Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
ROLLS-ROYCE BLACK BADGE: BORN FROM HERITAGE
Mon Oct 18 14:46:00 CEST 2021 Press Release
The desire for self-expression is fundamental to the human condition. It is one of the principal reasons clients are drawn to Rolls-Royce, which offers matchless opportunities to push boundaries, redefine what’s possible and challenge established convention. Our Black Badge series of motor cars captures this spirit in extremis.
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Author.
Andrew Ball
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
This article in other PressClubs
- Rolls-Royce reflects on commissions from highly prominent clients
- Three rebellious motor cars spanning four decades of marque's 117-year history
- Disruptive clients have embraced Rolls-Royce's near-limitless Bespoke possibilities
- Finished entirely in black, each car presents distinct application
of powerful colour
“From its very earliest days, Rolls-Royce has attracted free
spirits, creative minds and those who seek to challenge established
conventions. Though from entirely different backgrounds, our
founders both refused to be bound by the norms and expectations of
early 20th Century society. It was their courage, vision and
willingness to push boundaries that made them who they were – and
our company what it is today.
These wonderful historic cars are perfect examples of how that
rebellious spirit infuses our brand story, and continues in the
modern era with our Black Badge products
.”
Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce
Motor Cars
INTRODUCTION
The desire for self-expression is fundamental to the human
condition. It is one of the principal reasons clients are drawn to
Rolls-Royce, which offers matchless opportunities to push boundaries,
redefine what’s possible and challenge established convention.
Our Black Badge series of motor cars captures this spirit in
extremis. And today, we look at how individualism, iconoclasm
and even outright rebellion pervaded the marque’s history from its
inception and continues to inform the unique offer Rolls‑Royce extends
to its contemporary clients.
Although their backgrounds could hardly have been more
different, the company’s founders both successfully challenged norms
and conventions that might otherwise have bound them to unthinkable mediocrity.
Henry Royce overcame poverty, deprivation and a lack of formal
education to become a world-class engineer who created ‘the best cars
in the world’, eventually being ennobled for his achievements.
Cambridge-educated The Hon. Charles Stewart Rolls was born an
aristocrat: he could have chosen a life of ease, indolence and
privilege, but opted instead for the grease, grime and frequent peril
of early motor-racing and aviation, becoming a leading pioneer in both fields.
Today, we would call them ‘disruptors’ – outliers, visionaries
and subversives who shape the world by doing things in ways no one
else ever dreams – or dares – to try. No wonder then, that the marque
has always proved so beguiling to others who share their rebellious nature.
The Black Badge family of Rolls-Royce motor cars, launched in
2016, is the ultimate expression of this spirit of individualism,
self-expression, creativity and iconoclasm. And while clients have a
virtually unlimited choice of exterior finishes, one colour above all
still consistently exerts a special fascination and powerful allure
when applied to our motor cars – just as it has throughout the
marque’s long history. Black.
The colour black has long been associated with power, strength
and authority. It is intense and substantial. Black also speaks of
elegance and confidence.
Over the decades, there have been many notable examples of
bespoke Rolls-Royce motor cars finished in black. Each of the
following examples, spanning more than 30 years, has a unique place in
the marque’s history, and demonstrates how its owner took the
all-black theme in a unique and memorable direction.
1933 – Phantom II Continental (94MY)
In 1930, at the personal request of Henry Royce,
designer Ivan Evernden penned an experimental Phantom II Continental,
designated 26EX, designed specifically for long-distance Continental
touring. It had a short chassis and close-coupled four-seat saloon
body, with the two spare wheels mounted vertically behind the luggage
compartment for optimum weight distribution. The coachwork, erected
by Barker & Co, sat on a sub-frame designed to cope with sustained
high speeds and powerful braking forces.
On its first outing, Evernden and Don Carlos de Salamanca drove
the car to a concours d’elegance in Biarritz, where it won the Grand
Prix d’Honneur. Following this victory, Rolls‑Royce decided to launch
a ‘series’ model with the same mechanical attributes and overall
coachwork dimensions as 26EX, giving coachbuilders and owners scope to
accommodate their own taste in design.
The first such car, 94MY, built in 1933 for a Mr Samuel Coxhill,
has bodywork known as an ‘Owen Fixed Head Coupé’, a specialism of
London coachbuilder Gurney Nutting. The adjustable front bucket seats,
twin windscreen wipers and flush-fitting direction-indicators behind
the side windows were all unusual for the period and intended to make
long-distance Continental touring more relaxed.
Designer Ivan Evernden declared: “It is the criterion of a good
car that one can drive it the whole day long and at the end feel fresh
and relaxed enough to enjoy dinner”.
