Archives for March 2012
This Month’s Drawing Winner
The winner of this delightful book is Eduardo Prado! Become a Premium subscriber now to be eligible for next month’s drawing.
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The 2012 F1 season has just begun. Did you ever wonder how the team of David Hobbs, Steve Matchett and Bob Varsha do their magic on SpeedTV? Read this two part exclusive interview conducted by David Seibert with Speed’s F1 host Bob Varsha!
VeloceToday Interviews Bob Varsha
The F1 season begins soon, just in time to find out the real story behind SPEED coverage of the races. In an exclusive two part interview for VeloceToday, David Seibert talks to SPEED Formula 1 anchor Bob Varsha about life behind the SPEED cameras, and if Formula 1 will get another chance in the United States. Don’t miss this candid interview with a master Anchor.
VeloceToday Interviews Bob Varsha, Part II
In Part II of the Bob Varsha interview, David Seibert asks Speed’s top anchor about his favorite driver, Ayrton Senna. Varsha also reveals why it is so difficult to create content the typical VeloceToday readers enjoy, such as “Behind the Headlights” and the series “Victory by Design. He also explains why the BJ Auctions succeed in spite of the hype. Don’t miss this very revealing interview.
Cars and Chic Chicks
By Patricia Lee Yongue
Cars and Chicks
From the most elegant of international auto salons, posters, publicity photos, and magazine ads to the sleaziest of car shows and rags, a fetching female posed by—or slathered over—an attractive automobile remains an icon of Western popular culture. Occasionally, a woman sits behind the wheel and smiles through the side window. Less occasionally, she is depicted actually driving the vehicle. At the fancier shows and salons, she may move with the car by means of turntable. She and the car are assuredly objects of the ‘male gaze.’
Of late, some manufacturers have trained attractive young women to demonstrate the technology and other normally “guy knowledge” of the cars, but pretty girls talking in business-like voice about camshafts, rpms, and torque somehow diminishes the sexual sell despite the “smart is sexy” pitch. In a retro move, Ferrari offered a silent, stiletto-shod blonde-tressed female with a yellow 458 Italia at the 2011 Detroit Auto Show. And, for the most part, whether in print or at show, the non-driving, contextually sexually well-bodied and well-dressed (or undressed) young woman decorating an eminently drivable, beautifully bodied car still drives the marketer’s and, presumably, the target consumer’s desire.
The association of decorative women and cars dates back to the very introduction of the automobile at show. The poster for the opening of the first Salon de l’auto, organized by the Automobile Club of France and held in the Tuileries Gardens in Paris in June, 1898, featured a gowned, wasp-waisted goddess of speed reigning over the exhibit. In a poster for the French constructors A. Teste Moret and Cie Lyon-Vaise, a winged young lady in fancy dress pilots a voiturette encircled by a swarm of speeding flies. [Read more…] about Cars and Chic Chicks
Tony’s Talbots
Hindsight is a good remedy for perceived mediocrity. Looking back on the 20-odd year run of the French Lago Talbot, it is easy to see that the cars of Anthony “Tony” Lago (born on this date in Venice in 1893)were not only were winners on the concours circuit, but significant winners on the Grand Prix tracks in the post war era. After five major Grand Prix wins, nine lesser ones and victory at Le Mans in 1950, Cyril Posthumus would write, “Lago, in his retirement years could look back on a remarkable chapter of accomplishment.”
On the day of his birth, we remember the cars of Tony Lago, thanks to VeloceToday reader and longtime vintage racer, Peter Giddings.
From the dramatic concours-winning Figoni et Falaschi coupes of late 1930s to the last-of-the-line Lago America coupes of 1956, Lago Talbots came on the scene with style and flair, making the most of a meager budget and limited facilities. In between the flashy sports cars were the real stars…the series of remarkable 4.5 liter Grand Prix cars that were campaigned primarily by privateers from 1939 to 1952.
Peter Giddings can claim to have been racing Lago Talbots for over thirty years. Although he recently parted with the ex-Etancelin car #110054 (which went to his good friend David Duthu), Giddings has an enormous amount of experience with the GP Lagos. He also owned and raced the ex Chiron/Whiteford French/Australian Grand Prix winning Lago Talbot #110007 for ten years. Like no one else, Giddings is the guy in the know.
[Read more…] about Tony’s TalbotsConcours d’Elegance: Book Review
Review by Patricia Lee Yongue
All images courtesy of Dalton Watson and Authors.
CONCOURS D’ELEGANCE: Dream cars and lovely ladies
Dalton Watson Fine Books, 2011. By Patrick Lesueur and translated by David Burgess-Wise.
ISBN 978-1-85443-250-6 Page Size 290 mm x 240 mm. 208 pages. Hard cover with dust jacket. 200 black and white photographs. Price US$69/£42
Click here to order from Dalton Watson.
One wishes that Mr. Lesueur had enhanced this elegant book of photographic images with more text and had secured the collaboration of a specialist in French fashion history. What a fine resource treasure it would then be for both coachbuilder and fashion historians—and also for scholars of modernism interested in interdisciplinary design theories and practice, Art Deco, socio-economic history, business history, and cultural and women’s studies. Nonetheless, the book delights the viewer and tantalizes the scholar. Perhaps one of the latter will write a companion book with information about the fashion component and more commentary on the relationship between the coachbuilt bodies of the “dream cars” and the ensembles worn by the “lovely ladies,” who were originally models from the couture houses but were increasingly replaced by high society ladies, actresses, other celebrities, and race car drivers.
