|
English
|

1956 Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia)

Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Design Sketch
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Design Sketch
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: James Haefner
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: James Haefner
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior - Photo: Darin Schnabel
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior
Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 - Interior
Images: RM Auctions; www.jameshaefner.com
Rating:  18    -3    +21
The gentleman’s rocket ship
A Space Age icon of the 1950s
The only Supersonic built on an Aston Martin chassis
In 1984, Ghia’s president, D.F. Kopka, wrote of Turin that “it is a magic place. There is absolutely no other place like it on the face of the earth. Imagine having a group of descendants of Lautrec, Giotto, da Vinci, and others of that ilk all painting canvases just for you and your friends to admire in the privacy of your own home. Having Ghia SpA report to me is not that different as an analogy.” Ghia’s creative designs evoked an era of sky-soaring rockets and unlimited dreams, and they put those fantasies on the road.

Here is presented the Supersonic. It was the 15th and last of a series of unique motor cars that have been individually created by Ghia to variations on a race-bred Giovanni Savonuzzi design, and it is the only example on an Aston Martin chassis. It has been a fascinating part of fascinating lives, residing in Manhattan, in Michigan, and on a golf green by the sea.

Harry Schell was an American expatriate living in Paris who was born into the world of racing and premium sports cars. His parents, French driver Laurie Schell and American privateer Lucy O’Reilly, had founded the Ecurie Bleue team for which Rene Dreyfus famously campaigned Delahayes against the finest Bugattis and Mercedes-Benz of the late 1930s.

Despite the death of his father behind the wheel during a road outing, the younger Schell was bitten by the racing bug, and through the 1950s, he competed in grand prix racing with a variety of makes, including Talbot-Lago, Maserati, Gordini, and Vanwal. Schell was a regular on the grand prix circuit of the 1950s, but he was also known to keep a variety of exceptional personal cars.

Coachbuilt sports cars of this period were, of course, not entirely uncommon, but there were relatively few Aston Martins of the period that were constructed with non-factory bodywork. Unfortunately, very little reliable documentation exists regarding the finer details of the Supersonic production run, as recordkeeping at Aston Martin and Ghia was lamentably vague. The first known photograph of this extraordinary Aston Martin Supersonic was taken at the car’s show debut at the Turin Auto Salon on April 21, 1956. The car was displayed there alongside one of the first examples of the Dual-Ghia, the exclusive American luxury car that was just entering production. It is believed that Harry Schell was subsequently presented with the car on loan directly from Aston Martin, with the intention of engendering additional publicity, particularly since he was a racing driver of some renown.

In execution, it is interesting to note how successfully the Supersonic coachwork was grafted to Aston’s powerful but roomier DB2/4, which substituted a 2+2 seating arrangement for the prior DB2’s smaller two-seat interior. Provided with a slightly longer chassis than the Otto Vu Fiats with which Ghia had surely grown comfortable, the coachbuilders were able to endow Savonuzzi’s design with a slightly taller profile in the characteristic lightweight aluminum. (Early press descriptions of the Aston being bodied in fiberglass are actually incorrect.) Furthermore, the Aston Supersonic’s body is distinguished from its siblings by the presence of a unique front bumper—a delicately curved piece that seems to serve as a more sculptural form than safety function.

The next known photograph of this Supersonic was taken at Spa, during the week of the Belgian Grand Prix, which took place on June 3, 1956. Harry Schell took 4th place while competing for Vanwal that weekend, but it would appear that his personal transport to the race was the new Aston Martin. As detailed in the June 15, 1956, issue of Autosport magazine, Schell’s car was parked on the streets of Spa, with a second close-up photo and caption focusing on the unusual front bumper.

The following October, the Supersonic was depicted in the October 1956 issue of Quattroruote, the Italian motoring magazine. In an article regarding the personal cars of Formula One drivers, including Juan Manual Fangio and Peter Collins, Harry Schell is seen stepping out of the Aston Supersonic with the door open, further demonstrating his early connection with the car.

