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Mad_Aussie
27-04-2010, 10:24 AM
I've never really known much about James Dean, only that he was a ye olde actor who smashed his porsche. But here's a bit of an interesting read about the way the car kept killing people years after it killed Dean.


http://firefox.org/news/articles/1435/1/James-Dean-and-the-curse-of-the-Little-Bastard/Page1.html

There's shit all over the net about this too.

----

It was like a silver bullet: Shiny, fast and rare. James Dean's Porsche 550 Spyder was only one of 90 made. And on September 30, 1955, with Dean behind the wheel, the customized racing machine that he named Little Bastard proved to be just as deadly when it carried Dean into a collision that took the movie star's life.

Then, inexplicably, the wreckage went on to cause property damage, injury, and even death wherever it went, before disappearing altogether.

Dean acquired the Porsche 550 during filming of Rebel Without a Cause for use when he raced. The car was a temporary solution. He'd purchased a Lotus Mk. X, but it wouldn't be delivered in time for an upcoming race in Salinas that he planned to compete in. (A few months prior, he blew the engine out of a Porsche 356 Super Speedster while racing in Santa Monica.)

Immediately, Dean hired legendary car customizer George Barris, the “King of Kustomizers”, to work on the car. Barris is known for his design of the Batmobile for the 60's era Batman TV show. The customizer painted Dean's racing number 130 on the front, sides and back. Along with red racing stripes and the name Little Bastard on the back. The car's name had been taken from a nickname that Dean had been given while filming the move Giant.

Though Dean had been contractually unable to race while filming Giant, once he had finished the movie, he started making plans to race again.

And while the actor was excited to show off his newest race car, his friends weren't happy about the purchase. In the time leading up to Dean's death, friends of the actor - including Barris, Eartha Kitt and Dean's former girlfriend Ursula Andress - said that they felt that the vehicle had a malevolent presence about it.

“James, I don't like this car; it's going to kill you,” Kitt is reported to have said to Dean while the two were out for a drive the week before Dean's crash.

Around the same time, Dean introduced himself to Alec Guinness and asked the actor's opinion of the car. Upon seeing it, Guinness stated that the car was sinister, and said that if Dean got in it, he would be dead within the week.

Perhaps Dean himself sensed that he was headed for destruction. Prior to his death, he gave away a kitten that Liz Taylor gave to him on the set of Giant. His reasoning for doing so was that “some day I may go out and not come back.”

And while filming a commercial for the National Safety Council, Dean ad-libbed the words of the script from “Please Drive Safely. The life you save may your own,” to “The life you save may be mine.”

The anticipated road race was to take place on October 1. On September 30, Dean and his entourage consisting of his mechanic Rolf Wütherich and stunt driver Bill Hickman, both of whom would serve as Dean's racing crew. Also traveling with the group was Life magazine photographer Stanford Rolf, who planned on doing a photo story of Dean at the races.

Dean originally planned to trailer the Porsche behind his station wagon, but at the last minute decided to drive the car to the race in order to familiarize himself with it. Wütherich would ride with Dean while Hickman and Rolf would take the station wagon.

During one of the stops along the way, Hickman cautioned Dean to watch his speed (both drivers had already received tickets that day, Dean for going 10 miles over the speed limit. Since Hickman was pulling a trailer, his ticket was for 20 over.) Hickman cautioned that Dean was still getting used to the car. He said that Dean's silver Porsche was difficult to see, thanks to its low profile and silver color. He was concerned that it might blend too easily into the pavement.

At approximately 5:30, Dean was driving west on U.S. Route 466 near Cholame, California, when a 1950 black and white Ford Tudor cut across his path. The driver of the Ford was a college student named Donald Turnupseed, who was on the way home to visit his family. Turnupseed had been driving in the oncoming lane and was attempting to make a left-hand turn on to Highway 41.

The sun had just dipped below the nearby hills, and dusk was quickly falling. Just as Hickman predicted, Turnupseed failed to see Dean.

Though legends say that Dean was driving in excess of 100 miles per hour when his vehicle struck Turnupseed's, responding officers say that Dean was in all likelihood only driving 55 miles per hour when the accident happened. According to Wütherich, Dean's last words were: “That guy's gotta stop. . . He'll see us.”

Neither Dean nor Wütherich were wearing their seat belts a the time of the accident. The mechanic was thrown from the automobile, and suffered a broken jaw and leg. Dean remained trapped in the vehicle, which was crushed like a piece of used tinfoil. He was taken by ambulance to nearby Paso Robles War Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 5:59 PM. Cause of death: broken neck, multiple fractures of the upper and lower jaw, severe head trauma and massive internal bleeding.

What happened next fueled speculation that Dean's car was cursed, or at the very least, led a cursed afterlife.

