Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fun, fun, fun: Alberta premier takes the T-bird away at U.S. auction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2015 10:31 AM

    EDMONTON — It was fun, fun, fun for Alberta Premier Jim Prentice on the weekend when he took the T-bird away at a vintage car auction in Arizona.

    "This is the first collectors' car I've ever purchased," said Prentice in an interview Monday.

    "It was a car I remember from my youth. I remember being in one. And I just think they are one of the most beautiful cars that was produced in that era."

    The premier purchased the iconic American automobile for US$59,400, or about C$71,000 — a price that included the auctioneer's commission at the Barrett-Jackson auction in Scottsdale.

    Prentice said he had wanted to buy a first generation T-bird for a decade and had been actively shopping for four years.

    He said his first love is Detroit-made cars from the 1950s and '60s, which he considers the high point of the North American auto industry. He has a Ford sign in his garage.

    "The cars that they produced were pretty extraordinary pieces of history, pieces of art in lots of ways," he said.

    He said he also wanted a 1956 model to match the year he was born.

    Prentice's purchase is colonial white with a dark-blue peacock interior, and comes with power seats, power windows, power steering, and a three-speed automatic transmission.

    The two-door T-Birds first rolled off the line in 1955, vastly outselling their main sports car rival, the Chevrolet Corvette.

    The '56 version gained fame for its sleek lines, muted tail fins, eight-cylinder engine delivering about 225 horsepower along with the rear-mounted spare tire and porthole side windows.

    It has become a pop culture symbol, celebrated in the 1960s Beach Boys song about a young woman going cruising, the radio blaring and having "fun, fun, fun 'til her Daddy takes the T-Bird away."

    In "American Graffiti," George Lucas's 1973 nostalgic cinematic paean to lost innocence, bombshell blonde Suzanne Somers cruises one endless California night in a '56 T-bird, simultaneously driving Richard Dreyfuss' Curt character to hair-pulling paroxysms of unrequited passion.

    Prentice said he wasn't swayed by the Beach Boys song and didn't realize his car was in "American Graffiti" until his son-in-law sent him an email about it Monday.

    He also dismissed criticism, including from the opposition NDP spokesperson, regarding the optics of a premier buying vintage cars while simultaneously advising Albertans that belt-tightening is coming in times of low oil prices.

    "I saved for many years to buy this car," said Prentice.

    "My being in public life doesn't change me. I am who I am, and I enjoy the things I enjoy — simple things like hockey and cars."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
    TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Wife of injured Alberta Mountie says her husband will soon be in better place

    EDMONTON — The wife of an RCMP officer shot in the head at a casino north of Edmonton broke down Monday as she spoke of saying goodbye to her gravely injured husband.

    Wife of injured Alberta Mountie says her husband will soon be in better place

    Candlelight vigil held for 16-year-old Regina girl murdered last week

    Candlelight vigil held for 16-year-old Regina girl murdered last week
    REGINA — Members of a Regina community shaken by a teen homicide last week gathered on Monday to remember a girl described as having a kind soul.

    Candlelight vigil held for 16-year-old Regina girl murdered last week

    CP Rail to tap value of excess lands with property developer Dream Unlimited

    CP Rail to tap value of excess lands with property developer Dream Unlimited
    CALGARY — Canadian Pacific (TSX:CP) has chosen a partner to help the railway develop its surplus real estate, including sites in Chicago, Toronto, Montreal and Edmonton.

    CP Rail to tap value of excess lands with property developer Dream Unlimited

    Changes To Police Record-Check Policies Hopeful: B.C. Privacy Commissioner

    Changes To Police Record-Check Policies Hopeful: B.C. Privacy Commissioner
    In a critical report released last year, Elizabeth Denham said police record checks were revealing sensitive personal information beyond what was necessary for employment or volunteering.

    Changes To Police Record-Check Policies Hopeful: B.C. Privacy Commissioner

    Laid off Target workers face grim job prospects, labour experts say

    Laid off Target workers face grim job prospects, labour experts say
    TORONTO — Laid off retail workers, including more than 17,000 hit by Target's decision to pull out of Canada, face grim job prospects as they dust off their resumes and start looking for work, according to labour experts.

    Laid off Target workers face grim job prospects, labour experts say

    PrevNext