At that time, the vast majority of Rolls-Royce coachwork was
finished in either black, or shades of maroon or blue, so dark as to
almost seem black. 94MY was ordered in black with “special brown
leather, piped in light brown, carpets and headlining to tone, and
woodwork to be highly polished veneers”. Combining high performance
with superlative comfort and a unique personalised finish, if any
1930s Rolls-Royce could lay claim to embodying the spirit of today’s
Black Badge, it is this one.
1960 – Phantom V (5AT30)
The Phantom V was launched in 1959 to replace the
venerable Silver Wraith. A much larger car, it was intended primarily
for chauffeur-driven use, and all but a very few bodies were of
limousine design. Most were finished in black, and used either on
formal occasions, or for private use by members of the wealthy establishment.
One exception was 5AT30. Delivered in September 1960, its proud
owner was HRH The Duke of Gloucester, third son of King George V and
Queen Mary, and uncle to HM Queen Elizabeth II. The body was based on
coachbuilder James Young’s PV15 design, today regarded as among the
most elegant on the Phantom V chassis.
Although about as ‘establishment’ as it’s possible to be, His
Royal Highness clearly had strong ideas about what he wanted in
his Phantom V. His most obvious departure from the accepted
norm is the paint combination of matte black to the horizontal
surfaces and gloss black on the vertical planes.
Other Bespoke items include a much smaller-than-standard
backlight, large foglamps, door-mounted driving mirrors, sliding
shutters to the rear windows and two Stephane Grebel spotlights. The
front of the car is dominated by Lucas R100 headlamps, in place of the
usual faired-in headlights.
The Spirit of Ecstasy mascot, though supplied, was not fitted,
her place taken by the Duke’s own mascot of an eagle in flight. And
perhaps for the first time in the marque’s history, the chassis card
states that the car was supplied with ‘an umbrella in holder’ – a
standard feature on today’s Rolls-Royce motor cars.
On 30 January 1965, the Duke and Duchess were travelling home
from Sir Winston Churchill’s funeral when the car skidded off the road
and down a shallow embankment, turning over three times and landing on
its roof! None of the occupants suffered serious injury; and such was
the resilience of the James Young coachwork that 5AT30 was rebuilt and
continued to render sterling service to its owner for years to come.
1965 – Phantom V (5VD73)
In 1964, The Beatles stormed the world with A
Hard Day’s Night. In December, as a gift to himself, John
Lennon ordered a brand-new Rolls-Royce Phantom V from R. S. Mead of
Maidenhead. The specification was, as one might expect, highly
individual: he wanted the car not just to be black, but black
everywhere, inside and out, including all the brightwork that would
normally be finished in chromium plate or stainless steel.
The car, built by Mulliner Park Ward, was duly supplied with
all-black gloss paintwork, including the wheel discs and bumpers.
Only the iconic Pantheon grille and Spirit of Ecstasy mascot retained
their conventional chrome finish, at the marque's insistence.
It was also one of the first cars in Britain to have blacked-out
windows, made from darkened, reflective Triplex Deeplight glass, 3/16”
thick in the rear doors and 3/4” in the rear quarterlights, backlite
and division glass – but not, as one might suppose, solely for reasons
of privacy. “People think they’ve got black windows to hide. It’s
partly that, but it’s also for when you’re coming home late,” Lennon
told a Rolling Stone interviewer in 1965. “If it’s daylight
when you’re coming home, it’s still dark inside the car – you just
shut all the windows and you’re still in the club.”
The interior featured black Bedford cord cloth and black nylon
rugs in the rear compartment, and black leather in the front. There
were electrical aerials for a radio and a Perdio Portarma television
set, and a seven-piece set of black fitted luggage. Legend has it that
the car also had a record player, radio telephone, fridge, writing
table and red mood-lighting: this remains unproven, but could easily
have been later additions; likewise, a rear seat that, according to
many accounts, could be converted into a pull-out bed.
Such bold, imaginative and unconventional choices are, of
course, entirely consistent with Lennon's status as one of the 20th
Century's greatest cultural innovators. Quite apart from changing the
face of popular music forever, he's also credited with being among the
first non-athletes to wear trainers as footwear, away from sporting
grounds, much like the streetwear phenomenon that pervades the
catwalks and boardrooms of the 21st century. In a
photograph of the Fab Four taken in 1967, Lennon is wearing what
appears to be a pair of Adidas Stan Smith tennis shoes – still one of
the most desirable designs from 'the brand with three stripes' more
than half a century later.
Later, the car was repainted in a game-changing, vivid
psychedelic electric yellow, embellished with flowers, Romany scrolls
and signs of the zodiac. It is wholly unique, indelibly identified
with its owner and, in certain quarters, generated its share of
controversy – perhaps the perfect encapsulation of the Black Badge spirit.
That unquenchable spirit continues to be expressed in new and
dynamic ways through the ever-evolving Rolls-Royce Black Badge family.