To allow newer readers to become familiar with Tom Meade and his involvement with Ferraris, what follows is a transcription of a past article: Tom Meade --Artist and Craftsman Tom Meade was born in Hollywood and raised in Australia and Hawaii. At a very young age he developed a passion for beautiful cars. In 1960, after a four year hitch in the Navy, he returned to Newport Beach, California, where he stumbled upon a Ferrari Testa Rossa. He coveted the car, even though it was priced far beyond his reach --at $4000. The owner of the car told him about a warehouse in Rome full of used race cars that were being sold for a song. That was it. Meade packed a tennis bag, and with only $50 in his pocket, hitchhiked his way to Rome. He combed the city for the famous warehouse, which of course turned out to be a myth, just like the streets paved with pizza. He heard about a Ferrari being used on a Dino di Laurentis movie, but by the time he arrived at the set it was gone. However, he was offered the part of a British army officer in the film, and was cast opposite David Niven. The months of nighttime shooting left his days free for car hunting, but the results were still zero. After the film wrapped, Tom ventured to Modena, Italy, home of Maserati --and Mr. Ferrari. While on a tour of the Maserati plant, he spotted a beautiful shape covered by a tarp. He asked the guide what it was, and was told, "scrap." but Meade pulled up the cover and discovered the remains of the prototype 350S V-12 built for Stirling Moss to drive in the 1957 Mille Miglia. After much begging and negotiation, the car was his... for a mere $420! With only nickels left, he found a friendly farmer who let him keep the car in the barn with the cows. Tom slept in the hayloft, ate off the land, and immediately went to work rebuilding the car. He made a daily trips to the Maserati factory to root out parts and eventually was given free run of the racing department. When the car was finished, he shipped it back to the States and hitchhiked his way home again. Back in America, he sold the car $2,700 --a huge profit for the time. With the proceeds from his big sale, Meade returned to Modena, rented an apartment for $8 a month, and began brokering Ferraris, Maseratis, Lamborghinis, and Bizzarinis. He was the only American broker in Italy at the time, and became the go to guy for foreigners seeking Italian sports cars. His business began to grow, and he wanted to begin creating custom coachwork, so he moved his operations to a large warehouse, and his business continued to flourish. Eventually he was selling many cars a month, with a large and well-equipped shop staffed by skilled craftsmen, many moonlighting from their day jobs at Ferrari or Maserati. In 1962, Meade named his first custom-bodied car, built on a Ferrari 250 GT chassis, Thomassima 1, which in Italian means the maximum from Thomas. It was unfortunately lost in the floods of Florence. The first of his famous Nembo Spyders came in the mid 1960s, also built on a Ferrari 250 GT chassis. In 1967 he built Thomassima 2, a truly beautiful creation. In 1969 he built the third and final Nembo Spyder, S/N 2707, built as a lightweight competizione street version. A Lebanese Ferrari dealer out of Paris commissioned the car. The dealer took the car to Beirut and both he and the car have never been heard of since. Also in 1969 came the Thomassima 3, which created a sensation when exhibited at Italys automobile manufacturers show in Turin, the most important and prestigious event of its kind in Europe. It was necessary to move the surrounding exhibits further back, to make room for the dense crowds surrounding Meades creation. The resulting worldwide publicity included his life story on 60 Minutes and a talk show appearance with Walter Cronkite and Roger Mudd. Mattel manufactures Thomassima 3 as one of its Hot Wheels collection. Feature articles followed in Road and Track and Motor Trend magazines. As a result of the acclaim over Meades bold styling and beautiful designs some customers brought their production Ferraris to Meade and asked him to modify them into something unique and even more beautiful. Sometimes Meade fully re-bodied them, and other times he only modified parts of their factory original bodies, such as the 250 GT/L Lusso Speciale, offered here at Monterey, which he customized with covered headlights. Meade living in California now, recalled in a recent interview that these semi-customs gave him a great satisfaction because they allowed him to add his personal touch to some of the great designs of the period. While he did not keep records, he believes his total lifetime production of modified and custom bodied Ferraris and Maseratis is less than 50 cars, making them exceptionally rare today. Praise for his work was abundant in the period, and his cars are increasingly sought after by modern collectors.
