(from Galpin Auto
Sports Press Release) LOST ED “BIG DADDY” ROTH ORBITRON SHOW
CAR RECOVERED IN MEXICO
Missing for nearly 35 years, “The Most Incredible Barn Find Ever” is
set to undergo a complete restoration and will join several other
“Big Daddy” Roth Creations in the Galpin Collection
VAN NUYS, Calif. – A lost artifact from the pinnacle of the Custom
era has been found, and what Hot Rod Magazine dubbed “the most
incredible barn find ever” is now in California for a complete and
faithful restoration. Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s Orbitron, a far-out
bubble-topped show car built in 1964 and lost shortly thereafter,
was recently uncovered in northern Mexico, serving as a makeshift
dumpster in front of an adult bookshop! Michael Lightbourn –
nicknamed “the West Texas Scout” for his ability to find abandoned
automotive treasures – spotted and rescued the fiberglass-bodied hot
rod, which is missing its original acrylic bubble top and front end
but is otherwise fairly complete, down to the original engine,
chrome Astro wheels and most of its bodywork.
Beau Boeckmann of Galpin Motors acquired the car shortly after its
recovery from Mexico, and plans to completely restore the car to its
original condition at Galpin Auto Sports (G.A.S.) with input from
Roth experts and employees that were part of the original build.
“Being a huge fan of Big Daddy Roth, it’s a great privilege and
honor, not only to own this car, but to bring it back to its former
glory,” Boeckmann says. “Our goal is to make sure this piece of
automotive history receives the accurate restoration it deserves.”
Once the car is restored to its former glory, Orbitron will join
other Ed Roth cars in the Galpin Collection, including the Rotar
(Roth Air Car) that was built in 1962 and actually hovered, the
Globe Hopper three wheeled custom, The Great Speckled Bird chopper,
as well as Roth’s daily driver Honda CVCC, which is covered in
pinstriping and paint from his days as a sign painter at Knott’s
Berry Farm. Other Galpin Kustom Kulture artifacts include a replica
of Grandpa Munster’s Dragula, a ’52 Lincoln Lido built by George
“King of the Kustomizers” Barris, Kenneth “Von Dutch” Howard’s 1970
Toad, hand-made Von Dutch art, tools and firearms, and an XK140
Jaguar that was customized by “the Da Vinci of the garage.”
Orbitron & It’s Creator
Ed “Big Daddy” Roth was
a founder of what later became known as the Kustom Kulture movement,
starting off his career as a painter and hot rod builder in the
1950s and eventually creating world-famous characters like Rat Fink
and wild show cars such as The Outlaw, The Beatnik Bandit, Mysterion,
and Rotar. Working the show car circuit in the 1960s, Roth promoted
his bubble-topped customs, sold airbrushed monster t-shirts and
promoted Revell model car kits based on his own designs and
creations. Over the years he worked with a variety of Kustom Kulture
icons, including Robert Williams, Ed “Newt” Newton (who drew the
initial Orbitron sketches fresh out of Pasadena’s Art Center School)
and Von Dutch when the two artists worked for the Brucker family’s
Movie World theme park in the 1970s.
As a result, the man nicknamed “Big Daddy” influenced nearly every
niche of the car hobby, from traditional hot rod and custom builders
to lowriders and Detroit designers. In fact, many credit Roth’s
drawings and show cars as a key influence on the resurgence of
“traditional” hot rods that have regained popularity today. Roth
passed away on April 4, 2001, but his use of bright hues, wild
bodywork, outrageous monikers and over-the-top promotion has turned
his original show cars into rolling art, and most have been snapped
up and restored as icons of a highpoint in automotive design and
expression. Roth’s cars and choppers are so famous in custom culture
circles, they rarely changed hands over the four decades since the
heyday of traveling custom car cavalcades and road shows.
Except for one. And this car wasn’t even considered one of his most
successful, at least not by Roth himself. Built in 1964, Orbitron
was designed to look like a slingshot dragster with “space age”
influences, as evidenced by the car’s raked stance and dragster
slick rear tires. The nose incorporated a strange
half-round/half-rectangular headlight housing that shone a white
headlight on the rectangular side, and a set of red, green, and blue
lights in the round side. In a play on the era’s latest electronic
invention, the lights were intended to function like television
tubes, which when illuminated together would create a strong white
light beam.
