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Stars And Their Cars

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17,219
Location
New York City
Coop ...:D
and he still looks stylish regardless of the weather in this photo;)

There's a reason he was a major movie star and also a style icon.

Of course wind makes him look cooler / Me, I look like an unmade bed in wind (sigh).

Hadley, do you have this book ⇩? It came out several years ago and has wonderful pictures.

9781576875865_p0_v1_s550x406.jpg
 

3fingers

One Too Many
Messages
1,797
Location
Illinois
As a child I used to ride a pony that belonged to a neighbor. Given the general disposition of ponies and given Jack's advancing age he was perfectly happy to stand quietly rather than walk me around the barnyard. There was a bowl on a stick in the barn that you put a handful of oats in before mounting that Jack would never tire of walking after. At the end of the ride you let Jack have the oats. Lather, rinse repeat.
 

HadleyH1

One Too Many
Messages
1,240
There's a reason he was a major movie star and also a style icon.

Of course wind makes him look cooler / Me, I look like an unmade bed in wind (sigh).

Hadley, do you have this book ⇩? It came out several years ago and has wonderful pictures.

View attachment 101231




-"He was the epitome of grace and style and came by it naturally and seemingly effortlessly." -




Gary Cooper was definitely a style icon... he was born with it!

I don't have that book, Fading Fast, but I have seen it before, its great!:)
 

Benzadmiral

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,815
Location
The Swamp
Coop ...don't know the make of the car,sorry....but he has his pets with him in the photo:D


. . . and he still looks stylish regardless of the weather in this photo;)
That looks like it could be a Lincoln Continental Mark I. But the pics I find of that car show no chromed exterior door handle or chrome strip, and the convertible top and the window are both much more square on the Lincolns than on this car.
 
Messages
17,219
Location
New York City
That looks like it could be a Lincoln Continental Mark I. But the pics I find of that car show no chromed exterior door handle or chrome strip, and the convertible top and the window are both much more square on the Lincolns than on this car.

You know much more about cars than I do, but my very amateurish guess was one of those small model Packards - 110 / 120 - from the mid '30s.
 

Benzadmiral

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,815
Location
The Swamp
You know much more about cars than I do, but my very amateurish guess was one of those small model Packards - 110 / 120 - from the mid '30s.
Fading Fast, I do believe you're right: https://www.mecum.com/lots/DA0917-294070/1938-packard-six-convertible/

And if the Packard Six was an "affordable" high-quality car at that time -- what, $1100, $1200? -- that would have meant Coop (who could probably have bought almost any car he pleased) would have gotten himself a real bargain. Rather like with Buick today: 75% of the driving experience and reliability of, say, Mercedes, at 50% of the purchase price.
 
Last edited:
Messages
17,219
Location
New York City
Fading Fast, I do believe you're right: https://www.mecum.com/lots/DA0917-294070/1938-packard-six-convertible/

And if the Packard Six was an "affordable" high-quality car at that time -- what, $1100, $1200? -- that would have meant Coop (who could probably have bought almost any car he pleased) would have gotten himself a real bargain. Rather like with Buick today: 75% of the driving experience and reliability of, say, Mercedes, at 50% of the purchase price.

That would make me one for two hundred in guessing cars correctly. I've always liked those "smaller" Packards and it didn't quite look like any other car I could think of. Good point on the affordability to Cooper, but it might well have been one of six cars he owned, who knows - he seems like a car guy as he shows up in a lot of car pictures.
 
Messages
17,219
Location
New York City
Fading Fast, I do believe you're right: https://www.mecum.com/lots/DA0917-294070/1938-packard-six-convertible/

And if the Packard Six was an "affordable" high-quality car at that time -- what, $1100, $1200? -- that would have meant Coop (who could probably have bought almost any car he pleased) would have gotten himself a real bargain. Rather like with Buick today: 75% of the driving experience and reliability of, say, Mercedes, at 50% of the purchase price.


If that's it, it's quite a nice looker (from your link):

da0917-294070_1.jpg
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,763
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Those Packards were designed to compete directly against the Buicks, LaSalles, and DeSotos for the "family on its way up" market -- the kind of $3500 a year white-collar types who wanted to project the image but didn't want to live too far beyond their means. They were also popular among well-to-do people who didn't want to be too overly ostentatious about it -- by the late thirties, a lot of people viewed big, gaudy luxury cars as gauche.
 
Messages
17,219
Location
New York City
Those Packards were designed to compete directly against the Buicks, LaSalles, and DeSotos for the "family on its way up" market -- the kind of $3500 a year white-collar types who wanted to project the image but didn't want to live too far beyond their means. They were also popular among well-to-do people who didn't want to be too overly ostentatious about it -- by the late thirties, a lot of people viewed big, gaudy luxury cars as gauche.

I almost always like simple over ornate which is probably why those smaller Packards appeal to me (the one above would improve greatly if it lost that over-the-top hood ornament). One of my favorite simple cars (that I think you identified for me) is this 35 Ford:

34f70424c10879cae09dbcd75f44e028.jpg


I'm sure it wouldn't have wowed the Jones', but I love its simple, beautiful lines. Those luxury behemoths from the '30s - Duesenbergs, Cords, 12-cylinder Cadillacs, etc. - are fun as heck to look at today, but are (as so well put in "The Great Gatsby") "circus wagons" when you think about them.
 

HadleyH1

One Too Many
Messages
1,240
Robert Montgomery - American film and television actor (1904-1981) He was also the father of actress Elizabeth Montgomery from the TV series "Bewitched"







arriving at the MGM studios in his sports car no idea of the make



in 1929



Bob and his latest prize....the 1931 Cadillac.




Robert Montgomery and his Cadillac Sport Phaeton 1933
 

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