Gary Cooper

Tuesday of icon, today Gary Cooper!

With an innate elegance because of his exquisite British education. Brave and honest man.

A seducer with a fascinating and tender gaze. His maturity was able to catch any women.

Main Character of romantic comedies but above all a symbol of the American Western.

His glass cabinet came to have 3 Hollywood academy awards.

 

Chiti Chiti Bang Bang

If there is one film that continues to excite me and that I always look forward to seeing over Christmas (as I think they repeat it every year) it is “ChittyChittyBangBang”. It brings back an infinite number of childhood memories to me and I feel it’s one of those films that marks a before and after, not only in great musical and cinema history but also in the life of a young girl barely 7 years old.

Curiously when I told Angel that I wanted to write about this film and the car that starred in it, I was surprised by the fact that my nephew Angelito, roughly the same age as I was in this moment of fascination, was in love with not only the song and the film but also knew that the car was to be auctioned. Knowing this, he had begun to insert all his coins into his piggy bank in order to save and bid for the car in the auction.

It is estimated to reach about 2 million dollars in the auction.

You will have to save a lot Angelito! It’s a lot of money. However, what would be easier is a trip to the USA to see the car with the money you’ve saved up, given that is the place where it is to be found.

Various ChittyChittyBangBang cars were produced for the film, however only one managed to really work. This very car is the one that had remained in the hands of its only owner: Pierre Picton in Stratford-upon-Avon, until only a few months ago when he decided to put it up for auction. The vehicle was boarded in England and taken to California in May 2011, although I haven’t yet managed to find out the exact date that the auction is to be celebrated on. I am going to continue investigating because I would love to follow it live.

The star of the film, which was released 44 years ago today in 1968, is a vehicle designed by Ken Adam and built entirely by hand in the Ford racing department. It has a polished aluminium bonnet, a cedar wood interior, brass ornaments and its dashboard: the remains of a British First World War fighter plane, all this makes a most original and charming car. Chitty was finished in 1967 and was registered as “GEN 11”. This was meant as “genii” (genie), thus giving the car a magic and slightly human personality.

I don’t think that any of us who saw the film during those years would forget the main character, Dick Van Dyke, who gave life to an eccentric inventor that takes his sons on the biggest adventure of their lives.

The film, based on the novel by Ian Flemming that he had dedicated to his son, was filmed in England, France and Germany during 1967 and 1968, and was released on 16th December 1968. It was one of the most difficult and expensive films made of its period.

“ChittyChittyBangBang” was a huge success, and although its profits didn’t turn it into a box office hit (due to its extortionate cost more that a lack of spectators), for me it will always remain in my memory as one of the most charming films ever; one of those movies that I would love to continue enjoying with my grandchildren.

Does anyone share the same feelings as me?

Images:

http://chittygen11.com/index2.html

The Mg-Tc

It is rare that one Sunday such an attractive plan as this should come up. A few weeks ago a good friend called to tell me that he had bought an MG.

I must admit to you all that I absolutely love classic cars, with their spoked wheels, their wooden steering wheels, those funny headlights that seem to be looking at you with bulging eyes… All this reminds me of a car that I adore and that brings incredible childhood memories back to me: “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang”, of which I hope to speak in a few weeks.

My friend’s car is an MG, a 1949 racing green MG TC. I don’t know much about cars, but from hearing the explanations about how and why he obtained this jewel of British Engineering, I couldn’t help but feel excited.

The whim of this man, recently retired from everyday work, arrived fromEnglandand he told me about how its previous owner had deposited it at the very door of his English style house in Las Rozas. The car was carefully transported on a platform towed by he himself from the green countryside ofLincolnshire.

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The previous owner is an English collector who specialises in MGs. He sells them after fixing and fitting them with every luxurious detail, leaving them in perfect condition to be used for many more years in the hands of another collector or Classic English sports car lover like himself. He sells them just as he had found them yet with a known and identifiable history and, as they say, in running order. For completing this task, there are no better than the English, who are the best in the world for these things. They maintain their traditions in such a way that it is difficult to match. In the last three years my friend has dedicated hours to restoring the car in the garage of his house, until leaving it in nearly perfect condition.

My friend always wanted to own this car. It’s a whim that he has had in his head since he was a child of barely 9 years. At that age, one day whilst out walking with his father, he saw one parked inCentral Streetof Santiago de Chile. He fell instantly in love with it and whilst his father explained the technical qualities of this magnificent automobile to him, he couldn’t stop thinking that the car would be perfect to be driven by a boy of his young age. So accessible and compact, he would be able to manage all the vehicle’s controls with no problem. Childhood dreams that we have all had, right?

This event lead to the fact that many years later, now at the age of 20, in a good friend’s house he would find a TC again in the garage, this time in red. The car was in pieces and totally ruined, however, like the good engineer that he was, as soon as he saw it he could already imagine himself fixing and mounting every one of its valuable pieces one by one. He made an offer to his friend, invested all his savings and acquired the car that so reminded him of his father and that which he had so often dreamed of since he was a child. He dedicated many hours to retrieving every one of the pieces, polishing, cleaning and fitting every one in its place so that the TC could once again roll proudly and strongly along the highways ofChile.

