Story and Photos by Alessandro Gerelli
This year’s Oldtimer’s Grand Prix, held last weekend August 10-11 at the Nurburgring, was short on Ferraris but long on Maseratis. Alessandro Gerelli brings you the cars in two parts.
The Online Magazine for Italian and French Classic Car Enthusiasts
By pete
Story and Photos by Alessandro Gerelli
This year’s Oldtimer’s Grand Prix, held last weekend August 10-11 at the Nurburgring, was short on Ferraris but long on Maseratis. Alessandro Gerelli brings you the cars in two parts.
By pete
VeloceToday Select Number Two:
Barn Find Alfa
Edited by Pete Vack
Price: $20.00
Pages: 32 glossy; color photos
Dimensions: 8.5″ x 5.5″
Description: Shipping and Handling are FREE.
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In the 1970s, the Editor retrieved an Alfa Romeo Sprint Veloce from a barn, sold it and forgot about it. Thirty-five years later he received an email from the cars’ current owner, wondering if he had any as-found photos or information about the car. We found the photos, beginning the intriguing story of an Alfa Veloce that was once raced, lost, found, raced again and restored by a succession of owners, all of whom contributed their words, photos, and experiences for this story. A Barn Story unlike any you’ll ever read! Click HERE for more details.
By pete
By pete
Attention PREMIUM SUBSCRIBERS!
Win Maserati A6G 2000 Zagato
by Walter Bäumer, a $155 USD value!
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here to subscribe and become eligible to win.
To enter, simply send an email to me at vack@cox.net with your name and address.
Drawing will be held on August 31st.
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Book is provided by Dalton Watson Fine Books.
By pete
By Pete Vack
Was it even remotely possible, that one of the rarest and most treasured Italian race cars ever built had been hidden from sight for over 40 years, and was only one hour from VeloceToday Headquarters? Since moving to Williamsburg, we’d helped rediscover an Iso Marlboro Lele built for Howden Ganley, found a rare TVR whose owner had no idea what kind of a car it was, the only true Intermeccanica Formula Junior in the world, and a few odds and ends.
But this mystery car would top everything we had ever dreamed of finding.
In January 2007, the phone rang and I heard a familiar voice. “A friend of mine says she has a Cisitalia D46 in need of restoration. I was wondering if you could come with me to check it out.”
By Wally
By Wallace Wyss
This is a story of unrequited love all the way around. It occurred in the early ‘50s. Think film noir, mood lighting, moonlight on the Riviera, that sort of thing.
First, (and good casting for this story I might add) as the female lead was Rita Hayworth, born Margarita Carmen Cansino, to a Spanish Flamenco dancer father and Ziegfield girl mother. She was reportedly an under-age dancer at a Tijuana club when she was discovered by Fox Studios.
She became one of the hottest actresses in Hollywood. Her one-glove strip tease in the movie Gilda put her on the map. Rita was a top movie star and a popular pinup girl during the forties. Her second husband was famed director Orson Wells, who she married in 1943. Her career bloomed during that time, but she lived on the edge, by having a fling around 1948. Not with some ordinary Joe, mind you, but with an Ismaili prince, Aly Kahn.
I had heard about Aly Khan since I was a teenager but back then (you might say “before Wikipedia”) I never actually had been able to figure out what country he was a prince of, primarily because the Ismaili sect of Muslims have no country or territory of their own. Prince Ali Salman Aga Khan, known as Aly Khan, was a son of Sultan Mohammed Shah, Aga Khan III, the head of the Ismaili Muslims. Aly Khan’s son, born in 1957, is the current Sultan Aga Khan IV and worth about $800 million.
[Read more…] about Missed Opportunities: Rita’s Ghia Cadillac
By pete
Panhard, the Flat Twin cars 1945-1967 and their origins
11.5 by 8.25
336 pages Softbound, approximately 1000 illustrations, B&W
$38.75 USD, £25 plus shipping
Order from https://stinkwheel.co.uk/shop/
Review by Pete Vack
This is one of the most important and well-researched books this year, in fact, in the past several years. For not only does it address a rare topic, but does so with immense authority based on superb research, a confidence that comes with deep understanding of the technical issues that are so much a part of the subject, a love of the marque that is both overwhelming and yet balanced and the ability to take relevant side roads that delightfully amplify the main subject. We are pleased that it is entirely in English.
The author, noted Panhard historian David Beare, gives us a brief historical look at the Panhard-Levassor firm from its beginning in 1891, enough to set the stage for the tiny and amazing post-war Panhards.
