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The Detroit Autorama/Ridler Award

Writer: scheurenmichaelscheurenmichael

The Detroit Autorama, also known as America's Greatest Hot Rod Show, is a showcase of custom cars and hot rods held each year at Huntington Place in Detroit, Michigan, in either late February or early March.

It is promoted by Championship Auto Shows Incorporated (CASI) and hosted by Michigan Hot Rod Association (MHRA). It is part of the International Show Car Association (ISCA) schedule for the Summit Racing Equipment Show Car Series, which includes other prestigious show car events such as the Chicago World of Wheels and Houston Autorama. The show features a selected group of 800 custom and restored vehicles from across the world and more than 140,000 spectators annually.

Detroit's Autorama is best known as home to the Don Ridler Memorial Award, considered the "Nobel Prize of Hot Rodding". It's presented to the "best in show" at each year's event, and has been won by many well-known car designers and builders, such as Chip Foose, Jerry Pennington, Troy Trepanier, Jerry Pennington, and Dave Kindig.

Together, the Detroit Autorama and Ridler Award are considered among the two "Crown Jewel" competitions and awards for professional show car builders in North America, alongside the Grand National Roadster Show and its America's Most Beautiful Roadster (AMBR) Award.


2011 Ridler Award winner owned by Bruce Ricks



History

The first Detroit Autorama was held at the University of Detroit Memorial Building on January 31 and February 1, 1953. It featured only 40 cars, and was hosted by members of the Michigan Hot Rod Association (MHRA), which was created only a year before to "organize small local clubs into one unified body that could raise the money needed to pull drag racing off the streets and into a safe environment". Eventually, the MHRA grew to also include clubs from the customizing and hot rodding scene, such as the Motor City Modifieds, Bearing Burners and Spark Plugs, who combined efforts to pull-off the first event, along with other Detroit car clubs such as The Road Kings, Shifters, and Milwinders.

For the second show, activities were moved to the Michigan State Fairgrounds Colosseum, where it was held from 1954 to 1960. For the fourth event in 1956, the MHRA hired a local band and sporting-event promoter Don Ridler to help the show reach a broader audience.Ridler served as the show's first true promoter until his death in 1963. The following year, the MHRA created a "best in show" award for Autorama, named after the man who made the biggest impact on the show during its infancy.

With increased membership and the success of the first four shows, the MHRA had the necessary capital to build its dragstrip. Motor City Dragway, located in Fair Haven, Michigan, opened in 1957 as the first dragstrip in Metro Detroit. The MHRA would continue to manage both the Detroit Autorama and Motor City Dragway until the track's closure in 1978.

The 9th Annual Detroit Autorama was the first to be held at the new Cobo Hall. That year featured a new-record 230 cars competing, and filled all 10,000 sq ft (930 m2) of Cobo's lower-level basement. The 1961 show's last day also broke the event attendance record by drawing a crowd of approximately 35,000 people. During these early years at Cobo, the event began to attract industry names from outside the Motor City, including George Barris, Darryl Starbird, Carl Casper, and "Big Daddy" Ed Roth. And as part of Ford Motor Company's "Ford Custom Car Caravan", the show also generated attention from other big name customizers, including Bill Cushenbery, Jack Florence, Dean Jeffries, and Gene Winfield.

In 1964, the MHRA created the Don Ridler Memorial Award to recognize the most "outstanding car shown for the first time ever". The inaugural Ridler Award went to Macomb's Al Bergler, with an Alcohol slingshot dragster.

Following Bergler's win in 1964, the next ten years saw growth both in the number of exhibitors, as well as the number of professional custom car builders competing for the show's new top prize. Early Ridler-winning entries included vehicles built by Larry and Mike Alexander, Jerry Pennington, and George Busti.

Starting in the early 70s, the MHRA began to incorporate other exhibitions and attractions to Autorama. This included Soap Box Derbies, an MPC Model Car Contest, and the Miss Autorama Contest. The show also began incorporating live acts. Celebrities including Wolf Man Jack, Adam West, Mark Hamill, and Lou Ferringo all made autograph appearances at Autorama during the 70's. Bob Seger performed at three Autoramas in the early 70's. Mitch Ryder, Alice Cooper, Bo Diddley, and Chubby Checker also performed during show weekends in the 1970's.