The event that Lesueur aptly terms a “beauty contest” flourished in France during the interwar period, emerging in 1920s Paris in the Bois de Boulogne and resort cities in the north and on the Riviera, and flourishing until the onset of World War II. Organized by the newspapers l’Auto and l’Intransigeant and the journal Fémina, the concours d’élégance féminine en automobile evolved from publicity programs for the auto marques into an equally important exhibition of haute couture. Eventually, the competition judged the marriage of car design and fashion. Grand Prix and other prizes were awarded in various classes, and, Lesueur points out, everyone likely went home happy.
Malaysian Grand Prix 2012
By Pete Vack
Photos courtesy and copyright Ferrari Media, unless otherwise noted
Recipes and a Witches Wet Brew
First it promised to rain and it didn’t. Then it promised to rain again and it didn’t. In between it rained Malaysian cats and dogs. Grey skies made for an exciting race with surprise outcomes.
Most surprised of all was probably Alonso, who managed to pull off the impossible, winning with a car that everyone says is a dog even in the dry. Or maybe they are just saying that. Or maybe it was so last week but not this week.
[Read more…] about Malaysian Grand Prix 2012
Our Features This Week, March 21st 2012
Enter NOW for a Chance to Win this Alfa Giulietta Book!
In January Premium Subscribers were eligible to win an official 2012 Ferrari Calendar; in February we gave away a copy of Dino Brunori’s “Nardi, a fast life”. This month, for our Premium Subscribers only, we are having a drawing for one of the best books on Alfa Romeo ever written: Alfa Romeo Giulietta, tutto su tutti I modelli della Giulietta by Tito Anselmi and Lorenzo Boscaraelli. This is a second edition published in 1998 by Giorgio Nada Editore, (text in Italian). Shipping is free! If you are a subscriber or subscribe before March 26th, send an email to me at vack@cox.net. Drawing will be held on March 27th.
Please help support VeloceToday and our contributors by becoming a Premium Subscriber at one of three levels; $9.95 for one month, $7.95 per month for six months, or the best bet, $4.95 per month for one year ($59.40). Use the mediapass form found with each article to subscribe. If you need help, just email us at vack@cox.net.
CLICK HERE TO A PREMIUM SUBSCRIBER
For Premium Subscribers ONLY!!
The 2012 F1 season has just begun. Did you ever wonder how the team of David Hobbs, Steve Matchett and Bob Varsha do their magic on SpeedTV? Read this two part exclusive interview conducted by David Seibert with Speed’s F1 host Bob Varsha!
VeloceToday Interviews Bob Varsha
The F1 season begins soon, just in time to find out the real story behind SPEED coverage of the races. In an exclusive two part interview for VeloceToday, David Seibert talks to SPEED Formula 1 anchor Bob Varsha about life behind the SPEED cameras, and if Formula 1 will get another chance in the United States. Don’t miss this candid interview with a master Anchor.
VeloceToday Interviews Bob Varsha, Part II
In Part II of the Bob Varsha interview, David Seibert asks Speed’s top anchor about his favorite driver, Ayrton Senna. Varsha also reveals why it is so difficult to create content the typical VeloceToday readers enjoy, such as “Behind the Headlights” and the series “Victory by Design. He also explains why the BJ Auctions succeed in spite of the hype. Don’t miss this very revealing interview.
Ferrari’s Birthplace Now a Museum
Photos by Alessandro Gerelli
We’re sure everyone has seen the news about the opening of the Museo Casa Enzo Ferrari. We are also sure that no one covers it better than VeloceToday. No PR here, but a good many insights from the Man himself.
Post War Tatra 600
Lightness prevails…
Photography by Don Hodgdon, text by Pete Vack
After months of digging through an unfamiliar subject, being assailed for mistakes I shouldn’t have made, assaulted for writing about a car which at one time was made behind the Iron Curtain and spending a great deal of time looking for Tatra books that don’t exist, we present below the fourth and final Tatra story.
That having been accomplished below, we can now sit back and take joy in the catchy, silly, enormously bad puns for titles foisted upon researchers by magazines around the world.
Just think what they had to work with…
Look, Vladimir, No Vladiator; Car, September 1973
Party Time..T603; Classic and Sportscar, July 1994
Tatra for Now; Custom Car, August 1973
Reach for your Czech Book; Classic and Sportscar, October 1992
Prague Uprising; Performance Car, July 1993
Czech Mate; Car Australia, December 1993
Czech Matey; Top Gear,May 1994
Bouncing Czech; Wheels Australia, August 1998
And the final blow, yet another article with the very same silly name, “Czech Mate”, from the good folks at Automobile Magazine in January of 2005.
But just one more; we almost forgot, “Czechmate of the Year”, Special Interest Cars, April 1987. Which leads us to our subject car, for that long ago article featured the very same car now owned by David Russel and photographed for VeloceToday by Don Hodgdon.
More on the Ala d’Oro Stanguellini
Some time ago, reader Bill Spear emailed a photo taken from Life magazine back in the 1950s. We don’t know when or where the photo was taken but he had no idea what the car is or who built it. So of course he sent it to us. But after that was published, we hear more about this post war classic Stanguellini.
[Read more…] about More on the Ala d’Oro Stanguellini
Australian Grand Prix 2012
VeloceToday readers are already familiar with the work of Andrew Coles (see Fiat Nationals, Australia). Coles attended the first round of the F1 World Championship at Melbourne and filed this report for VeloceToday.
Story and Photos by Andrew Coles and Ferrari Media
Formula 1 has always been the holy grail of motorsport. It doesn’t matter if you’re a driver, an engineer, an official or even just a spectator, the FIA’s premiere category has an attraction that no true motor racing fan can deny. It was this magnetic-like pull that brought me to Melbourne for the opening round of the 2012 season. Being there live is a world class experience. No matter how many cameras are used to televise the event, no TV coverage can match. In many respects, TV does a very poor job of portraying what actually makes Formula 1 so special.
[Read more…] about Australian Grand Prix 2012