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HOLLYWOOD’S INNOVATIVE KUSTOM KULTURE LEGEND | DEAN JEFFRIES

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Legendary painter, customizer, racer, and stuntman Dean Jeffries is one of those guys whose soft-spoken nature has allowed other, more self-promoting figures (read: George Barris, the Don King of Kustom Kulture) to steal a lot of his thunder.  Barris has tried to hire on Jeffries as an employee many times over the years, and Jeffries always rebuffed– preferring either to rent his own space, or work freelance.  Their histories are forever entwined, and the tales of rivalry, and particularly Barris’ trickery, are the stuff of legend.  Many of Dean Jeffries’ most recognized works (like the Monkeemobile, for one)– George Barris came behind and unrightfully claimed credit for them. It’s dumbfounding and downright sleazy– we’ll get to that later.

Dean Jeffries grew up immersed in Los Angeles auto culture– his dad was a mechanic, and next door to his dad’s garage was a bodyshop.  The young Jeffries was drawn to the creative expression allowed in bodywork over turning a wrench (“too greasy!”) like his ol’ man– the bodyshop became his hangout of choice.  After returning from the Korean War, he became buddies with another future legend of Kustom Kulture– Kenny Howard (AKA Von Dutch), and started pinstriping.

“We’d do freelance pinstriping on our own, then get together and hang out. I also worked during the day at a machine shop doing grinding. But pinstriping really took off then–I was painting little pictures and medallions on cars. My first job was pinstriping a boat. I didn’t have no shop back then. You were lucky if you got $5 for a whole car. If you got $25 in your pocket in a day you were King Kong. I thought it was great.” –Dean Jeffries

More than anything else, I’ll always remember Dean Jeffries for painting the infamous “Little Bastard” badge on the Porsche owned by his racing buddy– James Dean.

“For years Barris claimed he painted it– now he just says he can’t remember and somebody in his shop painted it. Sure. I used to bum around with James Dean. I wasn’t trying to be his movie friend. We just had car stuff between us. We hung out, got along together real bitchin’. But one day Dean asked me to paint those words on his car, and I just did it.” –Dean Jeffries

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Love this pic.  There’s the obvious knockout pinup, Carol Lewis (Dean Jeffries’ high school sweetheart in front of his ’47 Merc), posing for his pinstriping pleasure, but also check out Dean Jeffries’ paint box.  ”The Modern Painter Has Arrived.” It’s an incredible piece of work in itself.

“The above shot comes from a publicity shoot done ironically, at Barris’ shop, with George behind the camera. Jeffries was just out of high school, and Barris tried to hire him, but Jeffries wanted to sub-contract to Barris, so Barris cleaned out a storage area in his shop, and Jeffries based himself out of there. Pretty slick on Barris’ part– he could grab Jeffries any time he wanted a striping job.” –Thanks to Irish Rich for the story on Carol Lewis.

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Carol Lewis’ custom 1956 Chevrolet– Dean Jeffries high school sweetheart.  –image via Kustomrama “It was Jeffries who was having dinner across the street from Barris’ shop when he spotted the smoke coming from the start of the disasterous Dec. ’57 Barris shop fire. He ran across the street and broke in, and managed to get Lewis’ 56 Chevy out of there before the flames got too out of control. Lewis’ Chevy was done in a similar style as Jeffries’ ’47 was.” –Irish Rich

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A young Dean Jeffries with his late ’30s Horch sedan. While serving in the Army during the Korean War, Jeffries was stationed in Germany– and on weekends he’d hop in the Horch and explore Western Europe.  While overseas, he’s said to have first learned to pinstripe from an old German furniture maker who took Jeffries under his wing.

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“Troy Ruttman (1952 Indy 500 winner) lived across the street, and I bummed around with him a bit, learning about race cars. I liked it, liked the people. Then I ended up tying up with Mobil. They would paint anybody’s race car for free at Indy. So I did A.J. Foyt’s car, and Parnelli’s, and Jim Rathmann’s…everybody wanted me ’cause I was doing things a little different than plain old paint jobs. One year in the early 1960s, I did 21 of the 33 cars in the race. I was doing pretty good!” –Dean Jeffries

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“This shop asked me to paint three Porsches for them. I really didn’t know how, but I did it anyway– and they turned out really nice. So I thought, ‘I’ll start painting cars, too.’ About this time I bought a real cheapie Porsche Carrera, but I couldn’t stand the look of it so I redid the whole front end in metal and welded it back together– there was no such thing as Bondo back then. And I painted it real bitchin’. That car got lots of recognition.” –Dean Jeffries
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Dean Jeffries was also innovative the the field of Kustom Kulture clothing.  He got into airbrushing, and is oft credited as being the first guy to airbrush custom tees and sweatshirts– check the handiwork he’s wearing in the pic above.  Back when he was hangin’ around with Von Dutch (who was fond of painting a third eyeball on his forhead), it’s said that Jeffries created the now iconinic “flying eyeball” that Von Dutch and Ed Roth were known and credited for.  Whatever the case may be, Jeffries doesn’t seem too worried about it.  Another first credited to Dean Jeffries– the metalflake paint job.

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James Dean with his “Little Bastard– great view of the tail stripes and Dean Jeffries’ handiwork. “James Dean had entered the Salinas Airport Races for the Oct. 1st weekend of 1955. Dean was a provisionary racer with the Calif SportsCar Club and Sports Car Club of America. He did not have a permanent race number. He selected 130 which was available. Dean Jeffries, who had a paint shop next to Barris did the work which consisted of– painting ‘130′ in black non-permanent paint on the front hood, doors and rear deck lid. He also painted “Little Bastard” in script across the rear cowling.”  –Lee Raskin, Porsche historian, and author of James Dean At Speed.

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“A famous customizer, Bill Cushenberry, had won the Oakland Roadster Show, and I said to myself, ‘If I want to be a customizer guy like him or Barris, I gotta learn and do that kinda stuff– make something quite unique and different, a winner.’ I was lucky, because my ex-father-in-law had two prewar Grand Prix Maseratis rotting away in his backyard, with weeds growing through ‘em and everything. I asked if I could have one, and he said, ‘Sure. Nobody wants ‘em.’ Can you imagine what they’d be worth today! Anyway, I tore it all down to the chassis, and I started forming a shape out of little quarter-inch rods– I didn’t know how to beat metal around wood back then.”  –Dean Jeffries

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To create his masterpiece, the Mantaray, Dean Jeffries took two old Maserati single seater chassis and welded them together– then hand-fabricated the Mantary’s sexy curves from no less than 86 sheets of metal. Aside from four Weber carburetors, the car is in Jeffries’ own words, “true-​​blue American, right down to the 15-​​inch magnesium-​​cast Halibrand wheels and the bred-​​for-​​Indianapolis Goodyear Blue Streak Speedway Special tires.”

“I curved every piece just by looking at it and referring to a drawing I’d made. Then I took the framework down to California Metal Shaping, and for $800– which wasn’t bad back then– they shaped the aluminum body pieces in about a week. Of course, when I brought all the pieces back to the shop I had to adjust ‘em and trim ‘em to make it all work. But there isn’t a shred of fiberglass on that car. I made the plastic bubble roof by myself.” –Dean Jeffries

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“I won the Oakland Roadster Show (with the Mantaray), which included a free trip to Europe. And I got on the cover of Hot Rod. That was the tops. And what happened to my business after that you can’t believe. I was a lucky guy.” –Dean Jeffries

“Steve Allen saw my car somewhere and had me bring it onto his show. So this movie producer sees me on TV, and he calls me up and says he wants my Mantaray for his new movie. That was ‘Bikini Beach.’ Well, first of all, Frankie Avalon couldn’t drive a stick-shift– he could barely drive an automatic. So I ended up driving the car on camera, doubling up for Frankie Avalon’s Potato Bug part. I didn’t get a lot of money off that movie, but it did get me into the business– I met a lot of directors, producers, stunt guys. So I started making cars, model airplanes, boats, trucks, whatever the movies needed. I enjoyed the heck out of it.” –Dean Jeffries
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First AC-Shelby-Cobra CSX0001, Road & Track September 1962. This is the first AC Shelby Cobra. It arrived at Dean Moon’s speed shop from England minus engine and transmission and in bare aluminum, no paint. Shelby and Moon dropped in a new Ford Hi-Po 260 V-8, and 4-speed transmission and polished the body with Brill-O Pads. via

“Carroll Shelby brought the first Cobra back from Europe.  It was crude– and it ran like hell. The body was a mess– all-aluminum, but it wasn’t quality. Because I’d been trying my hand at aluminum work, I redid that first Cobra for Shelby– painted it, too. Shelby couldn’t even afford to pay me– he hadn’t gone to Ford yet. So, we loaded that Cobra on a crappy old trailer and off he goes to Ford– says, “I’ll pay you when this thing clicks.” Well, he goes and he gets tied up with Ford– booms out, 90 miles an hour! But he only had one car! So he comes back, and now he’s gotta show everybody that he’s got all these cars. So I’m painting that damn car over and over…they show it one day, then at night I paint it again, and the next day he shows it somewhere else. It was like he had five cars, but there was actually only one!” –Dean Jeffries
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1967 Pontiac GTO Monkeemobile. Pontiac GTOs were featured in a number of TV shows in the 1960s, but perhaps the most famous was the 1967 Pontiac GTO Monkeemobile. Penned by famed Los Angeles car customizer Dean Jeffries (George Barris also falsely claimed to have had a hand its design as well), this wild creation transported The Monkees on their TV show and at live appearances around the country. Although the car was equipped with a standard 335 hp engine and automatic transmission, the body was radically lengthened, and featured a new nose, utilizing the stock grilles. A nonfunctional GMC 671 blower was bolted onto the 389 cid engine, and a spacious custom interior with four-bucket seats was created, with an extra seat in the open trunk. Two original Monkeemobiles were built, along with a replica years later.  –Image © Car Culture/Corbis

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Dick Dean, who assisted Dean Jeffries with the build of legendary Monkeemobile.

“That’s one of many bad spots in regards to that man (George Barris). He sure does take credit, but he had nothing to do with it. I made the car. Every bit of it. He also says he made the Green Hornet’s car, still does to this day. He puts his name on a lot of things he had nothing at all to do with. My contract stated that when filming was done, I had first right of refusal to buy the cars back. So after the shows were over, the producers offered me the Monkeemobile and the Green Hornet for $1000 each. I said, ‘Heck, I could build new ones cheaper’– this was back in the 1960s, remember. So I turned them down. And George ended up with both cars. Then the company that made a Monkeemobile model ended up saying that legally George now has the rights to the car. I said, ‘Yes, the rights to own the car. But not the right to say he built it.’ But they went ahead and put his name on it anyway. I don’t go any further on the why and how in this situation. But it’s not over, that’s for sure. That’s all I can say.” –Dean Jeffries

“I admire the hell out of what he’s done all these years. I knew his brother, Sam, a very talented man, a very good metal man. I used to hang around their shop. George is not a metal man– I’ve seldom seen him do anything with it. I’m not bad-mouthing him. He’s a good promoter. I just don’t care for somebody who puts their name on something they had no part of.” –Dean Jeffries
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Related TSY posts:

THE LEGENDARY STRIPER VON DUTCH | STILL ALIVE AND LIVING IN ARIZONA ’72

ED “BIG DADDY” ROTH | RAT FINK KING OF SOUTH CALI KUSTOM KAR KULTURE

“LITTLE BASTARD” | THE SILVER SPYDER PORSCHE/DEAN MYSTERY REVISITED

THE SNAKE & THE STALLION | HOW SHELBY KICKED FERRARI’S ASS

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Read more on Dean Jeffries here

Get “Dean Jeffries: 50 Fabulous Years in Hot Rods, Racing & Film” here

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STEVE McQUEEN REVIEWS THE HOTTEST NEW GT’s | 1966 SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

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From the Blackwatch archives–

The year was 1966, and Steve McQueen was on top of the world. He was the reigning “King of Cool” who had the rest of Hollywood’s leading men eating his dust.  McQueen’s “hard knocks” path gave him an attitude and a lust for life that was flat-out unapologetic. So back In 1966, when Sports Illustrated wanted a Hollywood headliner to review the top new GT’s– Steve McQueen was the clear choice. Make that the only choice. Not Newman, or Garner, or… you get it.

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“BIG JOHN” SURTEES | THE LONE RACER MOTORCYCLE & F1 WORLD CHAMPION

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In all of history it has happened only once.  Only one man has ever won the World Championship in both motorcycle and auto racing– John Surtees. In 1956, at the wee age of 22 yrs old, he became the 500cc motorcycle World Champion. Then in 1960, he switched full-time to auto racing, and was crowned Formula One World Champion in 1964.  At 26 yrs of age, he’d become the only man ever to win a World Championship on two wheels and four. There has been no one since, and perhaps nevermore.

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Grand Prix motorcycle racing career
Active years 1952 - 1960
Teams Norton, MV Agusta
Grands Prix 49
Championships 350cc - 1958, 1959, 1960
500cc- 1956, 1958, 1959, 1960
Wins 38
Podium finishes 45
Pole positions N/A
Fastest laps 34
First Grand Prix 1952 500cc Ulster Grand Prix
First win 1955 250cc Ulster Grand Prix
Last win 1960 500cc Nations Grand Prix
Last Grand Prix 1960 500cc Nations Grand Prix

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May, 1964, Monte Carlo, Monaco — Ferrari F1 driver John Surtees — Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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Formula One World Championship career
Active years 1960 - 1972
Teams Lotus, Cooper, Lola, Ferrari,Honda, BRM, McLaren, Surtees
Races 113 (111 starts)
Championships 1 (1964)
Wins 6
Podiums 24
Career points 180
Pole positions 8
Fastest laps 10
First race 1960 Monaco Grand Prix
First win 1963 German Grand Prix
Last win 1967 Italian Grand Prix
Last race 1972 Italian Grand Prix

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1954 — John Surtees with Norton motorcycles. Surtees rode these machines in the Isle of Man TT races in 1954 , finishing 11th in the Junior race and 15th in the Senior. Over his TT racing career he won on six occasions. In 1960, Surtees moved from motorcycles to car racing, and remains the only man to have been world champion in both. – Photograph via National Motor Museum / HIP / TopFoto

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John Surtees racing for MV Agusta. When MV approached him at the end of the 1955 season, young 21-year-old Surtees, who was born into a well-to-do family of motorcycle enthusiasts in Catford, had already won 77 races, mainly with Norton 350′s and 500′s. He was capable of bringing Cascina Costa its first 500 title during his first season with the Italian brand. Inventor of a new style that was challenged and that is at the roots of today’s riding technique with the body outstretched towards the inside of the curve, he won another six titles in the 350 and 500 classes between 1958 and 1960. Of course they were “easy” years for MV due to the fact that the leading rivals pulled out. via

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John Surtees getting air…

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Isle of Man TT, 1957 — John Surtees

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1957 — TT Assen, (Left to Right) John Surtees – Keith Campbell – Libero Liberati – Dickie Dale.

