The Chevy Celebrity Eurosport VR Proved Chevy Didn’t Know What ‘Euro’ Meant

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At my local Rad-era car meetup, Triangle Rad, there’s someone who brings in a beautifully preserved Chevy Celebrity wagon. I see the car, and I appreciate that it still exists and all that, but if I’m honest, all it really does is remind me of how powerfully I don’t give a shit about the Chevy Celebrity. The shits I don’t give about these cars are some of the finest ever crafted by human colons. My apathy is just that intense — a bright, burning intensely beige glow of who-gives-a-shit. That’s because I was surrounded by all manner of Chevy Celebrities growing up, and they were very much the NPC of cars. In the grand salad of the automotive landscape, they were iceberg lettuce. They took up space, filled in the holes, and were the means by which people could start in one place, sit for a while, and end up in another. There was one Celebrity, however, that did sort of stand out, at least a little bit: The Celebrity Eurosport VR. These weren’t great cars, but they’re interestingly revealing cars — odd artifacts that give an insight into the American automotive mind at that time and place. In short, they’re Glorious Garbage.

I guess I should talk about the basic Chevy Celebrity first, huh? I may as well. Built between 1982 and 1990, the Celebrity was part of the GM A platform, its first front-engine/front-wheel drive mid-size platform. They sold over two million of these things in their various body styles – sedans, coupés, and wagons. The reason I felt like I saw them everywhere is because they very much were everywhere. The most common setup for a Celebrity seemed to be the three-speed auto with a 90 horsepower 2.5-liter Iron Duke engine. Not exactly pulse-quickening.

They also came in diesel versions and with  2.8-liter V6 or a 3.1-liter V6 at the very end, but I don’t think most people bought these for the performance or driving dynamics. I think most people bought these because the Celebrity was A Car.

Of course, that wasn’t enough for at least some of the designers and engineers at Chevy, who felt there needed to be a more engaging version of the Celebrity, and, in what I can only read as a strange act of national insecurity, this version was called the Eurosport. Because, I suppose, at the time, Europe was more associated with cars that emphasized performance and driving engagement, the most obvious example of which was likely the BMW 3 series. Maybe some Audis, too?

While generally the same basic shape, the Celebrity was very much not a BMW 3 series, but I think that’s what the designers and engineers and marketing people were targeting. Seeing exactly what was done to the basic Celebrity to “Euro-ify” it is pretty fascinating, because I think it gives a glimpse into what GM’s people felt the crucial differences in American and European car design were. Looking at the result, you’d think the biggest defining trait of Europe was a severe distaste for chrome and a love for black paint.

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As you can see, mostly the Eurosport just blacked out all the chrome on the door handles and window trim and bumpers, added some red accent lines around the car and on the seat piping, and, boom, it’s like you’re spending a week in Berlin.

Aside from blacking out the chrome, the Eurosport also got a black steering wheel, heavier-duty suspension, and the option of the 2.8-liter V6 engine making a fiercely adequate 130 hp.

I mean, the blacked-out/red detailing-look wasn’t bad, but I’m not really sure how it equated to European. I guess the Volkswagen GTI did some stuff like this? And, sure, Europe generally didn’t have the same fetish for chrome everywhere that America had – I mean, nobody did, really. Also, they missed out on an easy way to enEuro-ificate the car: add amber rear indicators! But no, GM wasn’t willing to go that far. Don’t forget, on the Vega they put in amber rear lenses and then cheaped out on putting bulbs behind them.

Now, this mild Euro-ization, which added about as much Europe to the car as spreading a bit of Nutella on the car and letting it complain to you about how we don’t appreciate the National Parks System in America, just wasn’t enough. Chevy wanted a halo Celebrity, so they needed to do something more.

Celebrs

 

GM looked to a smaller company called AutoStyle to help them out, and started the process in 1986 by building a show car called the Celebrity Eurosport RS. This one-off added a lot of body kit plastic to the lower nether regions of the Celebrity, giving it a sort of Euro-tuner look, like what Alpina might have done if they wanted to make BMW feel jealous, or at least a little less secure. The engine was 3.3-liter V6 with an alloy block that never actually made it to production.

Reaction to the show car must have been pretty positive, because starting in 1987 anyone buying a Celebrity sedan – or, significantly, a wagon! (and the next year, the coupé) – could shell out an anus-clamping $3,500 for the VR option package, which was the production interpretation of the RS show car. For reference, back in 1987, the VR package would have cost about $9,500 in today’s money, and this on a car that started at $10,265 (about $28,000 today), so we’re talking tacking on a third more of the whole price of the car for this advanced Euro-ization.