JF Launier's 2014 Ridler Winner





Builder Jerry Pennington's rear-engine Corvette (Scorpion) and hand-built custom street rod (Devilfish) with their velvet interiors and sharp body lines rank among the most over-the-top and iconic Ridler cars ever built. 1974's event was a first for Autorama, as Wimauma, Florida's Don Campbell and his '27 Ford became the first out-of-state entry to capture the Ridler Award. The decade was then capped-off with a series of six Ford T-bucket Ridler winners. The roadster trend continued throughout the 1980s, with nine of the next ten Ridler winners being '29 through '34 Fords. The first non-roadster to win the Ridler since 1973 was Dale Hunt's late-model Pro Stock Pontiac Grand Am at the 34th annual Detroit Autorama in 1986. Hunt's Grand Am remains one of only two Pro Stock cars to have won the Ridler (the other being Bob Rizzoli's '92 Mercedes 560 SEC).

Throughout the 1980s and 90s, the Autorama continued to grow into one of the most prestigious car shows in the country. Fueling growth was a next generation of professional builders and renowned car owners who began to make their way to Cobo every winter in hopes of capturing the Ridler. Among this next generation were California's Bobby Alloway and Boyd Coddington, Memphis' George Poteet, Ohio's Don Pilkenton, and others. With the influx of new talent in custom car building, the show started to gain national press, with annual coverage in Hot Rod and Street Rodder magazines. The only downside to the growing national attention was felt by local Michigan entries. As exhibitors started traveling from across the country, many local Detroit and Michigan customizers became less competitive against those from out-of-state. Though the Alexander Brothers and others continued to build local cars for the show (including a Great-8 competitor in 2012), as of 2023, Dave Emery's 1997-winning Ford Roadster ( Revolver) was the last Michigan-built entry to capture the Ridler.



Greg & Judy Hrehovczik's 1957 Chevy "Imagine" 2018 Winner




The new millennium brought a freshly redesigned Ridler Award trophy, and the creation of the "Great 8" finalist. It also brought a third generation of professional car builders. Wes Rydell's '35 Chevy Grand Master became the first built by designer and TV personality Chip Foose to win the award in 2002. Foose returned again the following year with a '34 Ford, Stallion, for Arizona's Ron Whiteside, which made him only the third builder in the show's history, and the first since Jerry Pennington, to win the award two consecutive years.

Foose returned again in 2005 with a '36 Ford (Impression), built for Littleton, Colorado's Ken Reister. It was with Impression Foose set a record, joining Don Pilkenton as only builders to win three Ridler Awards, with Foose being the quickest to accomplish that feat in only a four-year span. Foose would snap his own record yet again ten years later, when his '65 Chevy Impala (Imposter, built for Don and Elma Voth) captured his unprecedented fourth Ridler in 2015.

Following the success of Foose Designs, most Ridler contenders transitioned from individual to professional builds. Ross and Beth Myer's '36 Ford (First Love) was the first Ridler-winner to be built by "Rad Rides By Troy" (Trepanier). The transition to professional builders continued with T&T Customs (2010), Torq'd Design Lab (2012), Cal Customs (2013), Super Rides By Jordan (2019), and Pro Comp Shop (2022 and '23).

Since 2008, the roadster trend has begun to fade with only six of the last fifteen Ridler winners being pre-'39 Roadsters. Most Great 8 Contenders and Ridler winners today are professionally build for clients, with J.F Launier's '64 Buick Riviera as the only owner/builder to capture the award since 1998.

In 2002, the Detroit Autorama celebrated its 50th anniversary with special promotions from Murray's Auto Parts, and inducted an honorary list of "50 People Who Made a Difference". A hall of fame, entitled "The Autorama: Circle of Champions", was also introduced and has inducted at least one member every year since 1997. Inductees include George Barris (1999), Ed Roth (2000), Crain Communications' Keith Crain (2003), Street Rodder's Brian Brennan (2010), Chip Foose (2013), and Hurst Shifter girl Linda Vaughn (2014). Autorama also introduced for their 50th anniversary a special "Builder of the Year" award to honor past Ridler-winning or major show contributors. Past "Builders of the Year" include the Alexander Brothers (2002), Blackie Gejeian (2004), Ed Roth (2006), So-Cal Speed Shop (2007), Gene Winfield (2008), Darryl Starbird (2009), Bobby Alloway (2011), and Troy Trepanier (2014).