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1958 — At the German Grand Prix at the Nurburgring. Germany was banned from taking part in International events following WWII– as such, the German GP only became part of the Formula One World Championship in 1951. (Left to Right)  June Hartle, John Hartle, John Surtees, John Surtees sister & mother. via

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John Surtees grew up the son of a London motorcycle dealer, and had his very first professional race in the sidecar of his father’s Vincent, which they handily won. However, they were later disqualified by race officials when discovered his age. In 1950, at just 16 yrs of age, he joined Vincent as an apprentice. John Surtees first made the motorcycling world take notice when, in 1951, he gave Norton’s reigning star Geoff Duke a run for his money in an ACU race at the Thruxton Circuit.

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England, 1960 — British motorcycle racer John Surtees fine tunes his Formula II Cooper motorcycle. — Image by © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis

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John Surtees drives his F1 Lotus up University Avenue heading towards the raceway for the 1960 U.S. Grand Prix.  This pic is so rad I want to cry.  via

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1962– John Surtees, driver for Lola-Climax, at the Belgium Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps. — Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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Dutch Grand Prix, Zandvoort, Netherlands, 1963 — John Surtees (GB), for Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC in the iconic 156 F1– first built by Ferrari in 1961 to comply with new F1 regulations at the time that lowered engine displacement from 2.5 to 1.5 liters. It was powered by the V6 “Dino” engine (named after Enzo’s late son) that could produce up to 200 hp. The early “sharknose” design was breath-taking, but Ferrari design scrapped it by the end of the ’63 season for the more conventional intake seen above. via

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1963– Richie Ginther, driver for BRM, leads John Surtees, driver for Ferrari, around a corner at the Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo. — Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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Zandvoort, Netherlands, 1964 — John Surtees and fellow Formula One racers on grid for the Dutch Grand Prix — Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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1964 — Formula One racing legend John Surtees

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John Surtees and fellow drivers run to their sportscars during the start of the 1964 24 Hours of Le Mans. – Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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1965– Driver John Surtees, and Ferrari Formula One car designer at the time, Mauro Forghieri.

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May 30th, 1965 – John Surtees, driving a Ferrari 158 V8, follows his teammate Lorenzo Bandini, driving a Ferrari 1512 F12, during the Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo. – Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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French Grand Prix, 1965 — John Surtees (Ferrari), struck powerless to defend his F1 crown against the surging Scots– Jim Clark (Lotus/Climax) and Jackie Stewart (BRM). — Photograph © Schlegelmilch via

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June 12th, 1966 — John Surtees, racing for Ferrari, turns a corner in the Belgian Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps. The 1966 season ushered in larger 3-liter engines to Formula One. Surtees’s debut with Ferrari’s new F1 car was at the 1966 BRDC International Trophy at Silverstone, where he qualified and finished a close second behind Jack Brabham’s 3-liter Brabham BT19. A few weeks later, Surtees led the Monaco Grand Prix, pulling away from Jackie Stewart’s 2-liter BRM on the straights, before his engine failed. Two weeks later Surtees survived the first lap rainstorm which eliminated half the field and won the Belgian Grand Prix. – Photograph © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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Fans, drivers, and race officials get into position shortly before the start of the 1966 German Grand Prix at Nuerburgring. The front row of drivers (Left-Right) Jim Clark in his Lotus-Climax, John Surtees in a Cooper-Maserati, Jackie Stewart in his BRM, and Ludovico Scarfiotti in his Ferrari. – Photograph © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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1966 was the year that Ford swept the 24 Hours of Le mans powered by Carroll Shelby’s GT 40 Mk. II’s. Finally getting the upper hand on Ferrari.  It was not Ferrari’s only loss at Le Mans– John Surtees arrived at the race expecting to be partnered with Mike Parkes– instead Ferrari team manager Eugenio Dragoni had put “Big John” with Ludovico Scarfiotti. Surtees quit Ferrari, and finished the season driving for the Cooper-Maserati team, winning the last race of the season and finishing second in the drivers’ championship, 14 points behind Brabham.

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1967 — The Chaparral prototype of Phil Hill and the Lola Aston Martin prototype of John Surtees have yet to move off their marks as the Porsche armada leaves the start line with Jo Siffert in the lead at the start of the 1000km Nurburgring race in the World Sportscar Championships. – Photograph © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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John Surtees, driving for the Honda racing team, adjusts his goggles before the 1967 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo. — Photograph © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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in 1967, John Surtees joined the new Honda racing team– above he’s racing at the 1967 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo. Surtees was forced out of the race after 32 laps due to engine trouble. At the Italian Grand Prix that year, Surtees slipstreamed Jack Brabham to take Honda’s second F1 victory by 0.2 seconds. Surtees would finish fourth in the 1967 drivers’ championship. – Photograph © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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1968 — Lotus-Ford Formula One driver Jo Siffert stops to borrow a dry visor from retired teammate Graham Hill as John Surtees speeds past in his Honda during a wet French Grand Prix. – Photograph © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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Bergamo, Italy, 1965 — Scuderia Ferrari Formula One race team in 1965 including racecar drivers Lorenzo Bandini (in car), John Surtees (far right) and race engineer Mauro Forghieri (third from right). — Image by © Manuel Litran/Corbis

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Monza, Italy — Honda driver John Surtees prepares for the 1968 Italian Grand Prix in Monza. – Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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Monza, Italy — Honda driver John Surtees waits during a pit stop in the 1968 Italian Grand Prix in Monza. — Image by © Schlegelmilch/Corbis

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STEVE McQUEEN’S MEAN MACHINES | THE 1957 JAGUAR XK-SS “GREEN RAT”

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steve mcqueen 1957 jaguar green rat bw

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Jaguar’s epic 3.4 liter, DOHC inline-six powered D-Types were originally built for competitive racing– with a few also falling into the hands of privileged private owners. But by 1958, the D-Type had become obsolete– new racing mandates now called for smaller 3.0-liter engines, which would hurt the D-Type’s performance on the track. Ferrari had proven themselves to be the masters of small-displacement, high-performance racing, particularly with their iconic Testa Rossa that could handily eat the 3.0 liter D-type’s lunch. Jaguar found itself needing to unload 25 of the 3.4 liter D-Types.

Jaguar execs decided to convert the old D-Types to street legal sports cars and sell them to the public as limited-edition GTs. The Jaguar was subjected to a series of street-legal retrofits, including– a full-width windshield, and a bare-bones top and luggage rack added to the rear deck replaced the original racing dorsal fin. Removable fixed-pane side curtains were then mounted to the Jaguar’s doors. A vestigial exhaust system was devised by engineers– complete with a guard to prevent laymen from burning themselves on the Jag’s exposed, aggressive sidepipes. The roadster’s lighting was converted to meet street specs, two nicely-appointed seats were added, a passenger side door and sleek bumpers were tacked-on, and they were ready to roll.  Tragically, 9 of the 25 XK-SS D-Types were destroyed by a fire at the Jaguar factory in 1957, making the remaining 16 all the more special.

One of these iconic roadsters would find its way into the hands of Steve McQueen– who enjoyed an on-and-off love affair with this special Jaguar up until the very end.

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Perhaps no other car is more strongly identified with Steve McQueen, aside from the iconic Highland Green Mustang GT from the epic Bullitt, than his 1957 Jaguar D-type XK-SS.  He had his buddy Von Dutch custom craft a locking glovebox for the Jag to keep those Persols from flying out when he punched the gas. via

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Steve McQueen first saw his Jaguar XK-SS parked on a studio lot on Sunset Boulevard, back when it originally belonged to Bill Leyden (a local LA radio/television personality).  McQueen bought the Jag from him for $5,000 in 1958– though some historians claim the purchase price was $4,000. Wife Neile recalled, “I know exactly how much we paid for it– I signed the check.” Once, McQueen was pulled over for speeding with Neile, 6 months pregnant at the time, sitting beside him.  He lied and told the cop that she was in labor.  They got an official police escort to the hospital, where nurses were waiting to rush Neile in. After the police left, McQueen told the staff that it was just ‘false labor’, and off they went. He was later quoted as saying, “Neile was pissed. She didn’t speak to me for the rest of the day. But, by God, it worked. I didn’t get the ticket!”

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Steve McQueen tinkering with his ’57 Jaguar XK-SS on the set of  ’Wanted: Dead or Alive.’ McQueen’s Jag was originally painted white with a red interior– he would repaint the XK-SS proper British Racing Green, and had SoCal drag racer/hot-rodder/upholsterer Tony Nancy redo the entire interior in black leather.

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Under the hood of the Jaguar XK-SS– 3.4-liter, double-overhead-cam inline six-cylinder engine, topped of with a six-pack of side-draft Weber carburetors. This same engine powered the original XK-120, and all Jaguars made through the 1950s & 1960s. This little dry-sump honey could easily produce 250-275 horsepower– giving this cat an impressive power-to-weight ratio of 1 hp per 8 lbs, and 0-60 mph in 5 seconds, which was insane for a street car back in those days. via


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May, 1963– Steve McQueen tooling around LA in his Jaguar XK-SS. — Photograph by © John Dominis/ Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images. In 1984, McQueeen’s XK-SS was sold at auction to one-time neighbor, Richard Freshman, who knew Steve from his early Hollywood Hills days– reported for $148,000. Freshman then commissioned Lynx in England to carry out a respectful restoration of the car– insisting that all of McQueen’s own modifications (the Tony Nancy leather job and Von Dutch’s locking glovebox) remain fully intact, and that the Jaguar be road-safe and ready for action. Freshman later sold the car to Margie and Robert E. Petersen (patrons of the Petersen Automotive Museum and founders of Motor Trend) in 2000, in keeping with Petersen’s penchant for collecting movie-star cars. via

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May, 1963– Steve McQueen tooling around LA in his Jaguar XK-SS. — Photograph by © John Dominis/ Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images. McQueen and pals would often take their rides out on Mulholland Drive, in the early morning hours between midnight and 4 am, to quench their need for speed.  McQueen and friends terrorized Mulholland Drive with their high speed runs on-and-off for some 20 years, the XK-SS being his weapon of choice for most of his midnight rides. Petersen Automotive Museum director Dick Messer, an L.A. native and one of the car’s current caretakers, recalls, “I remember him driving this car a lot. People who lived up in the Hollywood Hills would hear the Jag coming and say ‘Yep, there goes McQueen.’ The Jag was his favorite.” via

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May, 1963– Steve McQueen tooling around LA in his Jaguar XK-SS. — Photograph by © John Dominis/ Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images. Local legend holds that at least one L.A. law-enforcement agency had promised its officers that an “expensive steak dinner” awaited the guy who could nail McQueen and the Jag with a speeding ticket. The tale continues that, while he was spotted often and even pursued a time or two, he was never caught and never written. The steak dinner went unclaimed. Another story refutes the entire affair, alleging that McQueen was so awash in speeding tickets he nearly lost his license.  via

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Steve McQueen at home with his prized 1957 Jaguar XK-SS D-Type & Lotus 11 autos.

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May, 1963– Steve McQueen driving his Jaguar XK-SS down Sunset Blvd, Hollywood, California. — Photograph by © John Dominis/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images

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Read more here.

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TSY related stories:

STEVE McQUEEN’s 1971 HUSKY 400 CROSS UP FOR AUCTION | BUY IT NOW!

STEVE McQUEEN REVIEWS THE HOTTEST NEW GT’s | 1966 SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

STEVE McQUEEN ’66 POPULAR SCIENCE | WHAT I LIKE IN A BIKE –AND WHY

STEVE McQUEEN | LE MANS & BEYOND GRATUITOUS 1970s RACING GOODNESS

STEVE McQUEEN | HOLLYWOOD’S ANTI-HERO & TRUE SON OF LIBERTY

REQUIRED VIEWING “BULLITT” | THE GRANDDADDY OF CAR CHASE SCENES

THE TSY FRIDAY FADE | STEVE MCQUEEN’S DUNE BUGGY DAYS

HUSQVARNA | THE SCREAMIN’ SWEDE THAT STARTED A RACING REVOLUTION

1970 12 HOURS OF SEBRING RACE | STEVE McQUEEN’S BRUSH WITH VICTORY

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POWER OF CONTEXT AND EXCLUSION | THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF HOLLIS BENNETT

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“The only things that I would say about the week were that no matter who you are, you need to experience it at least once.  There is something surreal about having all your senses that you normally rely on shattered from not being able to gauge distance on the salt flats or hearing a car that is not where it should be because it is going so fast or watching a little black streak pass you and not being able to fathom that a car could go that fast.  All in all an amazing place and an amazing time.”

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–Hollis Bennett, on Bonneville Speed Week

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Bonneville Speed Week — Photograph by © Hollis Bennett

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Visit Hollis Bennett’s photography website here

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THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF RAY GORDON |— THROTTLED –

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One of my big regrets of the year is that I wasn’t able to squirrel away the time & resources to make the trip out for –THROTTLED– Ray Gordon’s rad photography exhibition held last February at Wieden+Kennedy (Portland, OR).  Ray was cool enough to share some of the amazing pics, which just makes me feel even shittier for missing out on what was no doubt an epic event.

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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon

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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon

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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon

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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon

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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon

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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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– THROTTLED — Photograph by © Ray Gordon
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SCUDERIA FERRARI FROM SILVERSTONE TO MONACO | LIFE MAGAZINE, MAY 1956

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The 1956 Formula One Ferrari’s were truly modified Lancia D50′s.  The D50 debuted at the tail-end of the ’54 Formula One season, placed in the capable hands of Italy’s two-time and reigning World Champion, Alberto Ascari. He took both pole position in qualifying and fastest race lap in the D50′s very first event. On May 26th, 1955, Alberto Ascari was in Monza to watch friend and fellow driver Eugenio Castellotti test out the Ferrari 750 Monza, which they were to race together in the Supercortemaggiore 1000. About to go home for lunch with his wife, and dressed only in a simple shirt and trousers, Ascari decided to throw on Castellotti’s helmet and try out the new Ferrari. While coming out of a curve on the third lap he lost control– the Monza violently skidded, turned on its nose and somersaulted into the air. Ascari was ejected and thrown onto the track and died on the scene. After the death of their star driver, Lancia fell on hard times and sold to Scuderia Ferrari. Ferrari modified the D50, removing many of designer Vittorio Jano’s innovations. It was rebadged as the Lancia-Ferrari D50, and then simply the Ferrari D50. Juan Manuel Fangio won the 1956 World Championship of Drivers with the Ferrari modified D50. During its competitive run, the D50 raced in 14 Formula One Grands Prix, winning five of them.

