Posted on 08/15/2010 12:14:11 PM PDT by I still care
A sports car once owned by the late British actress Diana Dors has sold for $3 million (£1.9m) at a California auction.
The 1949 Delahaye Roadster, which some have dubbed the most beautiful car in the world, was given to Dors when she was 17.
The sky blue car has been described by auctioneers as "extravagant and outrageous - a rolling sculpture".
Dors, who was seen as the British Marilyn Monroe, died in 1984 aged 52
(Excerpt) Read more at bbc.co.uk ...
Good post.
Hot chick and a really hot car!
Whew!! Almost got a woodie just lookin’ at the photo! Certain model Sea Ray yachts (which I’ve never owned) have the SAME effect. ;oD
No 4 cylinder under the hood of that sum bitch. That’s a beauty!
The vicar became somewhat worried about his planned speech. After lunch, they arrived at the fête at the appointed time. The vicar, totally unnerved about mispronouncing "Fluck", introduced Diana with these immortal words:
Ladies and gentlemen, it is with great pleasure that I introduce to you our star guest. We all love her, especially as she is our local girl. I therefore feel it right to introduce her by her real name; Ladies and Gentlemen, please welcome the very lovely Miss Diana Clunt. Wikipedia
Richard Dawson?! Was he the putz who hosted Family Feud for years? And married to HER?! Just proves that LIFE AIN’T FAIR!
I saw a British-racing-green 1958 Austin Healey with shiny wire wheels, spinners, wood dash and tonneau cover sitting on a trailer the other day, which made this car look silly with its exagerated lines.
Interior shot. And this is 1949. Amazing.
Most all the Delahayes were very swept back and aero in an Art Deco way. To each his own, some think they’re stunning and some think they’re cartoonish. I waver back and forth.
Viewed purely as “car” in the American idiom, they’re somewhat nonsensical. Not that we didn’t produce a few “boutique” vehicles ourselves along these lines.
The French do what they do for their own reasons, always have and always will. Seldom does it match our own expectations or aesthetic sensibilities, but when they hit a homerun it’s really something else. This roadster is one of them, as is practically any DS19 through DS21.
I think it’s great, a masterpiece of craftsmanship in steel, chrome, wood and leather. Is it practical at all? No, not really. But, for the right person of means, with the persona to pull it off, this no doubt was a conveyance without peer for making an entrance.
I’m glad it’s been cherished and maintained for us to enjoy. Thanks for posting the photo.
But where do you plug it in?!
Yup-—he’s the one. They had two kids together.
I have a 63 Dodge. It gets 9 mph. So you are probably not far off.
“Once married to game show host Richard Dawson”
Interesting! He was a cutie pie himself. You only mention his game show career, he was also in Hogan’s Heroes, one of my faves.
She does look a bit like Marilyn.
Dawson later married one of the contestants on Family Feud.
Lagonda 1939
Lagonda 2009
The grill of the vehicle is a little much for me (I respond more to the side view) but it seems to match its owner.
Here is another extreme car.
They horribly repainted it for an ad, but it is from a famous movie.
A hint (paraphrased): "Cosmo, get out of the hideous thing. You look like a whatnot".
A guy at work drives a '73 Citroen SM, in very good condition. I'll bet he'd have a spaz attack viewing this car. Practicality is out the window when taste is in charge. And a taste which leans toward French design... Besides if plain old utility had the final say, none of us would ever be allowed to like anything. It would be a plain, generic, boring world with no place for Industrial Design, or Diana Dors, or the French for that matter. When it comes to impractical cars, I'm more of a TR3 kind of guy. But there's something about this car...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.