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Ridler Award in 2013, the 61st annual Detroit Autorama "Builder of the Year" exhibit was replaced with the largest gathering of former Ridler-winning cars ever assembled. To cap-off the celebration, the winners of the 50th Ridler Award (Rob & Deb Cizek & their 1940 Ford "Checkered Past") were presented with the first-ever Gold Ridler Award.

During the 2010s and '20's, recognition for the Detroit Autorama among car builders has continued to grow, with contenders traveling as far as Western Australian with hopes of capturing the prestigious Ridler Award. The growing recognition also led to an expansion of Autorama EXTREME, a special portion of the show featuring traditional Rat Rods, customs, and other patinaed vehicles. In 2023, the Detroit Autorama celebrated its 70th anniversary with more than 800 vehicle entries, over 240 different class awards, and an estimated 149,000 visitors through the weekend.

Out of shared competition and history, the Detroit Autorama has become one of the two "Crown Jewels" of professional show car competitions, often sharing cars and builders with the other "Jewel", the Grand National Roadster Show. Both Autorama's Ridler Award and the GNRS' "America's Most Beautiful Roadster" Award have been awarded annually for over 50 years, both are presented to vehicles being shown for the first time, and both have been won by the likes of Foose, Trepanier, and Alloway.

Championship Auto Shows Inc.

The Detroit Autorama has been organized in-collaboration between the Michigan Hot Rod Association (MHRA) and Championship Auto Shows (CASI) since 1961. In 1963, CASI President Bob Larivee Sr. and fellow CASI showrunners formed a new governing body for indoor show car events, titled the International Show Car Association (ISCA). The ISCA has since become the leading governing body of show car events and competitions in North America, with its own rulebook, classification, and points system. Along with CASI (now "North America's largest producer of indoor hot rod shows") they co-promote and judge events from coast-to-coast.

The most events ever on an ISCA schedule was 99, set during the 1982–83 season. The current schedule features 21 long-running indoor events under the "Autorama" and "World of Wheels" banner, including those in Detroit, Chicago, Indianapolis, Pittsburg, Houston, and the ISCA Championship Finals, which are currently held in Cincinnati. CASI and ISCA combine to promote and judge shows in sixteen states and four provinces, with events running from Thanksgiving weekend through mid-April.

All ISCA events have a series of "Outstanding Awards" for more than three-dozen classes. Each one counts as a single point in the ISCA standings, which is split into four overall classes: Rod, Custom, Truck, and Bike. If at the end of a season, a single contributor has four Outstanding Awards in a single category, they are locked-into the ISCA Championship Finals. Many Ridler Winners and Great-8 cars have gone-on to tour the CASI/ISCA event circuit to win an overall Class Championship.



Steve Barton's 1959 Cadillac Eldorado Brougham "CadMad 2019 Winner





Ridler Award

Autorama's "best in show" award is the Don Ridler Memorial Award, named after Don Ridler, a former Michigan State Football Player, Lawrence Tech Basketball and Football Coach and athletic director, and Autorama's first promoter from 1956 to 1963.

It was presented for the first time at the 12th annual Autorama in 1964, and has been awarded annually since.



Rick and Paddy Bird's 1931 Chevy Coupe "ShoBird" 2022 Winner






The "Great 8"

The Ridler Award winner is selected out of a pre-determined group of eight cars, known as "The Great 8".

On the application for Autorama, a box is to be checked to indicate to the promotional staff if the submitted entry is a Ridler contender. Once entered, each vehicle must meet two specific guidelines in order to qualify for the Great 8, and thus, the Ridler. The entered vehicle must be making its public debut with "limited media exposure", and must be in "minimally operable" condition.

Once a "Contender" vehicle has met those requirements, it inspected by ISCA judges, who then determine the "Great 8" finalist out of the contender pool.

An entire staff of ISCA Judges are assigned solely to the Great 8 cars, and go through each one before deciding on "the best in show". After a decision is made, the winner is announced alongside more than 240 other vehicle classes on Sunday Night.

The Ridler Award Trophy, designed by Larry Erickson, is presented to the vehicle's owner, who is also given an embroidered jacket and a $10,000 check. Along with receiving a personal Ridler Award, the owner's name is also engraved among the list of past recipients on the full-scale Ridler trophy, which is kept at GM Performance's Headquarters in Auburn Hills, Michigan.