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An incredible photo essay by LIFE photographer Thomas McAvoy, chronicling the Scuderia Ferrari racing team’s return trip from the 1956 BRDC International Trophy of Silverstone, to the Ferrari facilities where technicians wrenched the cars in preparation for the Monaco Grand Prix– and then off to Monaco where you see shots of the legendary drivers Peter Collins, Eugenio Castellotti, and the master, Juan Manuel Fangio (1956 was his only year with Ferrari)– who over his career won five World Championships for four different makers– Alfa Romeo, Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz and Maserati.

McAvoy’s images capture a time when Ferrari is simultaneously on the dusk & dawn of tragedy and great loss.  On June 30th, 1956, Dino Ferrari (Enzo’s only son, and heir apparent to the Ferrari legacy) was taken by Muscular Dystrophy– less than two months after these photographs were taken. Enzo remained forever heartbroken. “The Old Man” began wearing his signature dark sunglasses as a sign of his mourning, and in remembrance of Dino’s death.  His marriage soon failed under the stress of Dino’s passing, and Enzo lived out the rest of his years in a tiny apartment at the Ferrari factory, where he worked tirelessly to propel Ferrari forward until his own death at the age of 90 on August 14, 1988.

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Eugenio Castellotti driving for Scuderia Ferrari at the Monaco Grand Prix, 1956 — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine.  On March 14th, 1957, Ferrari’s young star driver, Eugenio Castellotti was killed at only 26 years old. While testing a new Ferrari for the 1957 racing season at the Modena Autodrome, he crashed against a curve and was thrown 100 yards, dying instantly. He was attempting to accelerate his average speed to 85 miles per hour when he lost control of the Ferrari. Not even two years ago, he was pallbearer at Aleberto Ascari’s funeral, who had died behind the wheel of Castellotti’s Ferrari– wearing Castellotti’s helmet.  The irony and agony is gut-wrenching.

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Peter Collins driving for Scuderia Ferrari at the Monaco Grand Prix, 1956 — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine.  On August 3rd, 1958, Ferrari’s Peter Collins (who looks like he’s on cloud nine in McAvoy’s Monaco pictures with his beautiful soon-to-be-wife, American actress Louise Cordier on his arm) would die in a crash at the ’58 German Grand Prix–  at just 27 years old Collins had already won three Grands Prix, and had a helluva career ahead of him before his tragic passing.

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The Scuderia Ferrari racing team unloading the D50 race cars from the nose of the cargo plane upon returning from the 1956 BRDC International Trophy of Silverstone. They are headed to the Ferrari facilities where technicians will in prepare them for the 1956 Monaco Grand Prix. — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. via 
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A great shot showing Scuderia Ferrari racing team unloading the D50 race cars from the cargo plane onto the transport trucks upon returning from the 1956 BRDC International Trophy of Silverstone. D50 #2, ch.number 0001, is raced by Peter Collins.  They are headed with the d50′s to Ferrari’s facilities where technicians will in prepare them for the 1956 Monaco Grand Prix. — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. via 

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The Scuderia Ferrari racing team unloading their D50 race cars onto the Fiat 642 transport truck (by Bartoletti) upon returning from the 1956 BRDC International Trophy of Silverstone. They are headed to the Ferrari facilities where technicians will in prepare them for the 1956 Monaco Grand Prix. — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. via 

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Scuderia Ferrari racing team unloading the D50 race cars upon returning from the 1956 BRDC International Trophy of Silverstone. D50 #1 (loaded top/front), ch.number 0007, raced by Juan Manuel Fangio. They are headed to the Ferrari facilities where technicians will in prepare them for the 1956 Monaco Grand Prix. The man in the military uniform under the plane’s wing is an agent of the Italian “Guardia di Finanza” (Taxes and customs police) overseeing the landing operation. — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. via

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Scuderia Ferrari racing team with their D50 race cars loaded on the Fiat 642 transport truck (by Bartoletti) upon returning from the 1956 BRDC International Trophy of Silverstone. They are headed to the Ferrari facilities where technicians will prepare them for the 1956 Monaco Grand Prix. — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. via 

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Scuderia Ferrari racing team with their D50 race cars loaded on the Fiat 642 transport truck (by Bartoletti) upon returning from the 1956 BRDC International Trophy of Silverstone. They are headed on the Via Emilia toward Maranello to the Ferrari facilities, where technicians will prepare them for the 1956 Monaco Grand Prix. — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. via

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1956 — Lancia/Ferrari D50′s awaiting unloaded in Maranello and awaiting preparation of the Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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1956 — Lancia/Ferrari D50′s at the Ferrari facilities at Maranello preparation for the Monaco Grand Prix race – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine
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1956 — Lancia/Ferrari D50′s at the Ferrari facilities at Maranello in preparation for the Monaco Grand Prix race – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Ferrari mechanics and technicians at Maranello prepare the Lancia/Ferrari D50′s for the Monaco Grand Prix — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — A Lancia/Ferrari D50 at Maranello is prepared for competition in the Monaco Grand Prix — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine
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May, 1956 — Ferrari mechanics and technicians at Maranello prepare the Lancia/Ferrari D50′s for the Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Ferrari mechanics and technicians at Maranello prepare the Lancia/Ferrari D50′s for the Monaco Grand Prix — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Ferrari mechanics and technicians at Maranello prepare the Lancia/Ferrari D50′s for the Monaco Grand Prix — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine
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May, 1956 — Ferrari technician at Maranello is hand-fabricating a body panel for a Lancia/Ferrari D50 headed to the Monaco Grand Prix — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine
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May, 1956 — Ferrari mechanics and technicians at Maranello prepare the Lancia/Ferrari D50′s for the Monaco Grand Prix — Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Racing fans swarm a Lancia/Ferrari D50 at the Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — The legendary Formula One driver Juan Manuel Fangio at the Monaco Grand Prix race – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Ferrari racing in the  Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — The Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — The Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 – Juan Manuel Fangio in his #20 Lancia/Ferrari D50 race car at the Monaco Grand Prix. Ferrari would have to retire this D50 from the race after Fangio smacked it into a wall  – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Luigi Musso’s Lancia/Ferrari D50 crashed into the straw bales at the Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — The crushed nose of Fangio’s Lancia/Ferrari D50 – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE

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May, 1956 — Juan Manuel Fangio’s Lancia/Ferrari D50 that he crashed into the wall at the Monaco Grand Prix, you can see the damage on the car’s nose – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine
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May, 1956 — Juan Manuel Fangio signing autographs at the Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Lancia/Ferrari D50 race car at the Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Driver Eugnio Callotti with the Scuderia Ferrari pit crew at the Monaco Grand Prix race – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Eugenio Castellotti standing over his Lancia/Ferrari D50 at the Monaco Grand Prix race – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine

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May, 1956 — Fellow Ferrari drivers Juan Manuel Fangio and Eugenio Castellotti share words at the Monaco Grand Prix. – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. The fiery Castellotti had a gorgeous girlfriend, actress Delia Scalato, to match his own good looks and suave style. His racing talent and bank account were also not lacking– he was a silver spooner who had inherited a substantial family fortune. At 21 yrs old, he bought himself a Ferrari 166S, and pursued racing. His looks, aggression and skill quickly thrust him into the limelight– as he became one of Italy’s top drivers with an ever-growing and adoring entourage. via

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May, 1956 — Ferrari driver Eugenio Castellotti with entourage (actress Delia Scalato?) on the streets of Monace during the Monaco Grand Prix – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine
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May, 1956 — Ferrari driver, Peter Collins enjoying a drink with his beautiful, soon-to-be-wife, American actress Louise Cordier at the Monaco Grand Prix. They married in February of 1957, and were the golden couple of the time, living on a yacht in Monaco harbor. – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine. via
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May, 1956 — Ferrari driver, Peter Collins enjoying a stroll with his beautiful, soon-to-be-wife, the American actress Louise Cordier (“Seven Year Itch”) at the Monaco Grand Prix. Just look at her tiny little waist… – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine
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May, 1956 — Ferrari driver Peter Collins (just 23 yrs old at the time) standing next to his Lancia/Ferrari d50 race car with beautiful, soon-to-be-wife, the American actress Louise Cordier (“Seven Year Itch”) at the Monaco Grand Prix. They married in February, 1957 and had just six short months together as husband & wife before Peter was killed driving in the ’58 German Grand Prix. – Photo by Thomas McAvoy for LIFE magazine.

Under the wing of the well-seasoned Juan Manuel Fangio, Peter Collins’ driving skills flourished incredibly.  He won at both Spa-Francorchamps and Reims, and went on to the Monza finale with a chance of taking the title. What followed has become legend (if not always accurately reported).

When Fangio retired with steering failure, it was clear that taking the win and extra point for fastest lap could deliver Peter Collins the Championship. By lap 30 of 50, he was solidly in second place, and while Moss’ Maserati was some way ahead, Collins still had a chance to take the lead. On lap 45, Moss ran out of fuel, and his team-mate Piotti came up from behind and pushed him to the pits. Fangio, meanwhile was expected to take over Luigi Musso’s car, to seek the one point that would retain his title– but Musso boldly ignored all instructions to hand over his car. When Collins came in on lap 35 for a tire check, he spotted Fangio on the pit wall, and voluntarily offered his car– giving up any chance to win the title himself, and handing the World Championship to Fangio.  Collins was a true class act for that selfless gesture of sportsmanship. via

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Related TSY posts:

“BIG JOHN” SURTEES | THE LONE RACER MOTORCYCLE & F1 WORLD CHAMPION

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN | BRITISH RACING LEGEND BARRY SHEENE

JAMES “HUNT THE SHUNT” | THE 1970′s HIGH-FLYIN’ LOTHARIO OF FORMULA 1

CARROLL SHELBY GOES MID-ENGINE | THE COOPER “KING COBRA” YEARS

STEVE McQUEEN | LE MANS & BEYOND GRATUITOUS 1970s RACING GOODNESS

1970 12 HOURS OF SEBRING RACE | STEVE McQUEEN’S BRUSH WITH VICTORY

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SHAWN DICKINSON ILLUSTRATIONS | SOCAL KUSTOM KULTURE KARTOONS

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“Ghost Rider” by Shawn Dickinson

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A product of SoCal, Shawn Dickinson grew up inspired by the surrounding counterculture of custom Hot Rods, Surfers, and the iconic art that was produced by the legends before him– you see the classic Rat Fink and Tiki influences that, in his hands, are at once timeless and fresh.  He got his chops as a cartoonist for the underground Untamed Highway, which was chock full of 1950′s Kustom Kulture. Dickinson went on to illustrate posters for Rockabilly and garage bands, not to mention numerous comic projects and commissioned works. 

I’m a big fan of the guy’s work.  As he describes it, Dickinson’s creations and medium are a throwback fusion of, ”Imagery stylistically inspired by 1930′s cartoons (what I feel was the craziest era for cartoons), mixed with iconic imagery inspired by 1950′s & 1960′s rock n’ roll, cars, bikes, etc. (what I feel was the craziest era for all those things). And I still paint with watercolor and India ink.”  Love it.

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Shawn Dickinson featured in Car Kulture DeLuxe Magazine

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“Smooth” by Shawn Dickinson

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“The Inker” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Beyond the Watery Grave” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Bonemobile” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Skeleton Surfer” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Bad Neighborhood” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Tiki” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Spanish Beach Girl” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Spare” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Shitzles Der Cat” by Shawn Dickinson

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“Pass” by Shawn Dickinson

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See Shawn Dickinson’s work here

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Related TSY posts:

HOLLYWOOD’S INNOVATIVE KUSTOM KULTURE LEGEND | DEAN JEFFRIES

ED “BIG DADDY” ROTH | RAT FINK KING OF SOUTH CALI KUSTOM KAR KULTURE

THE LEGENDARY STRIPER VON DUTCH | STILL ALIVE AND LIVING IN ARIZONA ’72

KENNY HOWARD | THE MASTER PAINTER & STRIPER ALSO KNOWN AS VON DUTCH

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PHOTO TIM’S EARLY DAYS | I WAS A KID ENTHRALLED WITH MOTORSPORTS…

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Early Days — image by Photo Tim
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“I was a kid that was enthralled with motorsports.  When I was 11 yrs old or so, a friend from schools parents took me to Ascot Park.  I started sneaking into the pits to be closer to the racers by going around the back where they had a 20m pile of gravel to shield it from the passing cars on the freeway.”

“One issue with sneaking in to the pits is you don’t have anything to do, so I would stand around and talk to one of the guys taking photographs, Dan Mahoney.  One night he handed me a camera and placed a little white pebble on the track.  He said, ‘when the bikes get there push this button.’  I did and the result is the photo below.  I was 12 yrs old at the time.  The next week Dan said I had a natural talent and would I like a job shooting the races.  I was a part of racing!!!  Ok, not on the track, but still…”

–Photo Tim

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Early Days — image by Photo Tim

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Early Days — image by Photo Tim
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Early Days — image by Photo Tim
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Early Days — image by Photo Tim

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Early Days — image by Photo Tim
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Early Days — image by Photo Tim
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Early Days (love the Harley XR-750) — image by Photo Tim
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Early Days” gallery by Photo Tim

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THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF RAY GORDON | BONNEVILLE– HOT RODS IN SPACE

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RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD HOT ROD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD BONNEVILLE HOT ROD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON TSY SALT FLATS THE SELVEDGE YARD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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Ray Gordon returned from the Bonneville Salt Flats a few weeks ago and shared these incredible shots with TSY.

Keep reading, as I do believe that Ray himself tells it best…

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“Cody Adams, good friend and owner of Hurst Racing Tires and I packed my 1996 Dodge shorty van full of survival gear (beer and beef jerky) and left for Bonneville Speedway 5:00 a.m. Friday, August 12th. The 12 hour drive had us rolling into the little desert town of Wendover, Utah right at dinner time.  As soon as we rolled into town there were traditional ’30s, ’40s and ’50s lakes style hot rods as far as the eye could see. This was going to be a good year for speed week.

The Salt Flats are located right outside of Wendover, Utah. Wendover is split right down the middle. Half is Utah and half is Nevada. We spent most of our time in Nevada since that’s where the cars, casinos and real beer with alcohol was. It was a good night.

Up before dawn on Saturday, we headed for the salt. What a weird place. It might as well be the moon. The largest flattest place on the planet. It’s a very hostile environment. Temps reaching 100+ during the day with a giant white salty surface bouncing the suns rays everywhere. You had better make sure that you put sun block everywhere. I mean everywhere. I have heard horror stories of people wearing loose shorts and the sun reflecting off the salt sizzling their junk like bacon. The only shade you can find on the salt are the port-a-potties.