By 1957, it is known that the car had been acquired by Robert M. Lee, the decorated sportsman, conservationist, and collector who has since won Best of Show at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. The young Lee was pictured outside the popular Harwyn Club in Manhattan with the car.

Mr. Lee, however, did not own the car for very long, as he sold it to a friend of his, Richard Cowell, also of New York, in late 1957 or 1958. Mr. Cowell, heir to an oil fortune, was about 30 years old at the time, and he would be featured in February of the following year in a four-page article in LIFE magazine that regarded his highly publicized and newsworthy marriage to Gail Vanderbilt Whitney, daughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney, whom Cowell had met in her father’s opera box. Quite amazingly, the article not only pictures the happy young couple, but also the Aston Martin, which Cowell gifted to his lovely bride, along with an eight-carat engagement ring and a Fifth Avenue mansion.

The couple, but Gail specifically, drove the car around New York for some time, and the car was photographed while in their ownership. In fact, although Aston Martin records are very limited, as might be expected of such a one-off project, the factory does retain service records of the car in period, clearly confirming Mr. Cowell’s ownership of the car and his Fifth Avenue address.

Mr. Cowell went on to lead an extraordinary life. He was a fixture in Southern France in the 1950s, following his U.S. national water skiing team debut in 1949 at the first world water skiing competition in France. He held a long-distance waterskiing record along the French Riviera, and after a divorce from Whitney in 1959, he later dated such extraordinary women as Ava Gardner and Jayne Mansfield. Quite fittingly, Cowell, who bought himself a small hotel on the Riviera, befriended David Brown, of Aston Martin, who entertained many friends and colleagues on his yacht in France, and whom Cowell would frequently entertain by waterskiing around the vessel.

The list of luminaries of this exceptional Aston Martin continued. Following Cowell’s divorce from Whitney in 1959, the Supersonic was acquired by Bob Grossman, the well-known Ferrari sports car driver who carved a reputation in Maranello’s Spider California. The Aston Martin successively passed to owners Fred Benson and then Arnie O’Brien, remaining in the Detroit region, where it eventually was parked at an abandoned gas station.

In 1974, the car was discovered at the old filling station around Detroit’s Nine Mile Road by 21-year-old Brian Joseph, an enthusiast who would soon enjoy a budding restoration career. As unfamiliar with the car as most people at that time were, Mr. Joseph giddily recognized the Aston Martin badge and knew that the car he had found was certainly something quite special. Mr. Joseph took photographs of the Supersonic and returned occasionally to admire it, until, on one such occasion, the car had vanished.

By late 2003, Mr. Joseph was informed of the car’s whereabouts, as it resided with one Bill Mains, of Toledo, Ohio, from whom he acquired the car after re-discovering it some 30 years after he first laid eyes on it.

The restoration of such a unique, one-off car was carried out with no expense spared and while in the ownership of the consignor, a highly respected collector and former Pebble Beach Best of Show winner. The car was gradually disassembled, the parts were catalogued, and the utmost was done to research every available photo or article about it.

Mr. Joseph’s work war conducted with absolute attention to detail, down to the last nut and bolt.

The powerful Mk II chassis and drivetrain were completely restored to Aston Martin factory specifications, while the unique nuances of the rare Ghia coachwork were carefully refurbished, with all moldings and components restored or fabricated to optimal authenticity. The only notable deviation from the car’s original appearance was the choice of the color scheme; the car now had a green top over an ivory body, replacing the original all-white livery, and it was trimmed with a color-matched green leather interior.

Completed in early 2011, the sensational restoration debuted at that year’s Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, taking Second Place in the Postwar Touring Class. The following January, the Supersonic earned the Most Unique Award at the Classic Sports Sunday at Mar-a-Lago, held in conjunction with the Cavallino Classic in West Palm Beach, Florida. The car’s overwhelming authenticity and rarity were further recognized in July 2012 at the Concours d’Elegance of America, which took place at St. Johns in Michigan.

