The 2023 Greenwich Concours, Part 1: The Alfa Romeos

My wife and I just got back from a whirlwind 25-hour up-and-back trip to Greenwich CT for the 2023 Greenwich Concours. My Alfa was on the lawn again this year, and given that this is an invitation-only event, it was a high honor indeed. Alfa Romeo was a featured marque on Sunday, divided into pre-war and post-war classes. My ’67 was in the post-war class, of course, and although we didn’t win anything, it was an exciting and event-filled day. This first post about the show will focus only on the Alfa Romeos. There is much else to cover, and I will put up additional stories about the rest of the show during the week.

THE POST-WAR CLASS

There were 8 vehicles; in model year order, they were a ’56 1900, a ’59 Giulietta Spider, a ’63 Giulia Spider, a ’67 4R Zagato, my ’67 GT 1300 Jr., a ’71 Montreal, a ’78 Series 2 Spider, and a ’93 RZ Zagato. Right off the bat, note the strong representation from THREE iconic Italian design houses: Pininfarina, Bertone, and Zagato.

 

THE MONTREAL

This car is so-named because Alfa Romeo exhibited a concept car at the 1967 Montreal Expo. That design study went into production and was therefore named after the city where it was first displayed. It remains Alfa’s only road-going V8-powered automobile.

 

THE 4R ZAGATO

I’ve read about this car but never saw one in the metal before today. The woman representing the car (she’s wearing the scarf in the first photo) told me that only 92 were ever produced, only 3 are in the U.S., and the other two are on the west coast. That kinda explains why I haven’t seen one before this. The chassis and all mechanicals are 1967 Alfa. The factory commissioned Zagato to build a “pre-war style body” on top of the Guilia chassis. Viola!

 

RZ ZAGATO

Another Zagato oddball (is that redundant? 😉 ). I know very little about these except that the Italians nick-named it “The Monster”, which in Italian is “Il Mostro”. Ergo the license plate.

 

THE EARLY SPIDERS

I think that the ’63 Giulia is the blue car and the ’59 Giulietta is the red car, but I’m not certain. Someone will correct me if I got that backwards.

 

MY GT 1300 JUNIOR

Spending the week prior to the show detailing it did it wonders. We drove it 192 miles round-trip, mostly at 65-70 mph, and it performed flawlessly. Interestingly, it was the only Giulia coupe in the show.

 

’78 SERIES 2 SPIDER NIKI LAUDA EDITION

I have no recollection of being aware of this special model before. Phil, the owner of the car, parked next to me so we spent a bit of time chatting. He said that in 1978, when Lauda left Ferrari and joined the Alfa racing team, Alfa created this special model. Included were the headlight covers, body-painted rear spoiler, pin striping, and fender badges. Phil said that the Turbina wheels would be correct for this model, not the 5-star ones on it now. Here, Phil clowns with a leather racing helmet on his head.

 

MEA CULPA

Each car in our class was judged, and the winning car was the 1900. Unbelievably, of the 8 Alfa Romeos in the class, it is the one car I did not photograph. although you can get slight glimpses of it in the background of some of the photos above. My excuse is that as class winner, the car spent a good part of the day on display elsewhere on the show field. That’s the best I can do.

 

THE PRE-WAR CLASS

For whatever reason, the 3 Alfa Romeos in the pre-war class were arranged in a different area of the showfield, nowhere near us. I managed to get only one photo of the group of cars. When I went back to take additional photos, I couldn’t get near them as the area was roped off in preparation for the awards ceremony.

 

Future posts will cover many of the remaining show cars; there were about 140 vehicles on the showfield, and a nice variety it was. I also met some amazing people and I have stories to tell about those encounters.

All photographs copyright © 2023 Richard A. Reina. Photos may not be copied or reproduced without express written permission.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

8 thoughts on “The 2023 Greenwich Concours, Part 1: The Alfa Romeos

  1. Always enjoy your posts!

    I had a busy weekend as well.

    Saturday traveled to Carlisle Ford Nationals and there were Mustangs as far as the eye could see. I was there to see if anyone had ’39 Ford stuff. Nope, but being a ‘ford national’, thought more models would have been represented. My mistake. While everyone was enjoying cooling breezes along the ocean ‘back east’, it was damned hot in the upper 80s. Ugh.

    My next visit to an automotive ‘Mecca’ will be Hershey.

    Sunday, with my son and his girlfriend, we traveled to the WWII Weekend at the Reading Airport, Reading, Pa. All I can you think you are on a movie set. War planes on the ground, war planes in the sky, paratroopers in the sky, troops of all fighting nations on the ground, military vehicles including 3 tanks (2 Shermans, 1 Stewart-light tank), staff cars, singers. All re-enactors were period dressed whether in uniform or civilian or partisans per that country. There is even a min-French village where depending on the day, the Germans or Americans occupied it and fought off invaders. Real guns with blanks are used and they are loud!

    Loved it!

    https://www.maam.org/maamwwii.html

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  2. Hello.

    I have just found this blog/post.

    My name is Krystal. I am the one who brought the 4R Zagato (the red head with the white scarf).

    Wonderful writeup, and what a wonderful day that was.

    Like

    • Hello Krystal, I remember you! It’s great that you found me and my blog. We chatted a bit. I had told you that your 4R Zagato was the very first one I had ever seen in the metal. Please subscribe to my blog, I post a LOT about Alfa Romeos! Best, Richard

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