Saturday was an epic scene. Cars and motorcycles and speed freaks of all shapes and sizes came together to say fuck you to the heat and the harsh environment to break some speed records. There is work to be done. No posing here. The heat and salt have a great way of keeping the kooks away.

Sunday was just as epic and and even more people came out but a storm rolled in right when they shut the racing down at 7:00. Crazy desert lightning storm. We headed into town and watched the lightning hit all around us and rain wash all the salt off the cars and the streets flood. I always forget how crazy the desert is.

We headed for Oregon in the morning but there were still hundreds of hard core racers that got up and headed back to the salt to chase the records. There was still 4 days left to run them until they break.

Once we got back to Gods green earth It really set in just how weird the salt flats are. Literally a different planet. Hot rods in space.

I am hooked and I will be there every year for the rest of my life. I hope to see you.”

–Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD DRAGSTER

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD BONNEVILLE HOT ROD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON BONNEVILLE TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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HOT ROD RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD MOTORCYCLE

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON THE SELVEDGE YARD TSY BONNEVILLE

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD RAY GORDON BONNEVILLE

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD BONNEVILLE DRAGSTER RAY GORDON

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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HOT ROD BONNEVILLE RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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BONNEVILLE HOT RODS TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS RAY GORDON THE SELVEDGE YARD HOT ROD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD RAY GORDON BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD BICYCLE

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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HOT ROD TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD RAY GORDON

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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BONNEVILLE HOT ROD TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD RAY GORDON

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON RAT ROD TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD BONNEVILLE

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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RAY GORDON BONNEVILLE TSY THE SELVEDGE YARD

— Image by © Ray Gordon

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Related TSY posts:

THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF RAY GORDON | — THROTTLED —

FLAT-OUT ON THE SALT FLATS | THE 1954 BONNEVILLE HOT ROD SPEED MEET

The Great 1950′s T-Bucket Hot Rod Rivalry | Kookie Kar vs. The “Outhouse on Wheels”

HOG WILD OVER HARLEY-DAVIDSON | THE “HOG BOYS” OF EARLY H-D HISTORY

THE WHITE TRIPLEX | THREE ENGINES, 1500 HP, AND ONE TRAGIC RESULT

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See more here at Ray Gordon’s website

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1965 — THE YEAR RICHARD PETTY “THE KING” OF NASCAR TURNED DRAG RACER

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In 1964, Mopar unleashed their 426 Hemi-powered fleet at the Daytona 500 and swept Ford clean off the track– taking 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place. Richard Petty (NASCAR 1959 Rookie of the Year, which was amazingly the same year that his father Lee won the Daytona 500) led for an impressive 184 laps, and handily took the win.

That year an outmatched Chevy did not even compete in NASCAR. Ford attempted to debut their new SOHC 427 just days before Daytona– but not only had they failed to list the engine with NASCAR 45 days prior as required, this was not a stock engine at all. Ford was flatly denienied, but even worse than that– Mopar somehow got drug into the high-performance engine debate (many say Ford was muddying the waters for Mopar behind the scenes) that spiraled into the 426 Hemi (reportedly capable of producing 600 HP in NASCAR trim…), which truly was a stock car engine sold to the public, being banned from future NASCAR races.

This easily could have spelled the end of Mopar’s 426 Hemi– arguably the most legendary and iconic American muscle car engine ever. But what Mopar did next was surprising– they decided to turn the tables and boycott NASCAR. This was potentially a major setback for Richard Petty’s racing career, as he was on pace to win the championship that year.

As fate would have it, drag racing was becoming a huge draw– as fans gathered in fevered hordes to see the new wave of super-powered big-block Motor City madness go head-to-head on the drag strips. Plymouth and the Petty crew announced their abrupt move to drag racing– although Petty had no real serious drag racing experience. It would be an exciting, and short-lived venture that would produce a couple of badass Hemi-powered Barracuda dragsters. Unfortunately it was also a period marred by a tragedy that would affect Richard Petty forever.

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August 16th, 1964, Huntington, West Virginia — Original caption: Richard Petty of Randleman, North Carolina flashes a winner’s smile after winning Mountaineer “500″ late model stock car race near here 8/16.  Helping him hold the winner’s trophy is pretty June Patton, “Miss Huntington” and “Miss Mountaineer 500.” — Image by © Bettmann/Corbis

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February 28th, 1965, Dallas, GA — Original caption: Richard Petty’s supercharged dragster flashes down the strip here in this picture made just an instant before the vehicle veered off the track and into the crowd.  Petty’s car plunged into the spectators just left of the pole at right.  An eight-year-old boy was killed and at least eight other spectators were injured. “Outlawed” on the side of the car refers to the fact that the vehicle, a (Hemi-powered) Plymouth, was recently banned from NASCAR stock car racing. Petty, one of the top NASCAR drivers last year, normally doesn’t drive drag races. — Image by © Bettmann/Corbis

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February 28th, 1965, Dallas, GA — Original caption: Volunteers load one of the injured into an ambulance after stock car driver Richard Petty’s car roared off a drag strip here and plunged into a crowd of spectators.  One youth (an 8 yr old boy) was killed and at least eight others injured in the mishap. — Image by © Bettmann/Corbis. Petty suffered minor injuries in the wreck, but was permanently scarred emotionally and has never publicly discussed it. The dragster was promptly hauled behind the Petty’s shop where it was buried– he never wanted to set eyes on that cursed ‘Cuda again. Reports say that Richard Petty walked away from the wreck cussing the car that he now hated– saying over and over, “I’ll never drag race again”. Many cash offers were made for the twisted wreckage– but Petty flatly refused. True to his word– he was determined that no one would ever see it, let alone have it, again.

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Richard Petty in his Hemi-powered Plymouth Barracuda 43/JR. drag racer that replaced the original “Outlawed” ‘Cuda dragster wrecked in the tragic crash. Due to Bill France’s decision to allow Hemi’s to race in NASCAR again, the “Outlawed” badge was retired. 

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Richard Petty’s Hemi-powered Plymouth Barracuda dragster. Street production ‘Cudas would not see a Hemi engine until 1967, when along with the Hemi, the 383 and 440 V-8 engines were options. The new 2nd generation Barracudas were now bigger by 2″ in width and length to house the new torque-twisting power-plants.

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Richard Petty pictured here with his 2nd Plymouth Barracuda (43/JR.) drag racer. The original had sported a bumper sticker that thumbed its nose at the NASCAR ban of Mopar’s Hemi engine– “NASCAR, If you can’t outrun ’em, outlaw ’em.” “Outlawed” was also defiantly painted on the original ‘Cuda’s doors to further make the point. Here you can see that the ‘Cuda’s headlight openings are covered in aluminum and the front bumper has been removed for better performance. 

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Related TSY posts:

“WE’LL DROP A HEMI IN THE REAR– AND RUN LIKE HELL.” | HEMI UNDER GLASS

THE ’66 DODGE CHARGER | MY FIRST TRUE LOVE/WHEELS

THE ULTIMATE CARROLL SHELBY MUSTANG | THE GT500E SUPER SNAKE

THE FORD MUSTANG GT350 | CARROLL SHELBY & THE AMERICAN PONY WAR

CARROLL SHELBY & THE FORD GT40 | FOUR YRS OF DOMINATION AT LE MANS

THE SNAKE & THE STALLION | HOW SHELBY KICKED FERRARI’S ASS

THE 1950′s T-BUCKET RIVALRY | KOOKIE KAR vs. THE “OUTHOUSE ON WHEELS”

SEX & SPEED | “JUNGLE PAM” HARDY & “JUNGLE JIM” LIBERMAN LIGHT ‘EM UP

OLD SCHOOL HURST GIRLS GONE WILD | GENTLEMEN, START YOUR ENGINES

1950 – 1959 THE SANTA ANA DRAG STRIP DAYS | THEY DID IT FOR LOVE

FLAT-OUT ON THE SALT FLATS | THE 1954 BONNEVILLE HOT ROD MEET

RELIVE DRAG RACING’S TOP RIVALRY 11/10 ~ THE SNAKE VS. THE MONGOOSE

SCUDERIA FERRARI FROM SILVERSTONE TO MONACO | LIFE MAGAZINE, MAY 1956

REQUIRED VIEWING “BULLITT” | THE GRANDDADDY OF CAR CHASE SCENES

1970 12 HOURS OF SEBRING RACE | STEVE McQUEEN’S BRUSH WITH VICTORY

TWO-LANE BLACKTOP | UNDER THE HOOD OF THE EPIC 1971 ROAD FLICK

MID-ENGINE DUEL THAT NEVER WAS | THE 390 AMX/3 VS. THE 351 PANTERA

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Check: The History of Petty Racing & The History of Richard Petty’s Drag Barracuda & Petty’s 1964 / 1965 Barracda

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AMERICAN GRAFFITI | THE EPIC FILM THAT REIGNITED HOT ROD CULTURE

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I was chatting with my friend Don a couple weeks ago about epic car films, and Two-Lane Blacktop quickly came up. Don is a major car nut (particularly classic Mopars) and so he quickly segued from Blacktop to American Graffiti– correctly stating that it was the same ’55 Chevy (built by Richard Ruth of Competition Engineering of Sunland, CA) for Blacktop that Falfa drove in George Lucas’ classic American Graffiti. Well there were actually two ’55 Chevy hot rods from Two-Lane Blacktop (1971) that were used in American Graffiti (1973). Both were built using Richard Ruth’s own ’55 Chevy as the blueprint. Producer Gary Kurtz (Two-Lane Blacktop & American Graffiti) had visited Ruth who took him for a pulse-quickening ride in his big-block hot rod. That same evening Kurtz promptly ordered three cars from Richard Ruth– two exactly like Ruth’s, and one stunt car.

Two of these original cars would survive to live another day in George Lucas’ American Graffiti: 

Main Car 1– Equipped with a 427 crate motor, M-22 Muncie, 4.88 Olds rear, fiberglass front end, doors, and trunk lid, straight axle front suspension when built and later modified and used in American Graffiti.

Stunt Car– All steel-bodied car equipped with a 454 crate motor, TH 400 automatic, Olds rear of unknown gearing, modified for American Graffiti. It was used for interior shots as it was equipped with an auto tranny and drove smoother than a stick.

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Shot of Mel’s drive-in from the 1973 classic, “American Graffiti” — Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis Mel’s drive-in was actually out of business, and was reopened just for the filming of American Graffiti– then promptly demolished after filming was finished. American Graffiti was George Lucas’ semi-autobiographical teenage tale (Lucas grew up in Modesto, CA during the heyday of cruising and hot rods) that starred a treasure trove of young talent– Harrison Ford, Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Cindy Williams, Mackenzie Phillips, and the list goes on. It also created a huge resurgence in American 1950′s & 1960′s culture–  inspiring a long string of films and TV shows, most notably “Happy Days.” Hot Rod magazine even listed the ’55 Chevy and ’32 Ford deuce coupe (the true stars of the film) at the top of their list of most influential hot rods of all time.        

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Paul Le Mat in the George Lucas’ 1973 classic car film, “American Graffiti.” George Lucas had  the license plate on the ’32 Ford hot rod read: THX-138. This was a reference to THX-1138, his 1971 sc-fi flick. Later in his Star Wars saga, the yellow airspeeder Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan use to chase bounty hunter Zam Wesell is said to be a tribute to John Milner’s iconic coupe in American Graffiti.

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Wolfman Jack on the set of George Lucas’ “American Graffiti” — Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis Wolfman Jack has hand-picked to star in American Graffiti because of his own found memories listening to the raspy, deep-voiced deejay back in his youth. Wolfman Jack is classic– as a kid, I myself had a “Wolfman Jack” impersonation that I was quite proud of.

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Pal Le Mat, Cindy Williams and Ron Howard in George Lucas’ 1973 classic film, “American Graffiti”

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Cindy Williams (Laverne & Shirley) in George Lucas’ 1973 classic car cruising film, “American Graffiti”

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Young George Lucas on the set of his 1973 classic film about 1950s & ’60s cruising, “American Graffiti”

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George Lucas on the set of his 1973 classic, “American Graffiti” — Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis

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Young Harrison Ford in George Lucas’ 1973 classic hot rod cruising film, “American Graffiti”

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Harrison Ford in George Lucas’ 1973 film, “American Graffiti” — Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis

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 Charles Martin Smith and Candy Clark on the set of the George Lucas’ 1973 classic coming-of-age film,”American Graffiti” — Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis

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Charles Martin Smith, Candy Clark on Ron Howard in Lucas’ 1973 classic car film,”American Graffiti” 

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Candy Clark from George Lucas’ 1973 car classic, “American Graffiti” — Image by © Bettmann/Corbis

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Richard Dreyfuss in George Lucas’ classic, “American Graffiti” — Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis

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Richard Dreyfuss and Bo Hopkins on the set of the George Lucas’ 1973 car classic, “American Graffiti” — Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis

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Paul Le Mat (John Milner) on the set of George Lucas’ 1973 classic car film, “American Graffiti”

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Mackenzie Phillips & Paul Le Mat on the set of George Lucas’ 1973 classic car film, “American Graffiti”– Image by © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis

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Old write-up on the ’55 Chevy that starred 2 epic car films– American Graffiti and Two-Lane Blacktop

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Related TSY posts:

TWO-LANE BLACKTOP | UNDER THE HOOD OF THE EPIC 1971 ROAD FLICK

REQUIRED VIEWING “BULLITT” | THE GRANDDADDY OF CAR CHASE SCENES

HOLLYWOOD’S INNOVATIVE KUSTOM KULTURE LEGEND | DEAN JEFFRIES

THE LEGENDARY STRIPER VON DUTCH | STILL ALIVE AND LIVING IN ARIZONA ’72

ED “BIG DADDY” ROTH | RAT FINK KING OF SOUTH CALI KUSTOM KAR KULTURE

FLAT-OUT ON THE SALT FLATS | THE 1954 BONNEVILLE HOT ROD SPEED MEET

GREAT 1950′s T-BUCKET HOT ROD RIVALRY | KOOKIE KAR VS. THE “OUTHOUSE ON WHEELS”

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MILES DAVIS |“IT’S NOT ABOUT STANDING STILL AND BECOMING SAFE…”

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The epic tales of Miles Davis and his need for speed have been on heavy rotation again lately, as they are just too damn good to die. I mean, who splits their Lambo Miura on the West Side Highway, and screams at a good samaritan responder for dumping two bags of blow for him before the cops show up? Both ankles were crushed and all Miles wants to do is jump out to see how busted-up his ride is. Cocaine is a helluva drug. The love of cars can be a vice all its own, and Miles had it bad from early on.

