Bugatti Type 57SC Atalante 1937, França
Fotografia
THE BUGATTI
TYPE 57S
The first Type 57S debuted at the 1935 London
Motor Show bodied with dramatic fastback Aérolithe coachwork, a style which was
eventually refined into the Atlantic coupe. Eventually only 48 of the exclusive,
sophisticated, rapid, and beautifully constructed Type 57S Bugattis would be
built, of which only 17 were bodied with the beautiful, elegant, athletic
Atalante coupe style.
CHASSIS NUMBER 57551
Bugatti Type 57S, chassis no. 57551 with
engine no. 30S, was completed on 23 July 1937 with an Atalante body finished in
black with pigskin upholstery. The body configuration, with its low headlight
placement between the radiator and front fenders, was identical to the October
1937 Paris show car. It was delivered by the factory just a week later to its
first owner, Jean Lévy of Strasbourg, Deputy Administrator of the family owned
“Grands Moulins de Strasbourg,” a successful grain milling company established
by his father, which is still in business today.
Lévy used his Atalante until the beginning of
the war and transferred it to Maurice Weber, manager of the livestock feed
operation at the Grands Moulin, in 1941, presumably for safekeeping.
In 1946 the Atalante was sold by Weber,
ending up in the summer of 1947 with Pierre Pruvost in Bezons. A year later it
was acquired by a Paris owner and displayed at the 15 June 1949 concours in the
Bois de Boulogne, now sporting modification to the rear window, fenders, and
added chrome flashing, work which may have been carried out by Figoni et
Falaschi.
Chassis no. 57551 passed through a known
succession of owners in France before being brought to the U.S. in 1959 by
Colin Doane, a U.S. Air Force Officer. Doane drove it 3,000 miles over the next
two years, including a 500-mile trip from Boston to Watkins Glen.
In 1961, Doane sold the car into the fabled
collection of casino magnate William F. Harrah. While in the Harrah Collection
it received a comprehensive restoration with the chassis and running gear
restored by O.A. “Bunny” Phillips, including the installation of a replacement
engine block (originally numbered 15S) and correct gearbox, no. 357, and the
body in Harrah’s shops. The engine was upgraded to the most desirable Type 57SC
specification, with the addition of a late-production five-bladed supercharger.
Several aspects of the Atalante were returned to the original configuration,
including re-creating the original pair of small rear windows and removing some
of the chrome embellishments that had been added in France in the late forties.
Completed in 1976, it earned the ultimate accolade for quality, appearance,
design, and performance: Best of Show at the 26th Pebble Beach Concours
d’Elegance.
It was acquired during the disposition of the
Harrah Collection by Dr. Herbert Boyer and later was acquired from him by the
current owner, a distinguished private collector who continued to enjoy and
maintain it carefully, until consigning it to RM Auto Restoration in 2013 for a
complete restoration to modern concours standards.
The Harrah restoration had been well
maintained, thus the restoration team found the car to be in very good
condition. They were quite delighted to find much of the original body wood
intact, including the entire rear section, which was retained and is still
present in the car today. The result was returned to Pebble Beach and, now
exactly as it had first been delivered, was awarded Best in Class, a superb
honor. This was followed by Best of Show at both the Concours d’Elegance of
America and the Keeneland Concours in 2015.
It is one of the most beautiful, desirable,
and advanced of all Bugattis, with Jean Bugatti’s lean, sleek, aggressive
Atalante coachwork perfectly complemented by the low Type 57S surbaissé
chassis. One of four built in this style, it has a well-documented history from
new and is one of the most attractive, desirable, and best-performing of all
Bugatti road cars.
Fonte: https://rmsothebys.com/en/home/private-sales/r0019-1937-bugatti-type-57sc-atalante/713573
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