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So, what did all that cash get you, exactly? There were the styling changes, most notably, including the new bumper skins with air dams and the other stuck-on ground effect plastics, but most noticeably is the strange grille-delete option. Yes, the grille was replaced with an odd silver-ish blanking panel, because who wants all that superfluous air getting into that 2.8-liter V6? I guess the enlarged under-bumper air intake provided enough cooling, and maybe there was some aero advantage to swapping that grille for a wall.

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The engine and suspension in the VR weren’t any different than the normal Eurosport, so we’re still talking about 145 hp and getting from parked to 60 in about 9 seconds. Not terrible, but hardly amazing, even for the era, and certainly nothing to Compuserve-message home about. The VR in came in black, silver, white, and that Code Red color from Corvettes and Camaros. You could get it with a five-speed Getrag manual shifter, or, if you hated yourself a bit, a four-speed automatic, and, if you hated yourself a lot, you could even get a three-speed auto shoved in there.

The Celebrity was never really planned on being a car where people would be shifting their own gears, so there wasn’t a nice big tachometer offered. The manual VR really demanded one, leading GM to make one of the most gloriously half-assed tachometers ever:

Tach

Look at that! In the little window normally reserved for the automatic’s PRNDL indicator, GM developed a tiny, tiny LED-based tachometer. You drop about a third the price of the whole car for this VR package, and GM was still too cheap to design a new instrument cluster with a real tachometer? Think how much better a couple of round gauges would have looked in that cluster, with a nice big, graphic tach! As it is, all GM proved is that they’re absolutely loath to let a perfectly good hole in the dash go to waste, no matter how tiny.

So, if we’re re-capping here, what’s the overall take on the Celebrity Eurosport VR? It was a boring-ass car with some kind of silly faux-Euroification and body kit plastic that had some mild performance enhancements, but very little that justified the huge cost of the option package, especially since the regular Eurosport drove about as well. That all adds up to the Garbage part of Glorious Garbage nicely. So where do we find the glory?

I think in this case, all the glory comes from this one significant detail: you could get all of this stuff on a wagon.

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A fast (ish) tough-looking wagon available pretty much anywhere in 1980s America was a glorious thing. Hell, it still is! A wagon that was roomy and useful and could do all the wagon things but still let you jam a gearshift around and make mouth vroom sounds when you threw it into a corner, your un-seat-belted children smacking their heads against window glass with screeches of delight and maybe some pain as they slide around that back seat like a hockey player’s teeth on the ice.

Of course, hardly anyone took advantage of this incredible wagon-tunity offered them, since only a bit over 1600 Celebrity Eurosport VRs were actually sold.

There was no way the Celebrity Eurosport VR was ever really competition to the actual Euro cars from BMW or Audi or Mercedes or even Volvo, but in a way, I like that they tried. Sure, it was sort of a Halloween costume for an American family car to dress up like a 3-Series, but if you’re having fun, who gives a shit, right?

The Celebrity Eurosport VR was, objectively, garbage. But, put all that crap on a wagon, and then, somehow it transforms into something magical! Still pretty shitty, yes, but magically shitty. Or at least shitty with an optional rear-facing jump seat.

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121 thoughts on “The Chevy Celebrity Eurosport VR Proved Chevy Didn’t Know What ‘Euro’ Meant

  1. I actually wanted one of these really badly (red, duh) until I saw the interior.

    Same thing killed the 6000 STE for me too, dreadful interior. Bonnville SSE (first gen) was a hottie but out of my price range at the time.

  2. If this Celebrity had the taillamps with amber turn signal indicators, side turn signal repeaters, headlamp washers and wipers, proper gauges (with needles), and external rear-view mirrors from Trevi (originally fitted to first-generation Pontiac Bonneville SSE), then this Celebrity would be worthy for “Eurosport VR” label.

    Well, Chevrolet could knock on the door of Pontiac house and ask for a “cup of sugar” instead of lame tachometer gauge.

  3. Is this platform the one where GM didn’t include rear windows that rolled down? Looks cool (a VR wagon and a Cutlass Cruiser with the wood would be a funny 1-2 radwood punch) but if I’m remembering that correctly, yikes.

    1. My 1986 4-door Celebrity had rear passenger doors with windows that roll down half way down.

      You might think of the RWD A-body (1978–1981, renamed as G-body for 1982).

  4. Every single GM A-Body car I drove had the most weak brakes possible and still have people think the brakes hadn’t failed completely. The idea of driving these cars like you would a BMW 3 series is a hella scary thought.

    Our ’87 – ’89 Celebrity(s) never locked up the brakes on anything other than oil slicked rain covered roads or ice conditions.

    They made me fairly religious at times.