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Miles Davis, Red Ferrari, New York City, 1969 – Image by © Baron Wolman

Miles Davis And His Mercedes 190SL:

“…In 1955 Miles Davis dragged his quintet into the Prestige Records studio and recorded five albums in a row for the purpose of satisfying his obligations to the label. Although Davis himself had turned away from the worst of his heroin addiction, his crew was all hooked on something — from John Coltrane, who had conspicuous tracks up both his arms, to ‘Philly’ Joe Jones, who showed up to the session with just one drum and a hi-hat because he’d pawned the rest to get high — and nobody could have predicted that the group would settle down and turn out some of the greatest music in recorded history.

Miles hated Prestige. They famously paid $300 a record and didn’t seem to be familiar with the concept of residuals. The moment he had a chance to jump the fence to Columbia, he did so, and celebrated by buying a Mercedes 190SL with pretty much all the money he had at the time.

A new 190SL cost about four grand — easily four times what Davis had just cleared on the Prestige session — and it was not exactly a rapid automobile. Most of them wheezed perhaps 85 horsepower back to the swing-axled rear wheels to push the 2600lb mass. The real hot ride was the 300SL, famous today as the ‘Gullwing’ but far more popular as a convertible back in the day, but Miles would have had a hard time buying one and a harder time keeping it maintained.

Miles eventually fell in with the fast crowd, which included the Baroness Pannonica ‘Nica’ de Koenigswarter-Rothschild. She rolled in a Bentley, and she was well known among the community. PIanist Hampton Hawes recalls:

Thelonius Monk and his wife and Nica and I driving down Seventh Avenue in the Bentley at three or four in the morning… and Miles pulling alongside in the Mercedes, calling through the window in his little hoarse voice… ‘Want to race?’ Nica nodding, then turning to tell us in her prim British tones, ‘This time I believe I’m going to beat the Mother F#cker.’”

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Miles Davis, Red Ferrari, New York City, 1969 – Image by © Baron Wolman

“That photo of Miles Davis and his red Ferrari (275 GTB) was taken on New York’s West Side Highway in 1969. We had just shot some portraits in his apartment near Central Park. He said he wanted to go to Gleason’s Gym to work out. He was am amateur boxer, as you probably know. Anyhow, we’re driving along and I said, ‘Miles, pull over. Let’s do some shots of you and this totally cool car.’ He said ‘yes’, we did, and then proceeded to the gym where he threatened to knock me out.” –Baron Wolman

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Miles Davis, Red Ferrari, New York City, 1969 – Image by © Baron Wolman

“Davis had an affinity for flashy cars and trouble seemed to follow him whenever he was in one. While it’s been rumored that he cruised around in his Lamborghini Miura with a .357 magnum under the seat and enjoyed outrunning the fuzz with people sitting shotgun (he once scared Jimi Hendrix half to death), Davis was arrested in 1970 on weapons charges when he was sitting in his red Ferrari and an officer noticed he had accented his ensemble of a turban, white sheepskin coat and snakeskin pants with a pair brass knuckles. One might have thought brass knuckles might not be enough protection, considering he had been shot in the hip while sitting in another Ferrari less than a year earlier in an alleged extortion plot. In 1972 he crashed his Lamborghini Miura and broke both of his ankles. He promptly ordered another.” Via

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Miles Davis, Lamborghini Muira – Image by © Joe Sackey

Director James Glickenhaus Tells Jalopnik: “How I Saved A Coked Up Miles Davis After He Crashed His Lamborghini.”

“Someone posted in Ferrari Chat that Miles Davis had fallen asleep at the wheel and stuffed his Lambo. I was there and responded.

There was a bit more to it than that. He didn’t fall asleep at the wheel. He tried to make a right angle turn at 60 mph from the left lane of the West side Highway to the 125 ST exit across three lanes of traffic. He didn’t make it. He hit the WPA Stone exit ramp and the Lime Green Miura came apart like Brazilian plywood in the rain. I pulled over and ran back to his car. He was wearing leather pants and the bones of both of his legs were sticking through the pants. He was bleeding badly.

He looked at me and said, ‘Is my car f#cked up?’ I told him the car was gone. He said, ‘I got to take a look.’ I told him both legs were broken and he wasn’t going anywhere. I ripped up a shirt I found on the floor and told him to hold the cloth over the bleeding with pressure as it was getting bad but not arterial. There were two large plastic bags filled with white powder on the floor and one had broken open. The interior was dusted. I grabbed the bags and ran to the sewer and chucked them. He screamed, ‘What The F#ck You Doing!!??’ I used rain water to wipe down the car as best as I could. The cops arrived. One of them asked me who I was. I told them just one of the guys he cut off. He looked at Miles and at me and told me to split.

Years later I was directing ‘Shakedown’ with Peter Weller. Weller liked Miles’s music and I told him that story. One night he went to hear Miles. He went back stage where Miles recognized him. ‘Hey Robo’ Peter told him the story and asked if it was true. Miles got real quiet and said, ‘I always wondered who that White Mother F#cker was. You thank him for me, and tell him to come by anytime.’

Miles was in the hospital for a long time and didn’t play for almost a year…” –Director James Glickenhaus

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STEVE MCQUEEN REMEMBERED | FORMER LOVER, FELLOW RACER

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1960 Lime Rock Nationals– Denise McCluggage sits on the grid  while SCCA gets things straight.

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Back in 1955 or so, a young Denise McCluggage had a chance encounter with a then unknown Steve McQueen which led to a brief affair and a long-lasting friendship. They would be separated by their own career ambitions, and the many demands and erratic schedules that come with the territory. That said, McCluggage managed to stay in touch over the years. She herself would go on to become a legend in the world of auto racing– a renowned driver, writer, and photographer for over 50 yrs. McCluggage has won trophies around the world and raced for Porsche, Jaguar, Lotus, Mini Cooper, Alfa, Elva, OSCA, Volvo, among others. In 1961 she won the grand touring category at Sebring in a Ferrari 250 GT, and in 1964 McCluggage scored a class win in the Rallye de Monte Carlo for Ford. She shared her remembrances of McQueen and their relationship years after his passing, published in AutoWeek magazine back in 1981. She recalls a young, lean McQueen who was already obsessed with cars and racing, who swept her off her feet with his searing looks, charm and well… incongruity, as she puts it.

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1955, Steve McQueen as he looked back in the day, running around the Village w/ Denise McCluggage – Image by © Roy Schatt

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Shortly after our reunion he had sidled up next to me and whispered in my ear: “I’m falling in love all over again,” and given me the full brunt of the smile. My response had been an instantaneous hoot of laughter. –Denise McCluggage

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Steve McQueen: Car Buff Extraordinaire, for Auto Week magazine– 

I first saw Steve McQueen in front of Joe’s luncheonette on West 4th St. in Greenwich Village. He wasn’t *STEVE McQUEEN* then, just Steve McQueen, Village hang-about. He was leaning against his cream-colored MG-TC holding a new leather-covered racing helmet and telling someone how some friends of his in England had sent it to him. And, man, that was too much!

I was on my way into Joe’s for a toasted bran muffin. Joe’s is long-gone, but at one time tout le village passed through there. That was before the Village was quite so boutique-y or self-consciously freaky. It was just a place to live.

Being a TC owner myself (my second — this one red) and interested in racing, I stopped to listen and stayed to talk.

Steve it seems, was an actor. Well, I knew something about actors having been married to one rather recently, albeit briefly. And I had studied the craft myself at night classes at the Neighborhood Playhouse (the one continuity of my life has been taking classes– in anything). So Steve and I had a wide range of commonality.

And I was touched by his almost waif-like quality– his delight and genuine surprise that someone would go to all the trouble to send him a present, particularly one he really dug. There was this incongruity in Steve’s vulnerability, his cock-of-the-walk posturing, his jive talk. And if there’s anything I’m a sucker for, it’s incongruity.

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1955, Steve McQueen as he looked back in the day, running around the Village w/ Denise McCluggage – Image by © Roy Schatt

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So the conversations continued. Then and later. At Joe’s over toasted bran muffins and at my five-flight walk-up around the corner. Indeed, we became something of a Village “item,” which surprised me. But then MG-TCs — or any sportscars — were comparatively rare, and two of them parked nose-to-tail on Cornelian Street didn’t go unnoticed. One regular at Joe’s, (as pleased as a successful matchmaker) said, “I’ve been watching those two cars around here for months and I knew it was inevitable that you’d finally get together.”

But it wasn’t like that at all! Well, it was a little like that, but not such a big deal.

I’ve been trying to remember what exactly was the Big Deal in my life at that time. The year must have been 1955 or 1956– that means it was after I had become sports writer for the New York Herald Tribune and before I got my Jaguar and raced my first SCCA National at Montgomery, NY.

Steve was at a nowhere place in his career– all possibilities and promise. But every actor I knew, including my ex-husband, had possibilities and promise. And little else.

But possibilities turned into actualities for Steve shortly thereafter, and he was off for the Coast, eventually to become Josh Randall on TV. I left the Tribune, kept racing, published Competition Press. Stuff like that.

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A brilliant photo of racing legends Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss, Denise McCluggage, Pedro Rodriguez, Innes Ireland, and  Ronnie Bucknum. via

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The next time I saw Steve McQueen must have been at Sebring in 1962. He was driving an MGA for BMC (British motor corporation). I was driving an OSCA (Officine Specializzate Costruzioni Automobili) with Allen Eager, a jazz musician with whom I had won the GT category with the year before. Allen had known Steve in the Village even before I had, and long before I knew Allen.

“Hey, man,” Steve said to Allen in a conspirator’s whisper. “I bet we’re the only two guys in this race who ever…” And he made toke-taking gestures with his thumb and forefinger. Allen’s answer was to start a hand for his pocket. “It just so happens…”

“Hey, man, what are you doing!?” Steve glanced around in a minor panic, his hands pushing disclaimers. I thought that was unfair to Allen. Allen had thought that Steve had gone Hollywood hypocrite. To me it meant Steve had Made It and wanted to Keep It. (This was 1962, remember.)

He had made it. People in restaurant booths pointed at him and called him “Josh” and grinned those give-me-a-prize-for-recognizing-you grins. Steve rather stiffly reminded them: “My name is Steve McQueen. The role I play is Josh.” That broke up Allen, who had had some share of fame for his tenor sax. Gradually Steve loosened up and laughed too, and and we talked Old Times talk. As we talked the quick McQueen smile became less mannered, less shtick-y and more like the Village days.

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Denise McCluggage (with a camera strapped around her neck) at Le Mans in 1958, published her first article for Autoweek in the magazine’s first issue back in 1958. via

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Another incident had loosened him up a bit too. Shortly after our reunion he had sidled up next to me and whispered in my ear: “I’m falling in love all over again,” and given me the full brunt of the smile. My response had been an instantaneous hoot of laughter. Steve looked hurt at first– that old vulnerability– and then th too laughed. It was a good line, and he had delivered it well, and I had loved it, but we both knew it was a stranger to any truth– either at the moment or long before.

And Steve’s truth was what I liked best about him. He had it in his acting. His full use of himself in the character of the moment. I liked his work.

I saw Steve several years later in California. I had a script idea about racing and he liked it a lot, but I wanted a friend of mine to direct it and Steve said (this was before The Great Escape) that he wasn’t big enough yet to risk an unknown director.

He was in a good place then. Enough success for a sense of satisfaction and a strong belief that plenty more was to come. Swell, it was. He led me in his British Racing Green Jaguar D-Type up the winding roads into the hills to see his house and meet his family. Chad was just about two yrs old I think. And Steve proudly showed me  job he had just finished– putting cork on the walls of a den.

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Denise McCluggage with Stirling Moss at Sebring, 1961. McLuggage was driving a Ferrari 250 GT SWB with Allen Eager, who was better known for his tenor sax. via

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Some years later when in London I picked up a newspaper and there was Steve McQueen along with an interview. He was on his way to France to start filming Le Mans. I called the reporter who had done the interview to find out what hotel Steve was in, and I phoned. I had no ide how thick the barrier would be to reaching him. I wouldn’t have tried very hard, but it was only one man deep. I told him I was an old friend of Steve’s and told him who I was. After a while a voice came back: “Denise McLuggage. Now that’s a name from the past.” 

We talked a long time– about his racing successes, his motorcycles, what he had done in Bullitt, what he wanted to do in Le Mans, and how he might revive my long-put-aside racing film ideas.

That was the last time I talked to Steve directly. He used to see Phil and Alma Hill in Los Angeles, and we sent “hellos” back and forth through them and said how we must get together again sometimes when I’m in L.A.

I knew what was happening, as much as you can know what is happening through the simultaneous successes and neglect of the press.

I thought that Steve was going to beat his illness. I really did. Hope gives a lot of color to how I think about such things.

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Steve McQueen, Monaco, 1969

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Steve’s name came up in a group conversation shortly after he had gone to Mexico and a young reporter among us said: “Boy, that’s the way to make a lot of money right now. If you can get to Steve McQueen you can make a fortune. An exclusive interview.”

I said nothing, but my mouth opened slightly as I tried to think of a word that described my feelings. “Appalled” probably came closest. And I thought too that I probably wasn’t much of a journalist.

Appropriately, it was a car radio that delivered the news to me Steve McQueen was dead. He was 50 years old, the announcer said. Fifty. That had no meaning. It was far too young. It was far too old.

I saw then that 1950s day in New York, and a young man with short-cropped hair wearing chino pants and a stark white T-shirt lounging against a cream-colored MG-TC with a machine-turned dashboard. He squints into the stark white sun and smiles a quick, not-yet-famous smile suddenly there, just as suddenly gone. He turns a new white helmet over and over in his hands.

I think too of those E.E. Cummings lines:

“And what I want to know is– How do you like your blue-eyed boy, Mr. Death?”

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RELTED TSY POSTS:

STEVE MCQUEEN, RICHARD AVEDON & RUTH ANSEL | HARPER’S BAZAAR, 1965

STEVE McQUEEN DOIN’ IT IN THE DIRT | TRIUMPH DESERT BIKE BY BUD EKINS

STEVE McQUEEN’s 1971 HUSKY 400 CROSS UP FOR AUCTION | BUY IT NOW!

STEVE McQUEEN’s 1971 HUSKY 400 CROSS UP FOR AUCTION | BUY IT NOW!