We have had an on again off again thread on Tom in the "Other Italian" section of Ferrarichat.com http://www.ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=16451 Interviewing Tom in 1996 for my article on him and many subsequent conversations, sometimes lasting over an hour(!) was and is always a pleasure. best regards, Marc
VisualHomage, Tom and I are part of a group of people who gather every Wednesday night in Westwood Village for coffee/pastry/dinner and conversation with like-minded folks from the Ferrari/Hollywood/finance domains. Never a dull moment!
No need to be uptight. Many participants do not own one either. It is a far more relaxed, loose gathering than you think. Very hospitable. w/ smiles Jimmy
I last saw one of his cars, a candy apple coupe with gullwing doors (275?) at a shop called Metalcrafters in Newport Beach. They later moved to Fountain Valley. They make prototypes for Detroit automakers. I don't know if the car was on loan to them or owned by one of them. The late Tony Carlini, an exec. there, used to dally in buying & selling exotics, among them the one off Miura targa
Come by and say hello to Tom and some other very interesting people any Wednesday evening from about 7 pm. Here is the location: Elysee Bakery 1099 Gayley Ave. LA 90024 2 blocks east of the 405, 2 blocks north of Wilshire Blvd.
Was at the Elysee Bakery last sunday with another French Ferrari friend living in LA who owns # 0841GT and a nicely restored 250 PF cab. We had Chinese diner with Tom before that and I am please to confirm that the 3 of us had a very nice evening.
Hope U R well. Where is Thomassima III today? Last I saw it it was at his Mom's a bit dented up from shipping damage.
I'm doing fine, thanks. Steve answered you already. I think that Tom has other priorities than playing with his toy at the moment, as he is very busy with another project. Big secret!
I do so agree! Compared to Tom Meade, Howard Hughes in his later years was an absolute gadfly. Tom once commented to me that it surprised him manufacturers hadn't sought him out for design authoring. My response was, "How in the world do you know they didn't because they would have had no way in Hell of finding you." He laughed at this for about twenty minutes.
I have a fun memory of going out to either Milan or Turin to visit Tom around 1990 to discuss him designing a special body/bodies for us to build in UK on 250GTE or 330GT chassis, maybe to make a series. Nothing came of it as the price crash intervened, but we ate fabulous pasta, and drank bottles of red, followed by other full-on recreational activity till about 6am, and then almost missed the flight back as the clocks had unexpectedly gone forward that night. We went and saw some of his spare parts stash in a cellar somewhere which I think included a 275 4cam & SWB engine. Forza Tom! Will
Gosh, Jim...I certainly wish I had the "depth and broadness" to refer to it as Puppy ! w/ smiles Jimmy
Last (and only) time I saw it, was on the cover of Road & Track, circa 1970? Have there been any more recent pictures of it posted (anywhere) on the internet? I was about fifteen (15) then, and didn't know too much about sex, but I knew that car had it!
I've enjoyed similar experiences with him that involved Il Rigolo restaurant with Pig, his Belgian shepherd, under the table and the Arena Hotel where most of the models visiting Milano seemed to stay. I believe he still has that engine, or another just like it.
Richard Merritt had memories of riding in Tom's mini in Modena in the back seat next to pig and feeling just a little crowded
...so you can imagine what conditions must have been like when Tom got involved in a police chase with Pig and Tom's mechanic as passengers in a...Dino!