Other key characteristics included Roth’s signature acrylic bubble
top, flashy candy blue paint and an interior featuring fur carpeting
and an actual color television. Under hood was a midship-mounted
small-block Chevy engine wearing early finned Corvette valve covers
and three chromed Stromberg 97 carburetors, backed by a Powerglide
two-speed transmission. The asymmetric fiberglass and plywood body
rode on a ’56 Chevy rear end and an early Ford dropped axle. Buick
finned drums and early Ford brakes sat inside Astro slotted chrome
wheels wearing single-groove Inglewood whitewall cheater slicks and
Cal Custom fake knockoff caps.
Roth always regretted covering the engine: The fiberglass hood was
raw inside, so it was kept closed, and the chromed and painted
engine was never displayed. He also blamed the Beatles for the
“failure” of the Orbitron saying, “the Beatles appeared on The Ed
Sullivan Show and all model sales stopped. Guys got guitars instead
o’ cars.”
The Orbitron was recently showcased in the book Ed “Big Daddy” Roth:
His Life, Times, Cars and Art, by Pat Ganahl, including photography
originally shot for a 1964 Car Craft Magazine cover feature. Ganahl
describes the rise and fall of this iconic car, from its quick
creation through its lengthy disappearance, as well as fully
documenting the mythos of “Big Daddy” with dozens of stunning full
color photographs.
Originally Roth sold the
car to fellow custom car builder and bubble-top king Darrell
Starbird, who planned to use Orbitron in his own travelling car
show. At this point the history starts to get a bit hazier – and
crazier. According to Ganahl, after Starbird eventually sold the car
it ended up in El Paso, Texas, where it changed hands a few times
and may have been acquired by a lawyer that obtained it “in criminal
case.” Stories vary about how the nose and bubble were removed. One
version claims that the snout was removed to make the car look more
like a T-Bucket roadster, another is that the nose was accidentally
torn off when the owner attempted to tow the car by its bodywork. At
one point it was driven daily by a high school student, who
purportedly got trapped in the car on a hot summer day, forcing him
to kick the bubble off.
All that is known for certain is that eventually two Mexican
businessmen bought the car to use in a carnival, and it stayed South
of the border for the next three decades. Eventually, the car ended
up in Juarez, Mexico parked in front of a sex shop and being used as
a dumpster. It remained there untouched until Lightbourn managed to
strike a deal with the owner and proceeded to drag it back to the
U.S. as customs agents laughed at the old jalopy on the trailer.
Ganahl’s story leaves off after the derelict car was brought back to
Texas. Soon after, however, Galpin Auto Sports (G.A.S.) President
Beau Boeckmann (through Roth friend and show promoter Moldy Marvin)
contacted Lightbourn and made arrangements to acquire the car and
bring it to Galpin for restoration. The G.A.S. crew is currently
researching the car’s original configuration and collecting parts as
it begins the restoration process. The nosepiece, hood and bubble
are missing, as is most of the interior trim. The original paint has
been covered in black primer, but the chassis appears almost
entirely intact. Once restored, the car will be publicly unveiled in
a ceremony showcasing Roth’s original creativity and raw talent.
Galpin Auto Sports, located at 15600 Roscoe Blvd. in Van Nuys offers
customizing and personalizing services on all new and pre-owned
vehicles including collector and classic cars and is the official
garage for MTV’s Pimp My Ride. For more information on Galpin Auto
Sports’ unique products and services, please contact G.A.S. General
Manager, Steve McCord (smccord@galpin.com), at (877)-GO-GAS-GO or
visit the website at
www.galpinautosports.com
Galpin Motors, the world’s largest volume Ford dealership for the
18th consecutive year was founded in 1946 and is headquartered in
Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley. Galpin is comprised of a family of
quality automobile brands including Ford, Aston Martin, Jaguar,
Honda, Lincoln, Mercury, Mazda, Saturn and Volvo. For additional
information on Galpin Motors contact Marketing Manager Jeff Skobin,
818-778-2540/ jeff@galpin.com, visit the dealer showrooms at 15500
and 15505 Roscoe Blvd. or visit the company website at
www.galpin.com