If ever there was a misunderstood and underrated car (at least outside of France), it was the Dyna Panhard. Even the name is confusing, often Panhard Dyna, and also seen as Dyna-Panhard with a hyphen. Born under the reign of Nazi Germany during WWII, the project was encouraged by Jean Panhard, the son of the founder, Paul Panhard, and two remarkable engineers, Loius Delagarde and Louis Bionier. (Remarkably, Jean Panhard reviewed the text of Beare’s book and last month appeared at a Panhard club celebration of his 100th birthday!) [Read more…] about Panhard, the flat twin cars 1945-1967: Book Review
By pete
By Graham Gauld
Here in the South of France there are a lot of “Brocantes” which, to you and me, means a space in a town or village where people set up a table and sell all the rubbish they have in the house for a few cents a time.
I am always on the lookout for real rarities such as commercially printed postcards of photos from auto racing 100 years ago.
Let me tell you the story behind two of those cards. The first shows a photo taken at the 3rd Coupe des Voiturettes held at Compiegne in northern France on September 27 1908. It was a great day for the French manufacturer Sizaire-Naudin as they finished first, second and fourth. What is even more interesting is that both Louis Naudin and Georges Sizaire, the founders of the company along with Georges’ brother Maurice, were racing in the event and finished first and second. The second is linked closely with the world’s oldest race driver.
By pete
VeloceToday Select Number One:
Cuban Grand Prix, 1957
by David Seielstad
Price: $20.00
Dimensions: 8.5″ x 5.5″ horizontal format, 36 full color pages on glossy 80 lb paper
Description: Shipping and handling is FREE!
Premium Subscribers Benefit! Contact vack@cox.net and get 50% off!
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Robert Pauley, a Chrysler engineer and car enthusiast who worked with Giovanni Savonuzzi in Detroit, sent us a collection of Kodachrome slides he had taken while at the Cuban Grand Prix in 1957. We found that another VeloceToday contributor, noted Ferrari historian David Seielstad, had written about the race. We combined Pauley’s never-before-published photos, Seielstad’s text, and the Editor’s epilogue, ‘Twilight of the Gods’ to create a unique view of this important but little known epic race.
By pete
Attention PREMIUM SUBSCRIBERS!
Win Maserati A6G 2000 Zagato
by Walter Bäumer, a $155 USD value!
If you are NOT a Premium Subscriber, click
here to subscribe and become eligible to win.
To enter, simply send an email to me at vack@cox.net with your name and address.
Drawing will be held on August 31st.
Shipping is FREE!
Book is provided by Dalton Watson Fine Books.
By pete
By pete
Story by Pete Vack
Photos by Gerald Vack
As we have seen in Part 1, the Editor’s uncle Gerry had an opportunity to try out his new Leica camera while at the Paris Auto Show in 1954. For an amateur, he did a pretty good job and the Kodachrome film looks as fresh now as it did in 59 years ago. The stock issue 50 mm lens, however, did not always make it easy to capture the entire car. Better, though, than a 35 mm which would have distorted the lines of the cars. We’ll take as is.
For the Editor, there were some stumpers, and if readers find us incorrect, please let us know. The Siata Fiat derivative is a case in point; we know that Siata made a number of 1100/1400 specials in 1954 and 1955, but were the bodies built in house, or by Vignale, and was the designer actually Michelotti?
Another was the Pegaso, clearly one of the Saoutchik bodied GT cars, but which one? It was not among the three cars on the Pegaso stand that year. It took some research but we turned to the classic book on Pegasos, “Ricart-Pegaso, La Pasion del Automovil” by Carlos Coma-Cros, and there we found the car and the history.
We begin with the all-time Pinin Farina classic, so often said to have been built for Ingrid Bergman and ordered by Roberto Rossellini. Sorry folks, Rossellini did not see it until the show and purchased it afterward. By that time Ingrid was not interested in his cars, or Rossellini for that matter, and the marriage soon fell apart. But the Pinin Farina body, the Ferrari 375 chassis, the famous director and the beautiful actress are legendary; whatever the circumstances of the purchase, Ferrari s/n 0456 embodies all four legends simultaneously.
The star of the show was the Pinin Farina 375 Ferrari built as a Pinin Farina styling exercise. However, immediately after the show ended on October 17th, Italian movie director Roberto Rossellini bought the car for about $6000 USD. When he registered the car, he left for Lyon to meet French director Francois Truffaut and the pair visited southern Spain. The steering broke along the way but the two directors got it repaired and made it home.