Hairy?! Hope you are well. The book on the croissant charriot is at long last nearing printing time.... best regards to you and Tom, Marc
-pictured below top: Tom Meade (left) shakes hands with Enzo Ferrari (right) as Enzo hands Tom his personal contact information after a 40-minute conversation at the Modena Autodromo Race Track (now defunct). -pictured below bottom: Thomassima II with P/4 Can Am cars, being tested the same day, seen in background on trailer. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
A Slice of Life, An Altered State: An Afternoon with Tom Meade By Chad Glass Having arranged a meeting today for conversation and coffee, I sped down Sunset Boulevard in Westwood, pretending I was in a Ferrari. The drive en route to have a second meeting with Tom Meade, whom I had been introduced to the prior Wednesday evening, became an exotic trip without having to leave town. It was sunny and mild as I downshifted through sweeping s-curves and hills. Tighter and turning, I could feel the front end gripping with the steering input; not bad for my modified Nissan, and enough to have me fantasizing about brief snapshots of a race I was never in, of memories I never had. What was real was the journey to visit someone who not only had Enzo Ferrari himself provide his personal contact information to (and talk for 40 minutes with Tom an unheard of event for nearly anyone in the worldto speak with Enzo for one or two seconds is a long time), but pay a visit to a man who perhaps outdid much of that marques iconic styling in its vintage heyday of the 1960s. Included in the pantheon of Italian coachbuilders of Pininfarina, Giugiaro, Bertone, Ghia, Vignale, Zagato, etc... the American born Tom Meade defies tradition, being perhaps more Italian than all the prior mentioned. Goggle the word Thomassima (Toe-MASS-ee-mah), and read about his rise to notoriety. As for me, being a storyboard artist in the Hollywood industry, I was excited to be meeting a car designer, and yet more amazed to be meeting someone who had rebodied and redesigned Ferraris specifically. As I have grown more interested in Italian automotive design, while dabbling in trying out some sketched designs of my own, I was eager to have Meade look at what I had drawn, but more interested in experiencing what this man had to say in general. Being a student of the world, I tend to absorb things that are interesting with free abandon. To be given an opportunity to learn something --anything-- from someone such as Meade, is a privilege and honor. Yet I choose to take it all in fun. Whatever we would discuss I already knew would be interesting. It would be because its about cars, extraordinary cars. Between gear shifts while looking down at my directions, creeping down the last street, I neared his residence and pulled off to park in the shade. His residence is designated as a whole number and a half, like 367 ½. So even though I am actively looking for a half-number, walking around the premises, I become challenged to find the front door. The half number somehow doesnt make itself very obvious. I eventually find it by calling his phone number and listening for the ringing. It works as I find myself standing on the landing of a unit one floor up and across from his. Upon arrival and greeting, Tom wants to go back to the corner coffee shop where we had first met. I sense and get the idea that this is the main rendezvous for future meetings. Coffee sounds great and I find that is but a short drive from his place. As we make our way through some back streets, I voice that to Tom: I see, this is some kind of back way; I can see were near it already. Yes, just like in Modena, I know all of the back ways to places, he says as we approach nearer. Arriving shortly, he suggests an ideal place to park, a sort of secret spot. He is correct and this makes everything flow very nicely, like the lines on a Ferrari. And finding a table outside on the sidewalk, among the din of the traffic and the people, he plunks down a thick book for me to see, what appears to be a collage of pictures and articles memory lane for him, an expose of his life for me. Straight away I open the thing as he begins to describe what I was looking at: Black and white pictures, all crisp and vivid, then color, abound. Very nice, and they all look like Ferraris to me, beautiful ones from the 60s and early 70s, but something strikes me: Theyre almost Ferraris. I see familiar cues making me want to say what model that one is, what this one is, to show him I know about Ferraris, and .. I cant place any of them. Theyre not Pininfarina or Bertone designs. Theyre his. But they look like factory production cars. Thats a Nembo Spider, he says. Wow, I say, that is just gorgeous, the best spider version of a Ferrari Ive ever seen. I could stare at it for the duration of our time together, but other pictures await. Page after page I have the same kind of reaction. The different models of cars are all equally as compelling to see, somehow looking a little better than the factory cars. Theyre at least models that Ferrari should have built. stay tuned for next week's installment