NATALIE WOODS MERCEDES-BENZ 300SL COMPETES AT 17TH ANNUAL AMELIA ISLAND
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The motion picture and the automobile came of age together. By the late Twenties movies began to talk and cars became practical daily transportation. A few grand marques, like Duesenberg and Cadillac, also became badges of status and social rank. Power, speed and exclusivity were coin of the realm.
By the Fifties a new type of car had emerged as Hollywood's favorite. Mercedes-Benz's 300SL had won Le Mans in 1952 and become the new high technology flagship for the venerable German marque. Speed, power and exclusivity still mattered most to Hollywood's elite and, with Mercedes-Benz's Le Mans one-two victory, impeccable and incomparable built quality, the 300SL had no trouble occupying the same Hollywood role Duesenberg had two decades earlier. Like the Duesenberg, 300SLs even appeared in several movies, most notably Elvis Presley's Viva Las Vegas.
Natalie Wood's personal 300SL stood out from all other cars on Hollywood's streets. Wearing optional Rudge knockoff wheels, her 300SL was already rare. But it was Wood's sense of esthetics that really set her 300SL roadster apart.
'She had it painted pink,' said Bill Warner, founder and Chairman of the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance, 'Pink with a lipstick red leather interior, as if driving a 300SL around Hollywood didn't attract enough attention.'
Wood was a star for practically her entire life. At the age of nine she starred in her first movie, the Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street (1947), with John Payne and Maureen O'Hara. Just a decade later the starlet took delivery of her 300SL. That December she married actor Robert Wagner.
Natalie's Mercedes-Benz 300SL will compete in the 300SL class at the Amelia Concours honoring the 60th anniversary of Mercedes-Benz first Le Mans win in 1952. Today it wears a traditional, factory approved silver-blue color. A meticulous restoration made certain that all the details in Wood's national award winning 300SL are correct. Such small details as the period-correct Becker in-dash radio and even the ownership documents in the glove box and the proper type of hose clamps were installed to restore the elegant German roadster to showroom condition.
About the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance
Now in its second decade, The Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance is among the top automotive events in the world. Always held the second full weekend in March, 'The Amelia' draws nearly 250 rare vehicles from collections around the world to The Golf Club of Amelia Island at Summer Beach and The Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island for a celebration of the automobile like no other. Since 1996, the show's Foundation has donated nearly $1.8 million to Community Hospice of Northeast Florida, Inc. and other deserving charities on Florida's First Coast. The 17th annual Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance is scheduled for March 9-11, 2012. For more information, visit www.ameliaconcours.org or call 904-636-0027.
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The motion picture and the automobile came of age together. By the late Twenties movies began to talk and cars became practical daily transportation. A few grand marques, like Duesenberg and Cadillac, also became badges of status and social rank. Power, speed and exclusivity were coin of the realm.
By the Fifties a new type of car had emerged as Hollywood's favorite. Mercedes-Benz's 300SL had won Le Mans in 1952 and become the new high technology flagship for the venerable German marque. Speed, power and exclusivity still mattered most to Hollywood's elite and, with Mercedes-Benz's Le Mans one-two victory, impeccable and incomparable built quality, the 300SL had no trouble occupying the same Hollywood role Duesenberg had two decades earlier. Like the Duesenberg, 300SLs even appeared in several movies, most notably Elvis Presley's Viva Las Vegas.
Natalie Wood's personal 300SL stood out from all other cars on Hollywood's streets. Wearing optional Rudge knockoff wheels, her 300SL was already rare. But it was Wood's sense of esthetics that really set her 300SL roadster apart.
'She had it painted pink,' said Bill Warner, founder and Chairman of the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance, 'Pink with a lipstick red leather interior, as if driving a 300SL around Hollywood didn't attract enough attention.'
Wood was a star for practically her entire life. At the age of nine she starred in her first movie, the Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street (1947), with John Payne and Maureen O'Hara. Just a decade later the starlet took delivery of her 300SL. That December she married actor Robert Wagner.
Natalie's Mercedes-Benz 300SL will compete in the 300SL class at the Amelia Concours honoring the 60th anniversary of Mercedes-Benz first Le Mans win in 1952. Today it wears a traditional, factory approved silver-blue color. A meticulous restoration made certain that all the details in Wood's national award winning 300SL are correct. Such small details as the period-correct Becker in-dash radio and even the ownership documents in the glove box and the proper type of hose clamps were installed to restore the elegant German roadster to showroom condition.
About the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance
Now in its second decade, The Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance is among the top automotive events in the world. Always held the second full weekend in March, 'The Amelia' draws nearly 250 rare vehicles from collections around the world to The Golf Club of Amelia Island at Summer Beach and The Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island for a celebration of the automobile like no other. Since 1996, the show's Foundation has donated nearly $1.8 million to Community Hospice of Northeast Florida, Inc. and other deserving charities on Florida's First Coast. The 17th annual Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance is scheduled for March 9-11, 2012. For more information, visit www.ameliaconcours.org or call 904-636-0027.