    1. I drove one (a normal Celebrity, not a Eurosport) that belonged to my relatives, and the brakes (or lack thereof) were terrifying. I asked them about it, they said that was just how the brakes had always been since they bought it new.

      Fortunately, when it failed to make it around a bend and slid into a ditch, my relatives weren’t hurt and decided to find a better car.

      1. My father had one as his US Gov issued car. Totalled it coming off a highway exit/entrance when someone trying to merge into his lane to get on the highway pulled in front. He said he rode the brake pedal hard….all the way into the back seat of a Ford Escort.

        My sister also ended up running her Celebrity into a truck. Truck was fine.

        Same for my cousin shortly after getting his Celebrity. He had previously been driving a Nissan 300Z and wasn’t prepared for the nearly twice as long stopping distance.

        My sister’s car didn’t need pads until nearly 80K miles, which was an incredible mileage for 1980s pads in a 50/50 city/Highway driven car.

  5. I had an 87 Eurosport (non VR) coupe for a bit as a winter beater. I really wanted a 6000 STE AWD (still kinda do). It was definitely Glorious Garbage, but it had the TPI 2.8, it floated down the road and never left me stranded! Yes, the exhaust did fall off and I couldn’t lock it because the locks would freeze but for the $800 I spent on it, it was a great car! Fixed the exhaust and some rust around the windshield and sold it for $1200. I sometimes miss the ride in that thing, it was more comfortable than my Mom’s (much newer) Intrepid.

  6. Eurosport was the satellite tv channel, where I first saw the Paris-Dakar Rally – and WWF wrestling! – when I was a kid. So thanks, Eurosport 🙂

    As for the car? A generic people carrier with an automatic: No thanks, I’ll take my (now sold) blue Citroën CX 25 GTi

  7. Great article as always Mr. Torchinsky. Growing up my father insisted on GM A-bodies, usually Olds Calais. They were smooth interstate cruisers. But the “Euro” thing never made any sense to me. My Mom was Scandinavian and these cars had nothing I could decern as vaguely European.

      1. Cutlass Ciera.

        Remember, those were the days Oldsmobile decided that they wanted to use the Cutlass name on everything.

        And in doing that, it made it a real pain the in the ass when looking at used car listings in the newspaper when the seller would just advertise it as “Oldsmobile Cutlass for sale”

        Which Cutlass? The N-body one, the A-Body one, the W-Body one or the G-body one?

        The only non-Cutlass A-Body Ciera was in 1996.

  8. C/D put up an archived review of the Eurosport on intro earlier this year and was rather kind to it. Calling de-chroming/blackout treatment or full(er) instrumentation or wheels that weren’t wire covers was pretty common “look it’s Euro!” marketing-speak in the 80s, especially since imports were getting all the positive press compared to stodgy domestics. It was fresh and new; Chevy was just more pointed with the name.
    Maybe because they didn’t have a better name for an appearance package either, not for a 4-door/family car as those didn’t have much sporting pretense in the Chevy lineup at the time. There wasn’t much of a performance upgrade and Z__ designations didn’t go on sedans, even Corsica and Lumina which had trims that shared some components from the Z__ coupe counterparts, LTZ was closest as they got there. Cavalier had Z24 (after “Type 10”) but that wasn’t on sedans or wagons; you could get an RS package with Eurosport-style touches though.

    Bodykits seemed to be in though, in a way I guess the VR foreshadowed the Lumina Z34’s bodykit, and there was the Corsica XT that had leather and a similar 3rd party supplied bodykit.

    You could do a whole series on the myriad editions of the A-body alone. There’s a super clean Ciera XC Special Edition that I always see at a nearby Dunkin, basically International Series looks in an anniversary edition value package. The Century Gran Sport, and the Mexican-spec Chevrolet Cutlass Eurosport (yes, and you could get that as a coupe up until the end A-body production, whereas they left the US after ’91).

  9. Does the slang term RS, shorthand for ratshit, not exist in the states? Down here RS means, “tired”, “worn out”, “broken” or even just “fucked”. Interesting name for the trim level of a concept design!

    1. Not in my 20 years as an Antipodean in America, no. But I suspect that’s because the starting point here is “ass” and not “arse” … or at least that’s my theory.

      It’s a damn shame, though, ‘cos your translation really works for the Celebrity!

  10. I remember coming out of the 80’s thinking the term “GT car” meant adding a spoiler, pinstripes, and maybe fancy wheels. Now I know it is supposed to indicate a high performance (quick with decent handling), comfortable Grand Touring coupe from Europe; usually emphasizing luxury. This “Eurosport” also cheapens the term.

    The US automakers sure missed the mark!

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