In celebration of Enzo Ferrari's birthday (il Commedatore would be 118 if he were alive today), a new exhibition will be unveiled at the Enzo Ferrari Museum in the Ferrari capital of Modena. The theme of the new exhibition is titled ' Red Carpet and as per the name, it is a tribute to Ferrari on the silver screen and Hollywood.
Those that are lucky enough to make a pilgrimage to Modena and visit the museum will get to a chance to view these famous Ferrari that had major parts in film and television.
PRESS RELEASE
Red Carpet: Ferrari’s homage to Hollywood and beyond:
A new exhibition is unveiled at Modena’s Enzo Ferrari Museum
Modena, February 18th 2016 — To celebrate Enzo Ferrari’s birthday, a new exhibition will be unveiled at the Museo Enzo Ferrari in Modena entitled “Red Carpet”. As the name suggests, the exhibit is a tribute to Ferrari’s role on the Silver Screen and beyond.
This exhibition brings together the models used on screen with clips of them in action in an homage of sorts to the world of film and television which was so quick to spot their star quality and give them their moment in the spotlight: from the famous Magnum P.I. 308 GTSs to the Miami Vice Testarossa, the 512S (above) used in Le Mans and the 375 America (below) driven by Sofia Loren in Boy on a Dolphin.
But Ferraris relationship to Hollywood is not limited to its role in the films themselves. Many actors and actresses are or were devoted Ferrari owners also. Paul Newman, for instance, even competed a 365 GTB4 in legendary races such as the 24 Hours of Daytona while Steve McQueen owned a whole slew of Ferraris now much sought-after by collectors. Marilyn Monroe adored Ferraris too – the white 250 GT Cabriolet Pininfarina featured in this exhibition was one of her favourites, in fact. Peter Sellers, Nicholas Cage and many other famous faces besides also fell under the Prancing Horse spell.
Like any exhibition, this one has taken a little artistic licence to include the F430 Schumacher voiced in Cars, complete with big cartoon eyes. We also picked the Thomassima, an American-style Ferrari sculpted by designer Tom Mead on 250 GT running gear, to symbolise the many Maranello cars that have appeared on screen in disguise, not least in the Fellini-directed segment of Histoires Extraordinaires, The Racers and The Love Bug.
On a racing tack, movies of the likes of Grand Prix, Le Mans and, more recently, Rush are the reason why we’ve featured a contemporary Formula 1 car as the symbol of the event. Because Ferrari would never have existed without the track.
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