Ben Dova

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Ben Dova
Joseph Späh on the last flight of the Hindenburg
Joseph Späh on the last flight of the Hindenburg
Born
Joseph Späh

(1905-03-14)March 14, 1905
Strasbourg, Alsace–Lorraine
DiedSeptember 30, 1986(1986-09-30) (aged 81)
Manassas, Virginia
Occupation(s)Acrobat, actor
Years active1922–1982
Known for
  • Drunk man contortionist act
  • Surviving the Hindenburg disaster
  • Playing Klaus Szell in Marathon Man

Ben Dova (born as Joseph Späh (also written as Spah) on March 14, 1905, in Strasbourg, Alsace–Lorraine – died September 30, 1986, in Manassas, Virginia) was a German–American acrobat and actor.

Career[edit]

He emigrated from Germany to the United States in 1922 and became a contortionist in the vaudeville genre, using the artist name Ben Dova, from the English "bend over". His signature act was playing a drunk man balancing on a street light. In 1933 he performed his act on top of the 56-story Chanin Building in New York with no safety measures, for the benefit of the newsreels.[1]

Next to his acrobatic career he became an actor, performing in small parts in movies and television episodes, most notably as Klaus Szell (the brother of the movie's antagonist) in Marathon Man (1976).

Hindenburg disaster[edit]

Dova was a passenger on board the LZ 129 Hindenburg during the Hindenburg disaster and escaped using his acrobatic skills.[2][3] The FBI investigated him as a possible saboteur but found no evidence and cleared him from wrongdoing.[4]

He was played by Robert Clary in the motion picture The Hindenburg (1975).[5]

Filmography[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]