I think this Zagato effort is uglier. Based on a 330GTC http://www.rmauctions.com/FeatureCars.cfm?SaleCode=LF09&CarID=r102&fc=0
I did visit with Toly for awhile and he told me about his car. Very nice guy & more than willing to share his story. I guess hardly anyone paid him or the car too much attention that day. I guess this car was too rare for those of us around that day to know what it was about... I too thought the car an oddity at best. Kinda struck me as what the Daytona convertible would have looked like had Bertone handled the design (ala how their 308 GT4 came out looking...but then they always liked angular designs...) I would NOT turn it back into a Cali. It is too rare as it sits...besides, what would become of this exact body if it were pulled off for the chassis to be restored? It's now a piece of history. There was only one ever built, right? The original color was the blue & it was re-painted the dark grey, correct?
One Off By Anatoly Arutunoff Reviewed by Pete Vack 254 Pages, color and B&W illustrations, hardbound, 6.25 x 9.25 Beeman Jorgenson, Inc. Indianapolis, IN 2008 ISBN 0-929758-25-0 Anatoly Toly Armaisevich Arutunoff is not your average autobiographer any more than he is an average amateur race driver. There is nothing average about Toly and thats what makes One Offan often incoherent accumulation of anecdotesso compelling. The title could not be more fitting for Toly, like many of the weird cars he has owned, is himself a classic one-of-a-kind. So is his book. Arutunoff pontificates. Disclaimers. I first met Toly at the Walter Mitty at Road Atlanta maybe 25 years ago, where he was competing with his Lancia Appia Zagato. Somehow during the rain I got myself holed up with him in his van and listenedfor when one is with Toly that is what is donefor hours. Many years later I asked Toly to write a few pieces for VeloceToday, which he did, and I hope he continues to do so. And of course we will review his new book. So is the reviewer biased? Of course. Read on anyway. Make us describe One Off in one word and it would have to be funny or on first read even hilarious. His humor is original, unexpected and poignant but like all humor isolated by time, culture, geography, gender, interests and language itself. Otherwise merely amusing or puzzling anecdotes will provide huge belly laughs if you were born a white-middle-class male in the midsection of the U.S between 1930 and 1950 and loved cars and women. If not, all bets are off. Give us another word and it would be American. Born in Tulsa and raised in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, (about 50 miles north of Tulsa), Oklahoma, his parents were both from Russia, his mother an aristocrat and his father possessing an engineering genius that made the family wealthy (dad invented the submersible pump). Toly grew up to be as American as the two-tone Chevy Bel Air he drag raced on the flat, white highways of his home state. He drove Packards, Studebakers, motorbikes, (a single cylinder Powell flathead) and listened with fear when Johnny Law spoke to him from behind reflective RayBans. His is a uniquely American story told with fondness, a distinct feeling and unerring insights. I was born nostalgic, he wrote. A Masten Gregory look-alike when he had hair. Proust-like, no matter what the subject, Toly has some distant recollection which usually adds to the flavor of the particular story being related. One autumn afternoon in 1953, gray and cold, the late Eddie Turner, Helen Smith, Sydney Grant and I put the top down on my Lincoln and drove down to Tulsa. In the full flush of teenage energy, we saw The Robe, went shopping, saw Mogambo, and went to a football game that night. We beat Houston 17-14; now ask me to remember something important. As he travels the world he remains consistently and honestly born in the USA. He races in the Targa Florio, but never really leaves home. He meets English royalty but pines for the girl next door. The gangly boy with the Rusky name is the all American boy next door, as generous and smart and naive as Opie from Mayberry. Maybe more sexed; a good part of the book is a coming-of-age humorous homage to the many women in his life. You have been warned. His baptism into our way of life came as an accidental tourist at the 1957 Mille Miglia. Until that time he was comfortable being an Okie fom Bartlesville, albeit one with a good deal of inheritable money. Having money allowed Toly to live a life the vast majority of Opies could only dream of. After catching Portago on film in that last tragic Mille Miglia and deciding that road racing was the only way to go, the 18 year old Arutunoff went home and ordered up a brand new Jag XKSS no less! The factory fire at Coventry meant that he had to settle for a new Porsche Carrera Speedster. Oh yes, Ferraris too. Here he is in another Targa Florio with a SWB. Arutunoff takes us from his baptism to the creation of Hallett Motor Speedway near his beloved Bartlesville, but pays no attention to any kind of formal structure such as subject matter or timeframe (as Denise McCluggage wrote in her review, chronology [is] shattered like the flower burst of fireworks) but a guy who has earned two and a half college degrees either knows what works or doesnt. It works and somehow flows well, bringing the reader back to the pages to find out what craziness he is up to now. Partial to Italian cars (Abarths, Alfas, Ferraris, Lancias), Toly would race anything from a Studebaker Golden Hawk to a Bristol Zagato and everything in-between. His epic drive in a box-stock Lancia Flaminia Zagato in the Targa Florio is recounted in detail and reflected again years later as he drives the Lancia again in the Targa Florio Historic event. Toly laughs out loud and makes us laugh, too. He livedand livesthe life many of us dreamed. Who of us could not say, in the summer of 1967, Wouldnt it be neat to have enough money to buy a new Lamborghini Miura, and go race it? (He did.) Or to take off on whim and go to Europe to race in the last of the great road races? (Many times.) Some might see too much of ourselves in this book, for Toly was our hero when we were young. He raced the cars we longed to merely see, traveled the world and partied til dawn when we were homebound; he caught the girls we loved to chase and came out of it all with seemingly nary a scratch and with a sense of humor and humility. He had it all, except Cary Grant looks, but that didnt slow him down. Toly in the Lambo, probably one of the only times a Miura was used for racing. As Toly put it, I wrote the book fundamentally to let the youth (up to 40 years old) of today know how simple motorsports used to be and as such is not meant to be philosophical. Still and probably purely accidentally, Tolys lifestyle tugged at this reviewer causing a bit of introspection. I couldnt help asking myself, like Peggy Lee, Is that all there is? of both ourselves and our hero. Cool guy. Few like him left today. I think this book gives a great picture of Arutonoff, and by extension, why the Ferrari looks the way it does. Simply, the car (and the guy) is a classic. Absolutely should not be rebodied. If you want a Cal Spyder (or SWB), go buy one. This will never again be one. (all IMHO, of course)