Barris immediately paid $2,500 for the wreckage with the intent of parting it out. However, a string of bizarre tragedies immediately struck.


*

As soon as the vehicle was delivered to Barris' garage, it slipped off its trailer and broke a mechanic's leg.
*

Shortly thereafter, Barris sold the engine to Troy McHenry and the drive train to William Eschrid. Both were physicians and racing hobbyists. While racing at the Pomona fairgrounds on October 24, 1956, McHenry was killed when his vehicle spun out of control and crashed into a tree. Eschrid's race car rolled several times while taking a curve, seriously injuring him. He later said that the vehicle 'just locked up' on him.
*

Two tires that Barris sold malfunctioned simultaneously, causing the car they were on to go off the road.
*

A young man who was attempting to steal the steering wheel had his arm gashed open on a piece of jagged metal.
*

Another man was hurt while trying to steal one of the bloodstained seats.

At this point, Barris decided that the car would be safer in storage. But before long, the California Highway Patrol persuaded him to loan them the car for a traveling exhibition.


*

The mangled remains of Little Bastard were taken to a garage in Fresno, and stored there. Then, in March 1959, a fire broke out in the garage. The garage itself, and everything stored within, were incinerated. All except for the wreckage of James Dean's car.
*

Further tragedy followed. At a display at Sacramento High School on the anniversary of Dean's accident, the bolts holding the car in place snapped. The car plowed off its display and broke the hip of a fifteen-year-old boy who had been looking at the wreckage.
*

En route to Salinas, the truck hauling the vehicle lost control, causing the driver to fall out of the cab. Although the fall from the vehicle didn't kill him, the Porsche fell off the truck bed and landed on top of him, ending his life.
*

Reportedly, while being displayed in New Orleans, the wreckage spontaneously broke apart in five separate pieces.
*

The car came off of a truck two other times. Once while on a freeway, and a second time in Oregon.

In 1960, the car's tour ended. Barris had the vehicle loaded onto a box car in Florida and sealed shut. Then it was transported via train back to California. When the train arrived in L.A., the seal was still intact, yet the car had vanished, and has not been seen since.

So was the car cursed? Did it house a malevolent spirit that thirsted for blood? Or were the string of accidents that touched many who came near Little Bastard just bizarre coincidences?

While some folks believe that there is no curse. Others aren't so sure.

For one thing, many people believe that Dean would die young, no matter what. George Stephens, Dean's director on the movie Giant, told his co-star Liz Taylor that with the way Dean drove, it was no surprise to him that the actor died in a car crash.

It has also been speculated that Dean simply couldn't handle the Little Bastard. The car's specs were different from Dean's 356 Super Speedster. The 356 had a lower center of gravity. Additionally, the 550 had higher pivot angles, so it was easier to oversteer a turn and spin out. The 356 was easily the more forgiving of novice mistakes. In the days leading up to the crash, Little Bastard showed evidence of minor fender benders, including a busted signal light, and a dent on the right rear fender. This is partially why Dean chose to drive the Porsche rather than haul it to the race: to give himself time to learn the car's quirks. Some fans speculate that, had Dean made it to Salinas, he may have caused himself injury or death while racing.

Others aren't so sure.

Some fans have suggested that Dean himself was the one cursed. And the one who placed the curse? Maila Nurmi, who hosted horror films as television's Vampira. Supposedly Nurmi, who was connected with the occult, was upset when Dean broke off their friendship, and cursed him. Others say that Dean's own interest in the occult lead to the actor bringing a curse down on himself.

If Dean was cursed, some fans speculate that the bad luck may have extended to most of his close friends. Rebel Without a Cause costars Natalie Wood, Sal Mineo and Nick Adams, who Dean once called his only true friends, also died under tragic circumstances. Wütherich, who survived the crash, went on to die in a motor vehicle accident in Germany.

Perhaps all of this is coincidence. Perhaps, as skeptics say, the idea of a curse is simply wishful thinking and our own need to venerate stars like Dean who live fast and die young and pretty. Perhaps the highly-charged atmosphere surrounding the well-publicized accident imbued the wreckage with a residual imprint that continued to follow it. Or perhaps the car was just evil.

In any case, the Little Bastard has not been seen since its disappearance in 1960. Rewards for its return, no questions asked, were posted on the 50th anniversary of Dean's death; however no one came forward to claim them. Unless the car is found, the answer may never be known.

TJ
27-04-2010, 11:09 AM
sppppoooooooooooooooooooky.

Pretty cool regardless.

Scaf
27-04-2010, 11:47 AM
Cool read. I love hearing about stuff like this.

Alt_F4
27-04-2010, 11:52 AM
The frogurt is also cursed.

