RIP Paul Reubens, Pee-Wee Herman, Who Made Us Laugh And Had Great Taste In Cars

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Like so many of us, I was saddened to hear that Paul Reubens, better known to most people as Pee-Wee Herman, cycling enthusiast and noted Big Shoe dancer and one of the few people brave enough to prove to the world that the Alamo does not, in fact, have a basement, has died. Reubens’ 1985 movie Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure was a significant part of my cultural upbringing, and I’m sure there are plenty of obituaries and reflections you’ll see online that cover the deceptive importance of his body of work wonderfully. But we’re a car site. Fortunately, I think the cars that can be seen featured in much of Reubens’ work demonstrates that he at least appreciated cars on some level, as the ones that he chose to use were absolutely selected with care. Let’s take a look at some of them, as you indulge this mildly thin pretense to honor Pee-Wee.

Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure did seem to populate background cars and incidental cars with older ones that fit Pee-Wee’s 1950s-ish aesthetic; in 1985, roads were pretty well filled with Honda Accords and VW Rabbits and Chevy Citations and that sort of thing, but when cars are shown in the movie, it’s pretty clear those cars were curated:

Roadsidecars

Even back in 1985 the roads weren’t exactly crawling with 1950 Plymouths or Volvo Amazons. There were some, sure, but these cars fit a certain tone that was clearly important.

Edsel

Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure was the first movie Tim Burton ever directed by the way. It was fundamentally a road trip movie, and as such is full of cars, and carefully chosen ones. Most significantly is the 1959 Edsel Corsair driven by an escaped convict that Pee-Wee gets a ride with. As a kid into cars, Pee-Wee’s unashamed glee at being told to take the wheel was hilariously familiar:

Pee Wee Yt

There was another inspired car casting choice later in the movie, for a character obsessed with Paris and who later migrated to France, only to return for a visit at the end, and seemingly managing to source one of the most intensely French cars possible, a 1963 Citroën ID décapotable by Chapron, also an extremely rare version of this Citroën, with only about 1,700 examples built.

Ds Vert

They could have just shoved these actors into a LeCar and called it a day, but they didn’t, and that matters, at least to me.

When Reubens revived Pee-Wee for a new movie back in 2016, there was even more careful and inspired car casting, including finally showing Pee-Wee’s very own car, a ’64 Fiat 600, which also was shown performing the baddest-ass stunt driving of a Fiat 600 that had been seen in Western cinema in likely half a century:

Pw 600

There’s also a Morgan three-wheeler in that film and a number of other great cars, including a very specific and strange and appropriate one:

Tbirdjr

That’s not just some random toy car, that’s a 1959 Thunderbird Junior! These were built by the Powercar company from 1955 to 1967, and could be had in either electric form (allegedly powered by an actual Ford starter motor) or a gas-powered version intended for adults. These weren’t cheap at all, costing about $4,000 in equivalent dollars today.

Tbirdjr 2

These were said to be capable of up to 40 mph! Who was buying these as adults? Well, if any adult was likely to buy one to drive around as a normal car, aside from a Shriner with processional goals in mind, I think it would be someone like P.W. Herman. These were also sold as promotional items for Ford dealers, as this add suggests:

Thbird Jr Ad

All of this is just to say that I think, at least on some level, Paul Reubens was one of us, and I don’t just mean a goofball, I mean a gearhead. He was an original, silly and funny and there was more sophistication under that plastic, back-of-the-comic-book-ad surface than you’d realize at first.

Let’s pour some Tequila and do the Big Shoe Dance for Pee-Wee one last time:

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42 thoughts on “RIP Paul Reubens, Pee-Wee Herman, Who Made Us Laugh And Had Great Taste In Cars

  1. The passing of Paul Reubens is indeed sad news. I wasn’t aware of his attachment to the car world.

    However, last week’s Air Venture Experimental Aircraft Association event reminded me that his father, Milton Rubenfeld, was a WWII bomber pilot and one of the founders of the Israeli Air Force, flying Czechoslovakian versions of the Messerschmitt BF109, which he said “was not a very good airplane.” He was known for his dry wit (read of his adventures in the 1948 Israeli War) which, as they say, is probably where PeeWee/Paul Reubens got his start in the comedy world. He was also said by some to the the very definition of swagger.

    It’s interesting to me that, while I was a casual fan of Paul Reubens and his comedy, I was even more aware of the well known actors, comedians – and family – who surrounded him. These included Gilbert Lewis, “The King of Cartoons,” who also invented (badly) artificial intelligence on the original Star Trek, Laurence Fishburne, Phil Hartman and S. Epatha Merkerson, all of whom I recall were on Pee-Wee’s Playhouse.

  2. Gotta admit I had never watched Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure until last night. That sure was something, and I had the same observation that the cars were clearly specifically curated for the movie.

  3. He was 70.

    SEVENTY!!!

    How is it possible that Pee Wee Herman was SEVENTY EARTH YEARS OLD?!?

    I mean, the 80’s were just 20 years ago, right? RIGHT?!?

    1. I said this to one of my clients yesterday. How was he 70?!. I watched Pee Wee as a child. I can’t believe it. My license says I’m 40 which I can’t believe either.

  4. We just finished rewatching Big Adventure. My favorite scene in that movie is when he calls Dottie from a payphone and to prove to her that he’s in Texas he starts singing “The stars at night are big and bright” and everyone stops what they’re doing to clap and sing the next line. It’s a stereotype but it’s 100% true, we will all do that, it’s a subconscious reaction trained into us from infancy.

      1. My seventh grade history teacher in Richardson, Texas taught the Texas history. When the end-of-the-class bell rang, Ms O’Neill proudly said, “Remember the Alamo!”, every time. She was our favourite teacher and made Texas history so much fun to learn. That sort of stuck to our collective consciousness to this day so every time we hear this slogan, we remember her fondly to this day…

  5. Just want to say Pee Wee’s Playhouse was one of the few shows I could watch with my little kids that had jokes for both age groups. Plus I got a first look at Phil Hartman.

    What I appreciate is the Autopian pointing out the great cars that I had forgotten about. That Citroën is a beautiful vehicle.

  6. Pee-Wee’s Playhouse was must watch tv for me on Saturday mornings, and I was in my late twenties when it was airing. He was a true original

  7. This one really hurts. I loved watching both “Playhouse” and his first movie, and frequently imitated him and his laugh for YEARS. Looking back at the wonderful vehicles in his productions was a treat. Thank you for this epilogue…

  8. Sad news for any Gen-Xer, but it also reminds me of John Hughes’ love of cars and how he very carefully included his favorites in his movies.

    Sure, mostly European sportcars, but I have to imagine he had a certain fondness for that Chrysler LeBaron convertible too.

    1. Parts were overbuilt back then because they didn’t the modern ability to make things with tight tolerances, and they were used for starting big, heavy V8s.

    1. My first school bus driver’s name was Marge. She needed 2x4s attached to the pedals of a manual transmission bus so she could drive it.

      She was mean as hell and had a striking resemblance to Large Marge.

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