Is the convertible heading into the sunset?
Key takeaways
- The convertible car used to represent all of these.
- In the 1950s and 60s, owning a convertible showed you had style.
- Later films like The Graduate and Thelma and Louise helped cement the open top car's position as a symbol of escapism and rebellion for new generations.
Theo Leggett International Business Correspondent Getty Images Sales of convertibles in the UK have dropped by 90% over the last 20 years Sophistication, freedom, rebellion or just the simple joy of taking to the open road with the wind in your hair. The convertible car used to represent all of these. But over the past two decades sales have collapsed, and its future seems deeply uncertain. So what's gone wrong?
In the 1950s and 60s, owning a convertible showed you had style. They were what the celebrities of the era were seen in.
When Hollywood deities Grace Kelly and Cary Grant were shown cruising along the French Riviera in a beautiful, sleek Sunbeam Alpine in To Catch a Thief, for example, they epitomised silver-screen elegance and savoir-faire.