Now publicly offered in pristine condition for the first time in many decades, this breathtaking, one-off Aston Martin offers serious cachet for collectors of coachbuilt post-war sports cars, Aston Martin enthusiasts, or Ghia devotees. The car is the only example built on an Aston Martin chassis, endowing it with completely unique physical dimensions and design characteristics. Certain to continue to command respect on the world’s finest show fields, and worthy of exhibit in museums, this remarkable car will forever hold fascination as the final chapter of the Supersonic legend, and it claims connections to such iconic figures as Harry Schell and the Vanderbilt family. It is one of but a handful of one-off DB2/4 Mk II examples, and it promises to comfortably join the most pedigreed collections of first-class coachbuilt European sports cars.
Source: RM Auctions
Coachbuilder: Ghia
1933 Fiat 508S Balilla Spider (Ghia), 1947 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 Sport Cabriolet (Ghia), 1949 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 SS Coupe (Ghia), 1950 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 SS Supergioiello (Ghia), 1950 Ferrari 195 Inter (Ghia), 1951 Chrysler K-310 (Ghia), 1951 Plymouth XX-500 (Ghia), 1951 Talbot-Lago T.26 Record Coupe (Ghia), 1952 Chrysler C-200 (Ghia), 1952 Chrysler Special (Ghia), 1953 Abarth Fiat 1100 (Ghia), 1953 Alfa Romeo 1900 Sprint Supergioiello (Ghia), 1953 Alfa Romeo 1900 Supersonic Conrero (Ghia), 1953 Cadillac Coupe (Ghia), 1953 Chrysler D’Elegance (Ghia), 1953 Chrysler GS-1 Special (Ghia), 1953 Chrysler Thomas Special (Ghia), 1953 Cisitalia 505 DF (Ghia), 1953 Dodge Firearrow I (Ghia), 1953 Fiat 8V Boano Coupe (Ghia), 1953 Fiat 8V Supersonic Coupe (Ghia), 1954 Alfa Romeo 1900 CS Speciale (Ghia), 1954 Alfa Romeo 1900 SS (Ghia), 1954 Alfa Romeo 2000 Abarth (Ghia), 1954 Chrysler ST Special (Ghia), 1954 DeSoto Adventurer I (Ghia), 1954 Dodge Firearrow II (Ghia), 1954 Dodge Firearrow III (Ghia), 1954 Dodge Firebomb - Firearrow IV (Ghia), 1954 Jaguar XK120 Supersonic (Ghia), 1954 Plymouth Explorer Special (Ghia), 1954 Simca Convertible Special (Ghia), 1955 Alfa Romeo 1900 Supergioiello (Ghia), 1955 Chrysler Falcon (Ghia), 1955 Chrysler Flight Sweep I (Ghia), 1955 Chrysler Flight Sweep II (Ghia), 1955 Chrysler ST Special (Ghia), 1955 Chrysler ST Special Convertible (Ghia), 1955 DeSoto Adventurer II (Ghia), 1955 Ferrari 375 MM Coupe Speciale (Ghia), 1955 Ghia Gilda I, 1955 Jaguar XK140 (Ghia), 1955 Lincoln Futura (Ghia), 1955 Volkswagen Karmann Ghia (Ghia), 1956 Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 