STEVE McQUEEN REVIEWS THE HOTTEST NEW GT’s | 1966 SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

STEVE McQUEEN ’66 POPULAR SCIENCE | WHAT I LIKE IN A BIKE –AND WHY

STEVE McQUEEN | LE MANS & BEYOND GRATUITOUS 1970s RACING GOODNESS

STEVE McQUEEN | HOLLYWOOD’S ANTI-HERO & TRUE SON OF LIBERTY

REQUIRED VIEWING “BULLITT” | THE GRANDDADDY OF CAR CHASE SCENES

THE TSY FRIDAY FADE | STEVE MCQUEEN’S DUNE BUGGY DAYS

HUSQVARNA | THE SCREAMIN’ SWEDE THAT STARTED A RACING REVOLUTION

1970 12 HOURS OF SEBRING RACE | STEVE McQUEEN’S BRUSH WITH VICTORY

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STEVE McQUEEN AKA HARVEY MUSHMAN RIDES AGAIN | VINTAGE SI

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A great article from 1971 unearthed from the Sports Illustrated archives– Steve McQueen discussing desert bike riding with Bud Ekins & Malcolm Smith, Racing in the 12 Hours of Sebring with Pete Revson, The Great Escape, his son Chad, and much more.

McQueen even recalls exactly when he was bitten by the off-road bug– “Well, I was riding along Sepulveda with Dennis Hopper when we saw these guys bopping and bumping through the weeds near there, off the road. It was Keenan Wynn and another guy on these strange machines, dirt bikes they called them. We asked Keenan if he could climb that cliff. ‘Watch this,’ he says. Varoom! Right up to the top. Dennis and I were standing there with our eyes out to here. The very next day I went out and bought me a 500-cc Triumph dirt bike.”

Read on friends, read on.

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Steve McQueen riding his Husqvarna 400 motorcycle. Below is an article from SI magazine, 1971.

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HARVEY ON THE LAM

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By Robert F. Jones

By any name, Steve McQueen gets all revved up over dirt bikes.

Slamming one across the California Desert is now his Great Escape.

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The opening scene: California’s Mojave Desert at high noon. Dead silence. Through the shimmering heat waves, Mount San Jacinto seems to writhe on the horizon like a dying brontosaurus. The spines of the cactus at foreground right are in sharp focus, the gleaming spearpoints of a vegetable army. In the shadow of a boulder, sudden movement. A Gila monster raises its beadwork head and flicks its tongue, alert to the distant sound that is just beginning to insinuate itself into the desert’s quiet. A sudden, ululating whine, the invading noise rapidly gains strength as four distorted dots on the horizon weave closer. The dots take on color and shape s they approach: a quartet of red and chrome motorcycles, stunting and racketing through the puckerbushes, their riders vaulting the ridges and slaloming through the cactus at 70 mph. Their ominous, mechanical verve sends the Gila monster– descendant of the dinosaurs– scuttling for shelter. The camers zooms in on the lead rider’s face, sun-blackened and jut-jawed under his helmet. Up music and credits: hold onto your popcorn, folks–

Harvey Mushman rides again!

That scenario, or one like it, takes place nearly every weekend in the desert surrounding Palm Springs. Harvey Mushman is the ocassional pseudonym of Steve McQueen, movie actor and motor sportsman, when he goes a-racing. His companions on those fast, racking transits of the wasteland often include the best of the desert-riding breed: Bud Ekins or Roger Riddell, Mert Lawwill or Malcolm Smith. Now and then a smaller figure on a smaller bike trails behind, slower but only a touch less skillful in his handling of the desert’s harsh nuance– Chad McQueen, the actor’s 10-year-old son.

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June 13th, 1971 – Steve McQueen riding his Husqvarna 400 motorcycle in the Mojave Desert — Photo by Heinz Kluetmeier/Sports Illustrated/Getty Images

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To the serious student (or critic) of motor sports, a movie actor might appear to be an odd choice to illustrate the game of desert riding. Actors. after all, are notorious in their appetite for publicity, and even those who appear in racing fils usually have stuntmen do most of their driving. But Steve McQueen’s racing credentials are quite in order. Last year he proved competence as a sports car endurance racer by placing second in the 12 Hours of Sebring. Aided by the considerable talents of Pete Revson as his co-driver, McQueen drove his half of the race impressively, mixing it up nicely in the corners and clocking lap times within seven seconds of Revson. What’s more, McQueen was driving with his clutch foot in a cast– he had broken his left leg just one week earlier in  bike race at Elsinore, Calif. The cast itself cracked during the first 20 minutes of the race “It hurt,” Steve recalls, “and that took a lot of strength away, but mainly it complicated the problems of downshifting through the corners.” Add to that the fact that the McQueen-Revson car was an obsolete Porsche 908, much slower in the straightaways than the top-line Porsche 917s and Ferrari 512s. and McQueen’s finish was even more remarkable. Mario Andretti, who won the race in a five-liter Ferrari, had to shift cars to do so. (His own machine broke down shortly before the end and he commanded another team car that was lying third at the time. At that, Mario only won by 23.8 seconds.) “The motor sports Establishment was scared foofless that I was going to win,” McQueen says now with a grin. “I’m told that Chris Economaki was tearing his hair out and moaning, ‘My Gog, not a movie actor, not a movie actor!’”

But why not? An actor with a rather limited repertoire, McQueen has done a lot to popularize the motor sports he regards as his avocation. In his film Le Mans the romantic cliches of most racing movies are largely avoided, and the kinetic truths of high-speed sports car competition come across with a commanding fidelity. The driving sequences, particularly the crashes of a Ferrari and McQueen’s Porsche 917 (actually a Lola with a Porsche body on the frame), are clearly the best and most realistic ever shot. When they viewed a rough cut of the film at Daytona earlier this year, drivers Jackie Oliver and Vic Elford could find no fault with the footage. “Seeing those shunts in slow motion makes you want to hit the brakes,” allowed Oliver—quite a recommendation from a driver who rarely hits his own.        

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The 65ft jump that Steve McQueen’s stuntman (and riding buddy) Bud Ekins performed on a 1962 Triumph TR6 650cc motorcycle in ‘The Great Escape’ almost defied the laws of gravity. It was a heavy bike– a special ramp was built for Ekins to accomplish the jump over the barbed-wire fence. via

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McQueen’s climactic motorcycle scene in The Great Escape, a 1962 film about Allied POWs in a World War II stalag, was in reality a paean to dirt racing. His slides, jumps, wheelies and even the ultimate “endo” (end-over-end spill) showed a vast audience just what the weekend bike freak sees—and does—at a motocross event. It was a revelation to the uninitiated.

“Most bike flicks in the past concentrated on the outlaw crap,” McQueen says, with some heat. “Hell’s Angels and all of that stuff, which is about as far away from the real world of motorcycle racing as I am from Lionel Barrymore. Brando’s movie The Wild One in the early 1950s set motorcycle racing back about 200 years.”

The real grind of the American Motorcycle Association’s championship circuit is well expressed in Bruce Brown’s superlative bike flick On Any Sunday, which McQueen financed to the tune of $313,000, and the film goes a long way toward rectifying that earlier setback. It shows McQueen’s sometime riding buddy Mert Lawwill trucking his Harley-Davidson from track to track—San Francisco to Columbus to Daytona and back to the Coast, to Sacramento—in defense of his No. 1 plate (which he loses to Gene Romero ultimately). Mainly, though, the Brown-McQueen effort conveys the agility and exuberance of bike riding, particularly off the road, so emphatically that the already swollen market of motorcycle buyers will probably explode as a result.

Insurance hangups have forced McQueen out of sports car racing, but no one can keep him off the motorcycles. “I can’t really say I’m sorry that I don’t race sports cars anymore,” he mused recently at his Palm Springs home. Two tidy Porsche 911s were parked in the driveway, along with six motorcycles. He studied them for a moment. “There’s something awfully final about automobile racing. I learned that when we were shooting Le Mans, if I hadn’t learned it earlier driving. If you foul up in a car often enough, it’s Adios City. Bikes can hurt you sure enough, kill you too, but there’s not as high a fatality rate in bike racing as in cars. I guess it’s the slower speeds and the absence of fire. If you lose it on a bike, you’re clear of the machine when and if it burns. Minus some hide, of course, and dinged up pretty good around the arms and legs and head and shoulders. But basically you’re intact. If you decelerate a car from 200 miles an hour to zero in like 10 yards, which is what happens if you hit a tree on a road course or the wall at Indy, you come out kind of compressed. And if you get knocked out in even a minor shunt and the car starts to burn…well, like I said, it’s kind of final.”

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McQueen himself is kind of final about his role as a motor sportsman. “Look, I’m an actor, not a racer. I love bikes for the fun they give me, not the money they might have given me. You can’t earn more than $80,000 a year racing bikes, and you work your tail off doing even that, races every weekend for seven months of the year and from coast to coast. I think that if I’d started young enough in motorcycle racing, I could have been ranked,” says the actor, now 41. “I’ve won my share of races, and I’ve lost them, too. I was in heavy competition with Scooter Patrick for the course lap record at Phoenix, and finally I did it—I set the record. But it’ll be broken. That’s how it goes and how it should go. Sport is not like art. There is no ‘best’ in sports, only ‘getting betters.’”

McQueen’s interest in motorcycles dates back to 1950, when he bought his first bike, “a mean old 1946 Indian Chief. I remember how proud I was of it—I right away went over to see this girl I was dating to show it to her. When she saw it, she said, ‘You don’t expect me to ride around with you on that?’ Well, I sure enough did. The girl went but the bike stayed.”

Those were hungry days for McQueen the entertainer. A tough kid growing up in wartime L.A., he had done time in the Chino, Calif. reformatory (“It was the competitive urge, I think, and I converted it into stealing cars”). The Marine Corps and a stretch in the Merchant Marine straightened him out and showed him much more of the world– Actors Studio, followed by many stage roles, large and small, confirmed him in the direction of drama.

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That’s a young Chad McQueen going for a ride with dad during the filming of the movie Le Mans in 1970. Chad even went for a ride with Steve in the #20 Porsche 917 that his dad drove in the film. Chad was even allowed to sit in Steve’s lap and hold onto the steering wheel for a short trip down the track. –Nigel Smuckatelli

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But fast cars and motorcycles remained an alternate mode of expression. During the late 1950s he took off on a bike trip through Cuba. “We were quite a group,” he recalls. “An actor, a poet and a guy who was just plain nuts, or maybe we all were. Hurricane Audrey was sloshing around on the East Coast while we zipped down to Florida. Then we ran from Havana to Santiago, about 967 or so kilometers, as I recall. Batista and Castro were shooting it out down there in the Sierra Maestra, and there were uniforms everywhere. I was still a little wild in those days, particularly when I was on the juice. So what happens? I get thrown in the calabozo. I sent a telegram to Neile Adams, my girl, to send money so’s I could get out. Well, she later married me, but that time she said no. It wasn’t so bad. The guard was a friendly dude, and he’d let me out of the cell so we could have lunch together—cheese and onions and wine—and that hot sun with the smell of the manzanita and the sewers. I suppose that’s the great romantic lure of the motorcycle– it’s a key to adventure.”

Thus far McQueen’s machines had all been “street iron,” outsized, over-chromed jobs that were a terror on the highways but stick-in-the-muds off the road. He learned about dirt riding quite dramatically. “You know that cliff that leads down from Mulholland to Sepulveda?” he asks. “Well, I was riding along Sepulveda with Dennis Hopper when we saw these guys bopping and bumping through the weeds near there, off the road. It was Keenan Wynn and another guy on these strange machines, dirt bikes they called them. We asked Keenan if he could climb that cliff. ‘Watch this,’ he says. Varoom! Right up to the top. Dennis and I were standing there with our eyes out to here. The very next day I went out and bought me a 500-cc Triumph dirt bike.”

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June 13th, 1971 – Steve McQueen riding his Husqvarna 400 motorcycle in the Mojave Desert — Photo by Heinz Kluetmeier/Sports Illustrated/Getty Images

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Competition quickly followed—club races, hare-and-hound chases across the Southern California wastelands, point-to-points and snow racing in the High Sierra. “It’s rugged riding,” McQueen allows. “I remember one snow race up in the Sierra where I lost it just as I was coming up on this ragged old pine tree. One of the broken-off branches slammed right into my mouth. I was standing there spitting out bark and blood when a course official came up. ‘Are my teeth still in there?’ I asked him. I didn’t want to waste any time taking off my gloves, so he felt around and said that they were loose but still there. I was just dumb enough to jump back on the bike and finish the race. Wow!” He shakes his head, grinning.

McQueen has also ridden in the real enduros, races like Las Vegas’ Mint 400 and the Baja 1,000 from Ensenada to La Paz. In last year’s Elsinore Grand Prix, a race through that small mountain-slope town and its surrounding gulches northeast of San Diego, McQueen was one of 1,500 entrants. As Harvey Mushman, he started well back in the pack but managed finally to snake, bump and vault his way to 10th place overall, while his friend Malcolm Smith was lapping the field for an easy victory. “In my book Malcolm’s the best all-round racer in the world right now,” says Steve. “He’s a gold medal winner in the Internationals, but he still runs all of it— hare-and-hound, trials, long distance. He’s a fine mechanic, and he gets the most out of a bike. He’s got a bad right leg, though he’s not going to tell you about it. I want him to put a brace on it. If he breaks it again, it’s going to be Adios City.”

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Steve McQueen, Mert Lawwill, and Malcolm Smith in Bruce Brown’s–  ’On Any Sunday’

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Intense as his own competitive instincts are, McQueen has found them changing under the influence of the desert– he respects that sternest of geographical gurus, though he is well aware of its quirky vulnerability. Cleat marks left by George Patton’s tanks, training in the desert nearly 30 years ago, are still visible, but rain may follow the new tracks of a dune buggy or a dirt bike and turn imprints into washes. Too many desert freaks, whether cyclists or truck drivers, leave their junk lying around where they dropped it, beer cans, aluminum foil, bottles, the whole undegradable lot, where even a simple tire track ruins the esthetics of this austere, previously wild desert world. “You end up pushing farther and farther into the boonies,” McQueen observes, “trying to escape from other people and their noise and their crap, but then they see your tracks and they follow you. It’s the problem that confronts all of us in a jam-packed world. Who are we running away from? Answer: us. It’s crazy, but what’s the solution?” Dirt riders are discouraged from much of the desert area of California by new laws enacted as a result of the current wave of ecological awareness, but a number of motorcycle parks have been established, mainly around Los Angeles, to give bike people an outlet. This is only a stopgap solution, but McQueen approves of it, for the moment.

As for the desert, “I first began to understand it as a living thing back in my wilder days,” he says. “I was interested in the Indians, and they had given me some peyote. This was way back before the drug culture got started, and people were still serious about the philosophical aspect of the hallucinogens rather than just kicks. Anyway, the peyote really hit me. I took off into the desert on my bike, bound and determined to whip it. I ran flat out, straight into the desert—I was all ego, challenging every bump and every gulch. I don’t know how many endos I turned, plenty of them. The cactus ripped me up, the rocks chewed on my hide, I had sand in my nose and kangaroo rats in my ears. I rode until the bike ran out of gas, and after that I just lay there. It was dead quiet, night falling and my bike making these little crackling noises as the metal cooled and settled. I knew then that not only could I never whip the desert, but that the whole thought of trying to whip it was the most ridiculous idea in the world.”

