows touring the counties and stunts, with riders like Arthur Brannon and included riding sidecars with animals on board including a lioness; however,
World War II put a temporary end to the shows. A few were restarted after the war and the Todd Family Wall of Death was featured at the
Festival of Britain in 1951, with Frank Senior, George, Jack, Bob and Frank Junior riding. Women riders often performed with them including Gladys Soutter, who is thought to have been the first woman rider in England and, later, her sister Winniefred (Wyn) Soutter who went on to marry George Todd who was also a wall rider. Women continue to do so to this day. The act is still often seen at fairs. In the 2000s, there remain only a few touring walls of death. "The Demon Drome", "Messhams Wall of Death" and the "Ken Fox Troupe". These acts feature original American Indian motorcycles which have been in use since the 1920s. A similar act called the "
Globe of Death" has the riders looping inside a wire mesh sphere rather than a drum. This form of motorcycle entertainment had a separate and distinct evolution from carnival motordromes and derived from bicycle acts or "cycle whirls" in the early 1900s. The building of a wall of death features as the central theme of Irish film
Eat the Peach. On 28 March 2016,
Guy Martin (successful
Isle of Man TT Racer) set the world record for the wall of death. He reached a speed of during a live broadcast titled ''Guy Martin's Wall of Death'' on UK television
Channel 4.The world record was set in a wall of death of 37 meters diameter, special-built for this attempt. ==India==