[FFOUR]
27-04-2010, 12:09 PM
One of the recent issues of Evo recounted some of that aswell, they retraced his last drive in a Porsche Boxster Spyder.

wormbo2
27-04-2010, 12:55 PM
wonder WHERE it actually went. im not too superstitious, so there's Bound to be a scientific explanation!?
cue scientific vs. superstitious poll?

Brockas
27-04-2010, 01:17 PM
The frogurt is also cursed.

LOLLLLLLLLLLL

Just made me burst out laughing.

Gypsy - "Take this object, but beware, it carries a terrible curse"
Homer - "Ooo, that's bad"
Gypsy - "But it comes with a free frogurt!"
Homer - "That's good"
Gypsy - "The frogurt is also cursed"
Homer - "That's bad"
Gypsy - "But you get your choice of toppings!"
Homer - "That's good"
Gypsy - "The toppings contain potassium benzoate..... That's bad"
Homer - "Can I go now?"

gav_wah
27-04-2010, 02:22 PM
Made a good episode on supernatural where some guy bought jimmy deans car and it killed him same episode had paris hilton beheaded.

millzy_88
27-04-2010, 03:07 PM
I love a good story that cant be explained. Not that im superstitious, but little bastard really did seem to be cursed.

Lump
27-04-2010, 06:15 PM
yes the core of the story is true but a curse, lol c'mon..

would like to see some references to back up alot of these claims.

you would think at the very least there would be names of the people listed that had been injured or killed..


wiki says Dean jeffiries painted the name & number on the car not Barris - and provides a reference to a motortrend magazine article.


& selling 2 tires off the wreck seems very strange as well.

http://www.car-accidents.com/2007-crash-pics/james-dean-car-crash-07.jpg

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/specials/images/1116_famousroaddeath/2134811_dean_300.jpg

the 'curse' is summarised in wiki pretty much exactly as stated above by the author & wiki has this to say on it.

While it has proven impossible thus far to confirm or deny all the claims in this legend, it suffers from several clear factual errors. Barris was not the initial purchaser of the wrecked 550. Rather the doctors Troy McHenry and William Eschrid, both 550 Spyder owners, purchased the car directly from the insurance company. They removed the drivetrain, steering and other mechanical components to uses as spares in their cars, then sold the shell to George Barris.[57] William Eschrid used the engine in his Lotus race car.[58] Troy McHenry was killed at a race at Pomona 1956 when the Pitman arm in his 550's steering failed, however this was not one of the "cursed" parts fitted to his 550.

Historic Auto Attractions in Roscoe, Illinois has claimed to have the last known piece of Dean's Spyder (a small chunk a few square inches in size). However this is untrue, as several other large parts are known to exist. The passenger door was on display at the Volo Auto Museum.[59] The engine (#90059) is reported to still be in the possession of the son of the late Dr. Eschrich. Lastly the restored transaxle–gearbox assembly of the Porsche (#10046) is known to be in the possession of car collector Jack Styles.[60]

btw if anyone didnt know im guessing 'little bandit' from simpsons is a pisstake on 'little barstard'. :)

DRKWRX
27-04-2010, 06:46 PM
I Believe everything I read on the internet!

Brett_J
27-04-2010, 06:51 PM
I remember my teacher reading this to us Kids in primary school, she had some weird facts book and we'd get a new story every day, not that we knew who he was back then, but it was cool to hear.
This was back in 88, so DRKWRX you fail.

DRKWRX
27-04-2010, 07:24 PM
yeah and Lepracauns and big foot are real too man, cos someone told you! you have people on here who believe man didnt land on the moon but im a fool for not believing in this bs.

Brett_J
27-04-2010, 07:36 PM
yeah and Lepracauns and big foot are real too man, cos someone told you! you have people on here who believe man didnt land on the moon but im a fool for not believing in this bs.

Wasn't implying it was real or not, was referring to the "read it on the internet, must be true" part.
I guess as long as there is going to be debatable content around, there is always going to be "just because you read it in the Newspaper/magazine/ on the Internet, doesn't make it real" types there to bring us all back to reality. Possibly the same reality that we read about in the Newspaper.magazine/internet...

ossie_21
27-04-2010, 08:45 PM
All seems pretty spooky, but can as easily just be coincidences or made up/bending the truth. First read about this to find out more about the guy when I found out it was him on the big picture in the spare room haha

ho57ile
27-04-2010, 09:11 PM
Pics or it didn't happen.

JBAE
27-04-2010, 09:28 PM
in the bottom PIC that 405ATW posted looks like a guys face in the guy in the darker shirts right leg

Alt_F4
27-04-2010, 09:45 PM
in the bottom PIC that 405ATW posted looks like a guys face in the guy in the darker shirts right leg
Looks like James Deans head, now that's creepy.

Lump
27-04-2010, 09:48 PM
yeah i think its just some dude lying down, maybe digging something out or attaching a towline
also that bottom foto seems to be 'opposite hand' to the correct top one