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Steve McQueen, Mert Lawwill, and Malcolm Smith in Bruce Brown’s–  ’On Any Sunday’

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On this day there was no thought of whipping anything except city-style boredom. McQueen had driven up to Palm Springs from his L.A. offices (he runs a plastics company in addition to his celluloid affairs) to spend a weekend with Chad and a couple of riding pals before embarking on his next film. The movie, Junior Bonner, about a down-and-out rodeo rider— splendid McQueen casting— is directed by Sam Peckinpah, a man with a good eye for such currently unpopular human qualities as toughness, loyalty and contempt for death. McQueen’s desert hideaway, standing on a sun-scorched ridge overlooking the wealth and desiccation of Palm Springs, is some decorator’s dream come surrealistically true. There are kongoni skulls and zebra skin pillows, the mounted head of a Boone and Crockett-class bighorn sheep, a gold-plated Winchester .30-30 “presentation model” hanging on one wall (“much better than that silly little sawed-off Winchester I used in Wanted—Dead or Alive” Steve muses, spin cocking the rifle absently). The refrigerator is full of Cold Duck, Almaden burgundy, Coors beer and Gatorade—this is a dry climate. In the house, at least, it is also a somewhat sad one. McQueen is separated from his wife. “We’ve got our problems,” he admits freely, “and we’re trying to work them out.”

Looking down into the desert from the poolside, McQueen points to the north. “I used to have a little shack out there in the flats—cost me only $102 a month, and I was perfectly happy with it. It was on a wash, and you could just jump on the bike and disappear into the giggle weeds. Oh, well.” Chad is riding around the swimming pool on a bicycle, doing 50-yard wheelies and other stunts, clearly nudging his father to hurry up and get with it for the afternoon motorcycle ride. In everything but his cycle skills Chad is a striking contrast to his father– dark and open rather than blond and curt. He wears braces over his uninhibited smile and has none of that exasperating cocksurety so common to actors’ children.

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“Actor Steve McQueen and his Triumph desert bike in their native habitat.”  –Cycle World Magazine, June 1964  via

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“I’ve tried to raise him as a real kid,” Steve explains. “He likes to ride in the desert and he bought his own bike, a Yamaha 60-cc Mini Enduro, out of his own pocket money. But his schoolwork has to be good if he’s going to ride. I grounded him for eight weeks earlier this year when his grades got sloppy. He’s shaped up nice since then. Christ, riding has got to be good for a kid. I was stealing cars at his age.”

It is egg-frying hot around the pool. Even the water temperature is an incredible 92 degrees thanks to the searing sun, and no one but Chad wants to ride until the shadow of Mount San Jacinto gets a bit taller. McQueen’s other guests are content to lie lizard-like in the sun until then. Roger Riddell is a lean, longhaired dirt rider from L.A. who has taken time off from the two-wheel wars to beat the promotional drums for Bruce Brown’s motorcycle movie. Morris Langbord is dark and hawk-beaked, an “environmental lighting specialist” when he is not racing through the desert. One can only suppose that “environmental lighting” is a euphemism for comedy– Langbord certainly brightens his surroundings with a ready, quippy wit. Just now, in response to a jocular put-down by Riddell, he has dumped a glass of ice cubes on Roger’s chest with an admonishment to “cool it.” Dirt-rider tough, Riddell scarcely flinches. The thirsty sun evaporates the ice in two minutes flat.

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Steve McQueen, Bud Ekins and the legendary Chevy-powered Hurst Baja Boot, only 2 were ever made.

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The talk touches, desultorily, upon the topics important to motorcycle men: famous spills and fractures; the relative worth of various shock absorbers, gearboxes and tread-shaping techniques. “Hey, Morris,” says McQueen. “The next time you go by Bud Ekins’ shop I want you to do something for me. You know that 1924 Indian Chief I restored—the one with the side hack? Well, Bud clipped the wheels off of it from me—the original wheels. Every time I come over, he hides them and I can’t steal them back. Maybe if you….”

“No way,” says Morris. “Do your own salvage jobs. My picture’s up in too many post offices already.” Yakety-yak, but their eyes keep watching the sun as it slopes toward the mountain. Finally the angle is just about right. “O.K.,” says McQueen, hitching up his Levi’s like an old gunfighter. “Time for a ride. Let’s get it on.”

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Bud Ekins owned and operated a successful Triumph dealership in Sherman Oaks, CA. He had become something of a hero to Hollywood’s young movie actors, who would often hang out at his shop. One of those actors was Steve McQueen. When McQueen bought an off-road motorcycle, Ekins, then the absolute master of Southern California off-road motorcycle racing, coached him in bike control on the desert washes and fir trails of the area. McQueen, in turn, got Ekins stuntman jobs in the film industry. They quickly became very close friends and their attention turned to racing and collecting cars and bikes. via

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The closing scene: four bikes in the desert. The interplay of the riders as they weave and leap their machines, like stampeding impala. It is a series of interlocking races, or fragments of races, with each rider picking up, without an exchange of words, on the challenge of the next patch of ground. Roger spots a tricky wash with an approach route made even trickier by a staggered stand of manzanita, and as he swerves his bike toward it, Steve and Morris take up the chase. There is only one route over the lip of the wash, and each man tries to reach it first, with Chad in vain but straining pursuit. Collision seems imminent, but Roger gets there just a wheel on top, and the others slip grudgingly into line for the jump. On the next extemporaneous heat McQueen wins the sprint into a sandy corner, and Roger, having come in too deep and now unable to pass, lays his bike on its side and slides clear of the corner in a swirl of spokes and dirt. As he gets to his feet, the alert concern of his companions gives way abruptly to raucous, chivying laughter. “Hey, man, you blew it, man, you road-hog, that’ll learn ya!” Roger flips them the bird, restarts the bike and the chase is on once more. At one point Chad loses a plug over his gearbox and is sprayed with oil. “Yuccchh!” he screams, shuddering as he tries to wipe the oil off. “I can’t stand it!” It is a strange moment, embarrassing to the men. Chad is, after all, still a little boy, with a kid’s sudden incomprehensible hang-ups. Steve reassures him that oil doesn’t hurt and tells him that if he’s going to own a bike, he’s got to make sure that everything on it is buttoned up tight before he rides it. They stuff a chunk of cloth into the hole and roar off once again.

The desert is covered with animal signs. Jackrabbits and ground squirrels have been this way, and there are the tracks of a long-loping coyote. As the day cools, the hawks come out, broad-winged buteos with undersides as pale as the desert sky, swinging in search of dinner. Coveys of Gambel’s quail call from the cool spots. “There used to be antelope around here,” says Riddell during one of the breaks, “but the railroad finished them in one year. They were afraid to cross the tracks, so the herd split up and finally died out. It sounds ominously like a metaphor—but meaning what?” McQueen looks serious during the exchange, perhaps recalling that long-ago run he had made in hopes of conquering the desert, but then he flashes the happy, movie-star grin. “What’ll we do for dinner tonight? How’s about Mexican food? Margaritas, frijoles refritos, enchiladas, peppers…” “Yeah,” says Morris, “and after that a 50-gallon drum of Maalox.”

The long shot that follows puts it all together: four bikes in silhouette, running toward the scattered golden lights of Palm Springs. No music, just the fading, up-and-down cacophony of the engines. Harvey Mushman rides again. And again and again.

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RELATED TSY POSTS:

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STEVE McQUEEN DOIN’ IT IN THE DIRT | TRIUMPH DESERT BIKE BY BUD EKINS

STEVE McQUEEN’s 1971 HUSKY 400 CROSS UP FOR AUCTION | BUY IT NOW!

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STEVE McQUEEN REVIEWS THE HOTTEST NEW GT’s | 1966 SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

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The Sports Illustrated Archives– Harvey On The Lam

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VINTAGE MENSWEAR | A COLLECTION FROM THE VINTAGE SHOWROOM’S BOOK

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I was pretty stoked when Doug Gunn sent me a copy of — Vintage Menswear — A Collection from the Vintage Showroom – as I’ve long been an admirer. Being in the menswear trade myself, London has always been a favorite stop for inspiration, and there’s no better place to be inspired than The Vintage Showroom. The collection is insane and beautifully presented, covering everything from academia, sporting, hunting, motoring, military wear, workwear, denim– it’s no surprise that they are one of the most complete and prestigious vintage dealers in the world. Of special interest to me are all things related to motoring as you see below including vintage leathers, Barbour, Belstaff, etc., and all the great snippets of the history, construction, and function behind the pieces.

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CHAMPION CAR CLUB JACKET, 1950s– “This is a simple, zip-up cotton jacket with fish-eye buttons at the cuffs and a short collar. What it signifies, however, is so much more. The hand-embroidered, chain-stitched imagery on its back places it squarely in the 1950s, at the height of the hot-rodding craze in the US. Hot-rodding was said to have been driven by young men returning from service abroad after World War II who had technical knowledge, time on their hands, and the habit of spending long days in male, if not macho, company. Rebuilding and boosting cars for feats of both spectacle and speed — often 1930s Ford Model Ts, As and Bs, stripped of extraneous parts, engines tuned or replaced, tires beefed up for better traction, and a show-stopping paint job as the final touch — became an issue of social status among hot-rodding’s participants. This status was expressed through clothing too. There were the ‘hot-rodders’ of the 1930s, when car modification for racing across dry lakes in California was more an innovative sport than a subculture, complete with the Southern California Timing Association of 1937 providing ‘official’ sanction. But by the 1950s, hot-rodding was a style too.  decade later it was, as many niche tastes are, commercialized and mainstream, with car design showing hot-rod traits.”  –Vintage Menswear, Douglas Gunn, Roy Luckett& Josh Sims

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BOLENIUM RACING COVERALLS, 1950s– “These cotton coveralls were made in Britain during the 1950s with factory work in mind. Their practicality and, when made in white, dash soon came to be adopted by motor-racing drivers of the period– among them Stirling Moss, Graham Hill, and Juan Manuel Fangio. Each of these helped to make the British racing tracks of the period, the likes of Brooklands and Silverstone, world-famous. The utility and style of coveralls had already been spotted by Britain’s wartime Prime Minister, Winston Churchill– his ‘siren suit’ was essentially a zip-front version of the coveralls, donned in a hurry over clothing or nightwear before entering an air-raid shelter. Although Churchill and members of his family had worn such suits since the 1930s (they called them ‘rompers’), the coveralls became a wartime sartorial signature for the PM. The dapper Churchill had several siren suits made in other fabrics, among them red velvet.”  –Vintage Menswear, Douglas Gunn, Roy Luckett& Josh Sims

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ALBERT GILL LTD DESPATCH RIDER’S COAT, 1943– “Despatch riders provided an invaluable, if not crucial form of communication during both world wars. With telegraph and radio lines often broken by enemy activity, or the messages relayed on them uncertain of inception, the despatch rider provided an almost assured means of delivery — the likelihood of  a single rider being physically arrested by the enemy was slight. He would be able to use his motorcycle to circumvent blocked roads and bomb damage, to move at speed and to deliver in person. He had to operate at all times and in all weathers– hence the need for considerable protection. This despatch rider’s coat, made by Albert Gill Ltd in 1944 and marked, in quartermaster fashion, (coat, rubber-proofed, motor cyclist’s) is made from bonded, rubberized cotton canvas fabric by Macintosh. Even after softening and with its perspiration eyelets under the armpits, it would have been an uncomfortably hot and heavy garment to wear. But it afforded almost complete water- and wind-proofing. The bottom of the coat even snapped together to cover the tops of the legs of the rider., with the front front rear edgepress-stud-fastened (using brass Newey studs typical of the 1930s and 1940s UK) onto the rear hem, creating a kind of military-grade romper suit. Straps on the interior secured the coat to the rider’s legs, preventing it from flapping about. A double-breasted front provided an additional layer of protection to the chest, with a storm flap designed to keep water away from the body. The most distinctive feature of the coat, however, remains the slanted chest ‘map’ pocket that carried the message– a design detail copied for latter cotton civilian biker jackets.”  –Vintage Menswear, Douglas Gunn, Roy Luckett& Josh Sims  

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BARBOUR INTERNATIONAL MOTORCYCLE JACKET, 1950s– “few specialist clothing designs can be said to have been adapted for use by the military and then to have found life with civilians again. Perhaps one of the most successful examples is Barbour’s International trials jacket. The Barbour company was founded by John Barbour in South Shields , north-east England in 1894. He built a drapery business specializing in boiler suits, painetrs’ jackets and oilskins for shipbuilders, sailors and fishermen of the local coastal towns, and later the farming community too. It was a hobby of John Barbour’s son Malcolm that saw the company build a motorcycling range during the 1930s– more or less exclusively kitting out the British International motor-racing team from 1936 onwards. One such design was adapted to make the Ursula suit for submariners during World War II, initially as a private order, and later as an official piece of wartime kit. Adapted slightly further, the jacket part of the suit found a third life with motorcyclists again from 1947. The jacket’s profile rose through the 1950s and 1960s thanks to its use by most of the riders at the UK’s Six Days Trial international motocross competition, as well as by keen cross-country biker and Hollywood actor Steve McQueen. The 1st Pattern civilian jacket, as with this example– still referred to as the ‘Barbour suit’ in its labeling and only later coming to be known as the International– used small-gauge, lightning zip of the Ursula and the moleskin-lined ‘eagle’ collar. Later models replaced the zipper with a larger lightning pull, the collar lining with corduroy, and the plain interior lining with what would become Barbour’s signature tartan.”  –Vintage Menswear, Douglas Gunn, Roy Luckett& Josh Sims  

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BELSTAFF TRIALMASTER MOTORCYCLE MOTORCYCLE JACKET, 1960s- “The Barbour International’s arch-rival in motorcycling circles has long been the Belstaff Trialmaster. Today the jacket has four patch pockets, but initially it shared the same ‘drunk’ left breast pocket, and was distinguishable only by being slightly longer in the body and by a few minor details. More distinctive perhaps was Belstaff’s readiness to use color– this jacket, although now broken down with time and use to a shade of maroon-black, was once a bold red. Like Barbour, Belstaff grew out of a business built around the development of early technical fabrics. Established in 1924 in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England by Eli Belovitch and his son Harry Grosberg, the company specialized in outdoorsy friction, wind, and  water-proof garments (although its logo, a Phoenix rising, did so from a fire rather than a muddy field). Later such garments resulted from experiments with rubber coatings. This led to Belstaff’s successful Black Prince clothing line, including the company’s first motorcycle jacket, and the waxing of cottons, the use of natural oils giving the fabric greater water-resistance while retaining its breathability. Like Barbour’s International jacket, the Trialmaster too won a stamp of approval from many professional motorcyclists, chiefly of the 1950s and 1960s. The champion trials rider Sammy Miller wore the jacket for many of his record 1,250 victories. adding to its later appeal for some was the fact that the revolutionary Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara wore this jacket for his legendary motorcycle ride across South America.”  –Vintage Menswear, Douglas Gunn, Roy Luckett& Josh Sims

