Opera Windows were small porthole sized side windows in the C-pillar of cars. Typically offered in unison with a vinyl roof, they were a very common design feature of American automobiles during the 1970s. The design was new at the time and would prove to be very popular, indicated by its imitation by almost every domestic automaker ... The opera window was a fixed rear side window surrounded by a vinyl roof.[1] Automotive designers hoped that incorporating an opera window in their cars would help convey the elegance and romance of a night at the opera.
History
This design element was used during the classical era of automobile styling. For example, “...the Elcar in 1924 was good looking .. and even a fabric top in the syle of a brougham wiith oval opera windows framed by landau bars ...[2] Opera windows saw their demise in the 1930s. Perhaps the most notable return was the "porthole" in the 1956-57 Ford Thunderbird. It was provided as an option to improve rear-quarter visibility with the removable hardtop in place..[3] Opera windows were once again reintroduced on the 1972 Lincoln Continental Mark IV as an optional luxury feature, but it was almost universally ordered.
During the 1970s they became a very common design element. “...The hottest thing going was the "porthole" window in the rear side pillar - called "opera windows" that came in during the horse and buggy [era]...[4] Most often, they were applied on two-door hardtop or coupe models and in all types of vehicles, from economy compacts to luxury brands. They were also “were recognition elements” in the specialty, personal-sized car market. [5]
The windows were intended to offset the significant blind spots created by the very wide C-pillars that were characteristic of American cars produced at this time. Even narrow opera windows helped rear visibility.[6] In an age of decreasing dimensions and increasingly fixed rear windows on 2-door models, the small windows helped rear passengers to be somewhat less claustrophobic.
These windows were usually non-functional, however, in the case of the AMC Matador coupe NASCAR racers, the small windows in the Barcelona trim package actually helped to clean up the aerodynamics when such windows were open to the wind under racing conditions..[7]
In some cars, an additional feature was the so-called "opera light" that was mounted on the outside of the B-pillar or C-pillar and lit up when the car's regular exterior lights were on.
Opera windows had fallen into disuse by the mid-1980s, as changing automotive styles moved away from the more formal elegance that was popular in the seventies. The smaller and more aerodynamic cars made the opera window appear gaudy or out of place.
Contemporary examples of opera windows are sometimes found on overly decorated and tacky customized automobiles. They are now often regarded as one of the worst design innovations in automotive history.
Cars with opera windows
This is a partial list of models that had opera windows as standard or optional feature:
Notes
- ↑ http://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z11551/default.aspx
- ↑ William S. Locke (2000) Elcar and Pratt Automobiles: The Complete History, McFarland & Company, ISBN 0786409568, page 71.
- ↑ see the 1955-1957 Ford Thunderbird.
- ↑ Robert Szudarek (2000) The First Century of the Detroit Auto Show, SAE, ISBN 0768005027, page 210.
- ↑ Paul A. Herd and Mike Mueller (1994) Charger, Road Runner, and Super Bee, MotorBooks/MBI Publishing Company ISBN 0879388447, Page 119.
- ↑ http://www.allpar.com/model/magnum-dodge.html.
- ↑ http://www.geocities.com/mmbb444/page3.html