Chrysler Dart (Ghia), 1956 Chrysler Norseman (Ghia), 1956 Chrysler Special K300 (Ghia), 1956 Dual-Ghia Convertible (Ghia), 1956 Ferrari 410 Superamerica (Ghia), 1956 Mercedes-Benz 300 Berlina/Convertible (Ghia), 1956 Packard Predictor (Ghia), 1956 Plymouth Plainsman (Ghia), 1957 Chrysler 375 Coupe (Ghia), 1957 Chrysler Diablo (Ghia), 1957 Dual-Ghia Sport Coupe (Ghia), 1957 Fiat 1100 TV Coupe (Ghia), 1957 Fiat Jolly (Ghia), 1958 Dual-Ghia 400 (Ghia), 1958 Simca Special (Ghia), 1959 Ghia Selene, 1960 Chrysler Valiant (Ghia), 1960 Ghia Dragster IXG, 1960 Plymouth XNR (Ghia), 1961 Chrysler TurboFlite (Ghia), 1961 Dodge Flite-Wing (Ghia), 1961 Dual-Ghia L 6.4 (Ghia), 1961 Ghia Cart, 1961 Maserati 5000 GT (Ghia), 1961 Plymouth Asimmetrica (Ghia), 1961 Volvo P1800 (Ghia), 1962 Fiat 500 Ziba (Ghia), 1962 Ghia Selene II, 1962 Plymouth Valiant St. Regis (Ghia), 1963 Chrysler Turbine Car (Ghia), 1963 Ghia G230S, 1964 Chrysler V280 (Ghia), 1964 Ghia 1500 GT, 1964 Renault R8 Coupe (Ghia), 1965 Bugatti Type-101C (Ghia), 1965 DeTomaso Competizione 2000 (Ghia), 1965 DeTomaso Vallelunga (Ghia), 1966 DeTomaso Mangusta (Ghia), 1966 DeTomaso Mangusta Spyder (Ghia), 1966 DeTomaso Pampero (Ghia), 1966 Duesenberg Model D (Ghia), 1966 Fiat 850 Vanessa (Ghia), 1966 Ghia 450/SS, 1966 Isuzu 117 Sport (Ghia), 1966 Maserati Ghibli (Ghia), 1967 DeTomaso Rowan (Ghia), 1967 Iso S4 Fidia (Ghia), 1967 Oldsmobile Thor (Ghia), 1968 Ghia Serenissima, 1968 Maserati Ghibli Spider (Ghia), 1968 Maserati Simun (Ghia), 1969 DeTomaso Mustela (Ghia), 1969 Isuzu Bellett MX1600 (Ghia), 1969 Lancia Fulvia 1600 Competizione (Ghia), 1969 Lancia Marica (Ghia), 1970 DeTomaso Pantera (Ghia), 1970 Ghia City Car, 1971 DeTomaso 1600 Spider (Ghia), 1971 DeTomaso Deauville (Ghia), 1971 DeTomaso Zonda (Ghia), 1971 Ford GT-70 (Ghia), 1972 DeTomaso Longchamp (Ghia), 1973 DeTomaso Pantera II/Montella (Ghia), 1973 Ford Mustela II (Ghia), 1973 Lincoln Mark I (Ghia), 1974 Ford Coins (Ghia), 1975 Ford Flashback (Ghia), 1975 Ford Urban Car (Manx) (Ghia), 1976 Ford Corrida (Ghia), 1976 Ford Prima (Ghia), 1977 Ford Megastar (Ghia), 1978 Ford Fiesta Tuareg (Ghia), 1978 Ford Lucano (Ghia), 1978 Ford Megastar II (Ghia), 1978 Ford Microsport (Ghia), 1978 Ford Mustang III (Ghia), 1978 Ghia Action, 1978 Mercury XM (Ghia), 1979 Ford GTK (Ghia), 1979 Ford Navarre (Ghia), 1979 Ford Probe I (Ghia), 1980 Ford Granada Altair (Ghia), 1980 Ford Mustang RSX (Ghia), 1980 Ford Pockar (Ghia), 1981 AC ME3000 (Ghia), 1981 Ford Aerovan (Ghia), 1981 Ford Avant Garde (Ghia), 1981 Ford Cockpit (Ghia), 1981 Ford EXP-II (Ghia), 1981 Ford Shuttler (Ghia), 1981 Ford Super Gnat (Ghia), 1982 Ford Brezza (Ghia), 1982 Ford Quicksilver (Ghia), 1982 Ford Topaz (Ghia), 1982 Ghia Mini Max, 1983 Ford Barchetta (Ghia), 1983 Ford Trio (Ghia), 1984 Ford APV (Ghia), 1984 Ford Vignale Mustang (Ghia), 1984 Ford Vignale TSX-4 (Ghia), 1985 Ford Probe V (Ghia), 1985 Ford Urby (Ghia), 1986 Ford Vignale TSX-6 (Ghia), 1987 Ford HFX Aerostar (Ghia), 1987 Lincoln by Vignale (Ghia), 1989 Ford Saguaro (Ghia), 1989 Ford Via (Ghia), 1990 Ford Fiesta Bebop (Ghia), 1990 Ford Zag (Ghia), 1990 Ford Zig (Ghia), 1991 Ford Connecta (Ghia), 1992 Ford Focus (Ghia), 1993 Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale (Ghia), 1994 Ford Arioso (Ghia), 1996 Ford Alpe (Ghia), 1996 Ford Lynx (Ghia), 1996 Ford Saetta (Ghia), 1996 Ford Vivace (Ghia), 1996 Lincoln Sentinel (Ghia), 1998 Ford Touring Ka (Ghia), 2000 Ford Street Ka (Ghia), 2001 Ford Forty-Nine (Ghia)
Other Aston Martin
1939 Aston Martin Atom, 1953 Aston Martin DB 2/4 (Bertone), 1953 Aston Martin DB2/4 Drophead Coupe (Bertone), 1954 Aston Martin DB 2/4 (Vignale), 1954 Aston Martin DB2/4 Spider (Bertone), 1956 Aston Martin DB2/4 Mk II Supersonic (Ghia), 1956 Aston Martin DB2/4 Spyder (Touring), 1959 Aston Martin DB4 / DB5 / DB6, 1961 Aston Martin DB4 GT Jet (Bertone), 1961 Aston Martin DB4 GTZ (Zagato), 1961 Aston Martin Lagonda Rapide (Touring), 1966 Aston Martin DBSC (Touring), 1972 Aston Martin DBS V8 'Sotheby Special' (Ogle), 1980 Aston Martin Bulldog, 1986 Aston Martin Vantage (Zagato), 1993 Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale (Ghia), 1994 Aston Martin DB7, 1998 Aston Martin Project Vantage, 2001 Aston Martin 2020 (ItalDesign), 2002 Aston Martin DB7 (Zagato), 2003 Aston Martin AMV8, 2003 Aston Martin DB AR1 (Zagato), 2004 Aston Martin DB9 , 2004 Aston Martin Jet2 (Bertone), 2004 Aston Martin Vanquish Roadster (Zagato), 2006 Aston Martin Rapide, 2009 Aston Martin Cygnet, 2009 Aston Martin Lagonda, 2011 Aston Martin V12 (Zagato), 2013 Aston Martin CC100 Speedster, 2013 Aston Martin DB9 Spyder Centennial (Zagato), 2013 Aston Martin DBS Coupe Centennial (Zagato), 2013 Aston Martin Jet 2+2 (Bertone), 2014 Aston Martin Virage Shooting Brake (Zagato), 2015 Aston Martin DBX, 2016 Aston Martin Vanquish (Zagato), 2016 Aston Martin Vanquish Volante (Zagato), 2017 Aston Martin Vanquish Shooting Brake (Zagato), 2017 Aston Martin Vanquish Speedster (Zagato), 2018 Aston Martin Lagonda Vision, 2019 Aston Martin Lagonda All-Terrain, 2019 Aston Martin Vanquish Vision, 2020 Aston Martin DBS GT (Zagato), 2022 Aston Martin DBR22
Discuss this car
Author
E-mail
Add your comments