The epic scale of this outrageous Daimler will always draw crowds but seldom, I fear, buyers.
After all, what exactly can you do with a near 20ft-long, 6000lb, six-and-a-half-foot-wide convertible with a 50ft turning circle?
A misplaced statement of optimism from a grand old English marque struggling to find its way in the post-war world, the seven ‘Green Goddess’ DE36 straight-eights invite comparison with Bugatti’s Royale in the white-elephant stakes.
Only five are known to survive: this car, chassis 51724, was the second built.
The first Hooper Drophead Coupé, the true Green Goddess, got Daimler all the publicity it could handle, its turquoise coachwork earning it the famous moniker.
The British press dubbed it ‘Chariot to the Sun’, the perfect car in which to escape the restrictions and privations of post-war Britain to the warmer, less austere playgrounds of Europe.
Although you wouldn’t have got far on your monthly 10 gallons of rationed pool petrol in this 12mpg monster.
Yet as a statement motor car for those who could afford to buy and run such a thing it should have been unbeatable, the perfect ride for a late-’40s heartthrob such as Stewart Granger to squire around town in.