Courageous, boyishly handsome at just 25, Charles Lindbergh must
have seemed literally super heroic when alone he flew — actually flew! — across
the Atlantic to land in Paris in 33 hours, 30 minutes and 30 seconds.
And because he landed in a 1927 world newly united by tabloid
newspapers, radio, telephones and motion pictures with sound, Lindbergh became
one of the first people on the planet to discover the double-edged nature of
superstardom, a freshly honed edge that would finally cut him deeply.
Lindbergh actually saw the Era of Celebrity arrive in real
time as a crowd of 150,000 surged toward his plane, the Spirit of St. Louis, when he landed at Aéroport du Bourget late
that May night.
“Without either belittling or aggrandizing the importance of
his flight, he considered it part of the continuum of human behavior, and he
was, after all, only a man,” observed biographer A. Scott Berg.
“The public saw more than that. Indeed, Harry Crosby felt
that the stampede at Le Bourget that night represented nothing less than the
start of a new religious movement — ‘as if all the hands in the world are …
trying to touch the new Christ and that the new cross is the Plane.’
Universally admired, Charles Lindbergh became the most celebrated living person
ever to walk the earth.
“For several years, Lindbergh had lived according to one of
the basic laws of aerodynamics — the need to maintain balance. And so, in those
figures running toward him, Lindbergh immediately saw inevitable repercussions.
“At first he feared for his physical safety; over the next
few months he worried about his soul. He instinctively knew that submitting
himself to the idolatry of the public could strip him of his very identity; and
that the only preventive he could see was to maintain his privacy. That
reluctance to offer himself to the public only increased its desire to possess
him — the first of many paradoxes he would encounter in his lifelong effort to
restore equilibrium to his world.
“’No man before me had commanded such freedom of movement
over earth,’ Lindbergh would write of his historic flight. Ironically, that
freedom would be denied him thereafter on land.”
Source: ‘Lindbergh’ by
A. Scott Berg
Lindbergh by Granger |
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