Years later he would find himself obliged to sell it in order to accomplish another dream: come toSpainwith his wife and form a family here.

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For the lovers of all things technical, I shall tell you that according to my friend, the brand MG, thanks to the MG TC, obtained a great reputation in theUSA, selling more than 2000 of the total 10,000 TC models that had been manufactured. Many American soldiers that had driven and even acquired a Midget’s model in Great Britain during the war took the pleasant memory home, resuming their romance with this suggestive sports car by soon acquiring one in their home country. One of the most famous owners of this car was the Duke of Windsor, Uncle of Queen Elizabeth ofEngland.

The appearance, sound and best of all the control of the MG TC are unique. The driving is hard and continuously rebounds. The engine has a lot of revolutions and is very noisy and the management has had too long a journey.

As the 1250 cc engine wasn’t powerful enough, the car had to go in a low gear and at high revolutions to give its best. Due to it having no aerodynamics the maximum speed was limited to 120km/hour.

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For me, this car is a dignified jewel, one to enjoy with time, patience and peace. Imagine the tacking and narrow roads that wound through the green English countryside in the early Twentieth Century, to drive through them in these beautiful cars would have been an unforgettable experience.

I love to see how there are still people that get excited keeping and talking about these kinds of cars. Pieces that today are a collector’s item and an authentic example of good design, reliable mechanism and a driving style that still excites us after more than 100 years. Thanks to them we can relive periods of our history that in other circumstances would already be forgotten.

I’ll just be satisfied with a ride through the foothills of the mountains ofMadrid, which I’ll tell you, seemed to me equally thrilling and I hope to be able to repeat the experience again.

It’s a most Vintage car that stops traffic wherever it goes.

100 weeks of Icons!

One Vintage icon a week.

100 characters who have managed to become inspirations for artists, designers and photographers through their image, personal style and life journeys… and that continue to serve as an inspiration today despite the amount of time passed.

They’re our one hundred Twentieth Century icons: 50 men and 50 women that will arrive at Vintage By López-Linares every Tuesday.

Each and every one of them will occupy a very special place in our Vintage space.

Will you join us in this journey throughout the best of the Twentieth Century?

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“The Queen of Technicolor” or the “Caribbean Cyclone”

Our September “Vintage Icon” was born in Barahona (The Dominican Republic) in 1912 and was baptized in the church where the remains of Christopher Columbus are believed to be buried. Maria Montez was the first Dominican actress to reach the Hollywood Mecca.

She spent her infancy years growing up in Tenerife as her father was from the Canaries. She was educated in a Catholic Convent there. Since a young age she dreamed of being an actress and, they say, that when she was very small she would take a big sheet to the door of her house and make an improvised stage from it in order to perform small plays.

She had an anxious yet dreamy personality, when she moved to New York in the Thirties; she arrived already convinced that her principal aim was to become a famous actress. In order to reach this the first thing she did was to adapt her biography to make it more attractive to reach the Mecca of film. She changed her name to Maria Montez as a tribute to the ballerina Lola Montez.

Her strong Hispanic accent, her exuberant Latino presence and her great beauty contributed to raise her to stardom in very little time.  Within a few years she became known as the “Caribbean Cyclone”.

Since 1942 she was known as “The Queen of Technicolor”. She played a lead role in successful box office titles such as “White Savage”, “Ali Baba and the 40 thieves”, “Cobra Woman” or “Arabian Nights”… In reference to this last film she was quoted to say: “When I look at myself, I am so beautiful I scream with joy”.

Maria married twice, once in the Thirties to an Irish Banker whom she divorced in 1939 and with whom she had no children, and the second time to a French actor, Jean Pierre Aumont with whom she had a daughter: the actress Tina Aumont.

In 1951 a Hollywood as trologer told her that her life would be short and that she would die a sudden death. She died that same year from a heart attack whilst she was having a hot bath with bath salts in her Paris house. She was 34 years old.

Maria Montez posed for McClelland Barclay, one of the most famous illustrators of the time and pin-up art painter.

TheDominican Republic International Airport carries her name in memory of her.

By her own merits she won her place in theMeccaof film.

I live you links to three of her most famous films:

“Arabian Nights”

In this film the Caliph of Baghdad must hide his identity with a group of travelling actors when his brother usurps the throne. Both brothers lust after the same beautiful dancer who hesitates between power and true love.

“Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves”

A young Prince, accompanied by forty thieves, avenges the Mongolian invaders who assassinated his father and stole his throne.

“Cobra Woman”

Upon discovering that his girlfriend, Tolle a, has been kidnapped, Ramu and his friend Kado set off for a Pacific island where all the foreigners are assassinated at their arrival and the inhabitants, who are frequently sacrficed to an evil volcano God, worship the cobra. The island is governed by Tollea’s evil twin: Naja the Cobra Woman, who, apart from having plans for her new prisoner Ramu also wishes to eliminate any competition from her benevolent sister.