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UNKNOWN BRAND, DOUBLE-BREASTED MOTORCYCLE JACKET, 1920s– “This English, custom-made leather jacket dates from the 1920s when hobby motorcycling was in fancy. It sets a benchmark for subsequent biker jackets, though this one buttons up, lacking the signature asymmetric zip of later models. The hobby of motorcycling soon became a craze and manufacturers rushed to cater for it, vying to create the definitive article and many basing their designs on hunting jackets of the period– a fact seen in the pocket positioning of this example. It stretches the idea to say that these makers liked to romantically compare the motorbike to the trusty steed, but early bikers did tend to wear jodphurs too– if only because they were easy to wear tall boots with. This jacket, with its fleeced cotton lining, flapped pockets, hand-sewn buttonholes and horn buttons may lack any of the double-layered leather or safety features of later jackets, but its cropped style (allowing a crouched riding position), waist belt adjuster and elegant proportions make it much classier.”   –Vintage Menswear, Douglas Gunn, Roy Luckett& Josh Sims 

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LEWIS LEATHERS PHANTOM RACING JACKET, 1970s– “The biker jacket had long been a fashion staple by the time this Lewis Leathers Phantom model was created in the 1970s. The famed Perfecto model had been developed by Schott for a Harley-Davidson dealer during the 1930s– it reached iconic status and sealed its rebellious image thanks to Marlon Brando’s misfit wearing one in the 1953 film ‘The Wild One’. Although specialist pieces had been designed for riding before, this would become the benchmark for biker jackets, especially in the US. In the UK, however, Lewis Leathers was devising a more European feel– more fitted, longer and more blouson in style. D. Lewis Ltd. had been in business since 1892 as a pioneering maker of clothing for early motorists and aviators– for this latter market it even introduced its own Aviakit brand. By the 1950s, it had entered the biker clothing market with styles that defined the ‘ton up’ boys of the era– also the British ‘Rockers’ so stylistically and culturally opposed to the scooter-riding parka-wearing Mods. Two decades on, the company was reinventing the biker jacket in the most obvious way– by producing it not in the standard black or brown, but in bold new hues. In 1972, one catalog proclaimed ‘the colorful world of Lewis Leathers’. This heralded a brash new look for motorcyclists, although it proved to be just an interlude in fashion terms before punk rock made black the biker jacket color of choice once more.”  –Vintage Menswear, Douglas Gunn, Roy Luckett& Josh Sims       

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The Vintage Showroom blog

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HURST RACING TIRES ~ SINCE 1961 | MADE BY HAND IN OREGON CITY, OR

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Here’s a cool video by Ray Gordon on the story of Hurst Racing Tires– owned and operated by Cody Adams & Steve Adams since 2005 in Oregon City, OR. They make each tire by hand, using the original equipment acquired by Ron Hurst himself when he started making racing tires back in 1961 to supply the local racers in San Diego, CA. You get a real appreciation that some things are just better when done by hand, using quality materials and time-honored craftsmanship.

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OLD SCHOOL HURST GIRLS GONE WILD | GENTLEMEN, START YOUR ENGINES

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THROTTLE MERCHANTS | SO CAL’S PRE- 1940s FORD HOTRODS & VINTAGE BIKES

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Throttle Merchants Magazine is the photobook project of Matt Porter & Aileen Aquino. Their passion is shooting SoCal’s amazingly rich Hot Rod culture, focusing primarily on pre-’40s Fords, and vintage motorcycles. Looking at the images of these incredibly crafted machines and their unique creators, one is impressed that this no hobby. This is what they live for. To that point, Matt and Aileen are big on keeping the pages of Throttle Merchants all about the stories being told through the photography, and have strayed away from ads & sponsor revenue. Check out their website here to see how you can help support their vision. The much anticipated Issue 4 will be available on 8/24, kicking-off that night with a release party at Old Crow Speed Shop in Burbank. Check it out.

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Bobby Green  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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A friend of ours recently called Throttle Merchants Magazine a “passion project”—and with that we would totally agree. We started photographing the hot rod culture back in 2008 and have self-published four magazines since then as a side-project. The term magazine can be somewhat confusing to people— none of our work contains articles, advertisements, or editorials. There are no staff writers, nor do we have a creative director. We simply take collections of our own images and let them tell a story. All photographs in each magazine are shot by us (Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino), and are then laid out by us before being sent to press. We’ve been nursing our latest work for a couple of years until now. To finally have the finished project—a tangible compilation to share with everyone—has set our minds at ease. Volume 4 includes Lucky Burton, Bobby Green, Billy Branch, Robert Lomas, Chris Casny, Jack Carroll, Jose Gonzalez, and more.  –Aileen Aquino

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Billy Branch  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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“Can’t Stay” Jose  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Jack Carroll’s Hot Rod  –  Photo by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Billy Branch  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Lucky Burton’s Hot Rod  –  Photo by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Nick Osborne’s Hot Rod  –  Photo by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Marion Bledsoe  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Nick Osborne’s Hot Rod  –  Photo by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Brian Law  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Robert Lomas  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Mike Kelley’s Hot Rod  –  Photo by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Lucky Burton  –  Photography by Matt Porter and Aileen Aquino © Throttle Merchants Magazine

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Throttle Merchants’ website

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FRANCE’S FAIREST EXPORT– FRANCOISE HARDY | IMMORTAL BELOVED STYLE & MUSIC MUSE

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Francoise Hardy on the ‘Grand Prix’ film set seen wearing co-star James Garner’s helmet, 1966.

Francoise Hardy was a wistful breath of fresh air during the sex, drugs & rock ‘n’ roll of the 1960s. Mysterious, sweetly naive, and utterly desirable. She was adored by Bob Dylan, Nick Drake, Mick Jagger, David Bowie, and more. The incredible enduring images of Hardy, particularly those by famed photographer Jean-Marie Perier (who shot her donned in Dior, Yves Saint Laurent, Andre Courréges, and Paco Rabanne), made her an instant and timeless style icon. With her faraway gaze and lazy smile, Francoise Hardy is like a melancholy dream that you simply don’t want to wake up from. Her unease with fame and adoration is at times clearly evident in her photos– serving only to make her even more alluring.

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Francoise Hardy perched atop a Honda motorcycle is an all-time internet #babesonbikes favorite.

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Francoise Hardy resting in a Formula One race car during the filming of Grand Prix, 1966.

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Francoise Hardy sittting in a Formula One race car during the filming of Grand Prix, 1966.

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Francoise Hardy, Antonio Sabato, and director John Frankenheimer on the set of 1966′s Grand Prix, which won three Academy Awards. The four stars— James Garner, Yves Montand, Brian Bedford and Antonio Sabato did their own driving on real GP tracks. World-famous “Grand Prix” drivers who appear in the picture include 1962 world champion Graham Hill, Jack Brabham, World Champion in 1959, 1960 & 1966; five-time World Champion Juan Manuel Fangio (1951, ’54, ’55, ’56 & ’57), and 1961 World Champion Phil Hill. via

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Francoise Hardy with Formula One racing legend (Sir) Jack Brabham, three-time World Champion, during the filming of Grand Prix, 1966. Brabham was the first driver in history to be knighted for his services to motorsport, and the only Formula One driver to have won a world title in a car of his own construction – the BT19 – which he drove to victory in 1966. The following year the Brabham team won its second successive world championship when New Zealander Denny Hulme drove the BT20 to victory. via

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Francoise Hardy snapping photos during the filming of Grand Prix, 1966.

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Francoise Hardy – Photo by © Jean-Marie Périer

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© Copyright 2013 CorbisCorporation

Francoise Hardy posing at her Paris home (in a 670/671 Eames lounge chair?), 1970— Image by © Leonard de Raemy/Sygma/Corbis

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Francoise Hardy – Photo by © Jean-Marie Périer

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Francoise Hardy playing guitar

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© Copyright 2013 CorbisCorporation

Francoise Hardy in Central Park, 1969. — Image by © JP Laffont/Sygma/Corbis

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Francoise Hardy in Montmartre – Photo by © Jean-Marie Périer

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© Copyright 2013 CorbisCorporation

Sylvie Vartan & Francoise Hardy on French TV. — Image by © James Andanson/Apis/Sygma/Corbis

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Francoise Hardy at Olympia Hall in Paris, 1965. — Image by © Pierre Fournier/Sygma/Corbis

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Francoise Hardy in Amsterdam, 1969. – Photograph by Joost Evers

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© Copyright 2013 CorbisCorporation

Singers/songwriters/spouses, Jacques Dutronc & Francoise Hardy, 1965. — Image by © Leonard de Raemy/Sygma/Corbis

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© Copyright 2013 CorbisCorporation

Georges Moustaki and Francoise Hardy, 1969 International Pop and Rock Festival of the Isle of Wight. — Image by © Jean-Louis Atlan/Sygma/Corbis

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FranÁoise Hardy et Georges Moustaki, Paris, 1970 par Jean-Marie PÈrier

Georges Moustaki and Francoise Hardy on a Honda motorcycle in Paris, 1970. – Photo by © Jean-Marie Périer

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JAMES HUNT | WHEN PLAYBOYS RULED THE WORLD AND THE RACETRACK WITH A RUSH

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© Copyright 2012 CorbisCorporation

James Hunt on the winner’s podium (L to R): Patrick Depailler (FRA) Tyrrell, second; race winner James Hunt (GBR) McLaren; John Watson (GBR) Penske, third. French Grand Prix, 1976. — Image © Phipps / Sutton Images / Corbis

I’m stoked to see Rush this weekend– the much anticipated film by Ron Howard on one of Formula One’s most talented and notorious drivers ever, James “The Shunt” Hunt. The seemingly insatiable ladies’ man was estimated to have had 5,000 trysts in his lifetime. History tells of a wicked weekend where buddy and fellow (motorcycle) racing legend Barry Sheene tallied 33 BA stewardesses lined-up at the door of their Tokyo Hilton suite. It’ll be interesting to see if Chris Hemsworth is able to capture his wit and charm, and if he can keep his muscles from overshadowing the memory of Hunt’s lean, lanky frame hard-earned by a physical exercise regiment consisting largely of driving, and shagging. The perfect primer for Rush is the documentary When Playboy’s ruled the World which accurately and colorfully takes you back to the glory days of Hunt & Sheene when driving was dangerous, and sex was safe. More epic photos of James Hunt in action after the video…

james hunt wife rushMay, 23rd 1977 — Monaco, what does the future hold? Not marriage, according to James Hunt. He says that he and girlfriend Jane Birbeck are blissfully happy as they are. Under British law Hunt is still married to Suzy Miller, despite the fact that she has now gone through a wedding ceremony with actor Richard Burton.

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james hunt 1974 brazilian grand prixJames Hunt at the 1974 Brazilian Grand Prix weekend. – Image © Sutton

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James Hunt rush girlfriend wife1982, James Hunt getting cozy with a model– that look in his eyes says it all.

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James Hunt at the 1976 Dutch Grand Prix. It would be his best year– six Grand Prix wins.

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1975, James Hunt in the Team Hesketh 308 Ford-powered Formula One race car. ”The Good Lord” Alexander Hesketh (As Hunt called him) was an eccentric young British aristocrat who inherited a fortune and spent it lavishly on personal entertainment. Though he knew nothing about motorsport he decided to amuse himself by forming his own racing team and hired ‘Superstar’ (his nickname for Hunt) as his driver. The Hesketh Racing team had limited success in Formula Three and Formula Two but gained notoriety for seeming to consume as much champagne as fuel and for having more beautiful women than mechanics. Since the Good Lord was having so much fun in racing’s lower ranks he thought it naturally followed that even more sport could be had at the highest level. When Hesketh Racing arrived on the scene in 1974 the Formula One fraternity thought the team was a joke. The ridicule became grudging respect when James Hunt’s Hesketh beat Niki Lauda’s Ferrari to win the 1975 Dutch Grand Prix. via

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james hunt naked modelJames Hunt and the epic “Sex, Breakfast of Champions” match he made famous.

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1974 BRITISH GP

His good looks, extrovert personality and unconventional behaviour made the ‘Golden Boy’ hugely popular with a wide public. He had a commanding presence and spoke impressively in a deep voice with a cultivated accent, saying exactly what he thought. He hated dressing up, always wore tattered blue jeans and often walked around in his bare feet, even on formal occasions. He drank heavily, smoked 40 cigarettes a day, occasionally took drugs, had a madcap social life and a succession of beautiful girlfriends. He married one of them, Suzy, a fashion model who eventually left him for the actor Richard Burton. Burton offered to pay Hunt’s divorce settlement to Suzy: $1 ­million. ­Burton couldn’t believe that Hunt was so casual about ­letting go of his ­beautiful wife. Hunt simply said: “Relax, ­Richard. You’ve done me a wonderful turn by taking on the most alarming expense account in the country.” via

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Watkins Glen, October 1977– Celebrations, James Hunt style (smoke, drink & Penthouse Pet), in victory lane following his triumph over local hero Mario Andretti in the United States Grand Prix. Image © Sutton via

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James Hunt living up to his reputation as an insatiable ladies’ man.

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“If you think my girlfriend can fight– you should see her box.” –James Hunt’s epic t-shirt.

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1981, James Hunt crashes.

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James Hunt in IROC (International Race of Champions) jacket. While he became a media darling for the tabloid press his behavior was less appreciated by Formula One journalists, who found him a frustrating mixture of boisterous charm and overbearing conceit. Twice he was voted the least liked driver and despairing members of the Formula One establishment accused him of bringing the sport into disrepute. Having achieved his championship goal his enthusiasm for racing began to wane. He admitted he never really enjoyed driving and finally, after two more seasons with McLaren, then a few races with Wolf, he retired mid-way through 1979, “for reasons of self-preservation.” via

RELATED TSY POSTS:

JAMES “HUNT THE SHUNT” | THE 1970′S HIGH-FLYIN’ LOTHARIO RUSH OF FORMULA 1

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN | BRITISH RACING LEGEND BARRY SHEENE

JACKIE STEWART | THE FLYING SCOT’S OLD SCHOOL FORMULA ONE STYLE

1970 12 HOURS OF SEBRING RACE | STEVE McQUEEN’S BRUSH WITH VICTORY

STEVE McQUEEN | LE MANS & BEYOND GRATUITOUS 1970s RACING GOODNESS

The 1957 Indianapolis 500 | A Sideways Step into the Unknown of Auto Racing History


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