Don't Cry For the Owner of This Famous Cadillac

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

If you’re fabulously wealthy and have a thing for musicals, get thyself to the UK right now.

Bonhams auction house will be selling a 1951 Cadillac Fleetwood 75 Limousine at the March 20 Goodwood Members’ Meeting Sale, but this isn’t your average, run-of-the-mill Fleetwood 75 Limousine.

Oh, no. This Caddy was the presidential car for former First Lady of Argentina María Eva Duarte de Perón, also known as Evita (also known as the lady from that Madonna movie your girlfriend made you watch in the ’90s).

We don’t want to recite the plot of the world’s longest music video — memories could still be raw — but it’s important to know what you’re getting into when you pony up the 100,000 pounds needed for this Fleetwood ($144,710, according to an estimate by The Telegraph).

Evita (1919-1952) emerged from lower-class obscurity to become a celebrated actress, eventually marrying Argentine president Juan Perón and becoming a huge champion for women’s rights, the poor, and her not-squeaky-clean husband.

Summoning the voting power of the working class and the support of labor unions, Evita helped sweep Juan Perón into power in 1946, but the subsequent charity and outreach to the disadvantaged masked a power-hungry office that restricted liberties if it was convenient. Making your enemies political opponents and critics “go away” is a fine art that Perón excelled at.

Nothing lasts forever, as the saying goes, and Evita died of cervical cancer at the young age of 33 (but not before allegedly receiving a lobotomy requested by her husband). Her death removed the lid that had kept the growing opposition to her husband under control, and Juan Perón fled to Paraguay after being ousted by a civil and military uprising in 1955.

Holding power in South America has its dangers, but while the good times lasted, Ms. Perón and her husband no doubt enjoyed the effortless power of their car’s 331 cubic inch, overhead valve V8.

The lucky buyer of this famous Fleetwood will be able to wave to his or her adoring countrymen with ease, thanks to standard power windows, while the optional Hydramatic automatic transmission will make escaping from armed dissidents a smooth, shift-free affair.

Remember, nowadays Argentine leaders aren’t nearly as refined in public.

[Images: Cadillac, Press Bonhams; Evita, Buena Vista Pictures]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

More by Steph Willems

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 31 comments
  • IBx1 I had high hopes but forgot that people from Alabama live in Alabama
  • AZFelix Any chance of show casing a 4-door Sunfire of 2002 vintage, when they were still selling sedans?
  • Jalop1991 You do realize, you can get a $1 lease payment on any vehicle from any manufacturer, for any term.Just make a big enough "down payment". But hey, at least you have bragging rights, right?I keep seeing this insanity being marketed. "Polestar, only $399 month!" (with a huge "down payment"). Are people really this stupid?$7500 to enter into a lease just so you can say "but the payment is only $559!"??? Good God. And when some car full of Kia Boyz slams into you and totals it as you drive it off the lot, what then? The dealership will laugh at you as they count your $7500 and you stand there on the street looking like a fool.Why do people who lease, put any money down on a depreciating and very easily totalled asset like a car?
  • EngineerfromBaja_1990 A friend from college had its twin (2003 Cavalier 2dr) which fittingly re-named the Cacalier. No description needed
  • Lorenzo GM is getting out of the car biz, selling only trucks, EVs and the Corvette. They're chasing the bigger margins on lower volume, like the dealer trying to sell a car for $1 million: "I just have to sell one!"
Next