The 60 recipients and/or builders of the Don Ridler Memorial Award are shown below:

Past winners

Year

Owner/Funder

Vehicle

Name

Winner (Builder/Designer)

1964

Al Bergler

AA Comp[clarification needed] Bantam coupe


1965

Bob Massaron

1956 Chevrolet Custom

1966

Maynard Rupp

1966 Chevy Malibu SS 396 Funny Car


1967

Mike Alexander

1966 Dodge Pickup


1968

Chuck Miller

Hand-built fire truck

"Fire Truck"


1969

Larry Alexander

Ford T roadster


1970

Jan Bergel

1966 Dodge Hemi Charger

George Busti[18]

1971

John Greer

"C" Cab truck

George Busti[18]

1972

Jerry Pennington

Rear-engined Corvette


1973

Jerry Pennington

Hand-built street rod


1974

Don Campbell

1927 Ford T sedan


1975

Bob Gutzke

1927 Model T Altered rod coupe



1976

Robert Sweatt

1923 Ford AA/FA roadster


1977

Frank Camden

1926 Ford T sedan


1978

Bob Anzalone

1923 Ford T roadster


1979

Frank Morabito

1923 Ford T touring


1980

Everett Rezendes

1928 Ford sedan delivery


1981

Bob Tiano

1934 Ford 3-window coupe


Ron Morgan[18]

1982

John Pappert



1983

Ron Barnum


1984

Bob Reed

1934 Ford Altered street coupe

Greg Fleury/Cary Weisner[18]

1985

Bobby Alloway

1933 Ford Victoria Altered street sedan



1986

Dale Hunt

1986 Pontiac Grand Am Pro Stock

special thanks to Dewayne White for his hard work to complete this car


1987

John Kolbusz

1934 Ford Altered street roadster



1988

Mal Kieswetter

1932 Ford 3-window coupe

1989

Mike Baliestiero

1934 Ford cabriolet Altered street roadster



1990

Dan Webb

1932 Ford Altered street roadster



1991

Tony Carlini

1933 Ford Altered street roadster


Gary Case[46]

1992

Jimmy Stewart

1932 Ford sedan



1993

Dave Stitzer

1940 Ford coupe


1994

Fred Warren

1937 Ford coupe

Fred Warren/Tim Novick[46]

1995

Bob Rizzoli

1992 Mercedes 560 SEC



1996

George Poteet

1937 Ford roadster


1997

Dave Emery

1932 Ford roadster



1998

Eric Peratt & Ken Reister

1933 Ford roadster

Eric Peratt[46]

1999

Bob Young

1932 Ford 3-window coupe


2000

Paul Atkins

1933 Ford speedster coupe (phantom)[49]


Greening Auto Company[46]

2001

Chris Williams

1949 Chevy Coupe

Randy Clark[46]

2002

Wesley & Bob Rydell

1935 Chevy

2003

Ron Whiteside

2004

Al Brockly

1937 Willys coupe


Tim O'Donnell[53]

2005

Ken Reister

1936 Ford hardtop convertible

2006

Kevin & Karen Alstott

1935 Ford

Radster

Roger Burman @ Lakeside Rods & Rides[55]

2007

Ross Myers

1936 Ford

2008

Mike Warn

1960 Nash Rambler

Divers Street Rods

2009

Doug Cooper

1932 Ford B400

Alan Johnson @ Johnson's Hot Rod Shop[57]

2010

Tammy Ray

1933 Ford Phaeton

Ted Thomas @ T & T Customs[58]

2011

Bruce Ricks

1956 Ford Sunliner convertible

Steve Cook[59]

2012

Dwayne Peace, Tyler, Texas

1955 Ford Thunderbird[60]


Torq'd Design Lab & Greening Auto

2013

Ron & Deb Cizek, Bennington, NE

1940 Ford Coupe

Andy Leach @ Cal Automotive Creations

2014

J.F. Launier, Osoyoos, BC

1964 Buick Riviera

J.F. Launier @ JF Kustoms

2015

Don & Elma Voth

1965 Chevrolet Impala

2016

Billy & Debbie Thomas

1939 Oldsmobile convertible

Harold Chapman @ Customs & Hot Rods of Andice

2017

Buddy Jordan

1933 Ford Roadster

Steve Fisbie @ Steve's Auto Restorations

2018

Greg & Judy Hrehovczik

1957 Chevy

Imagine[65]

Johnny Martin @ Johnny's Auto Trim & Rod Shop

2019

Steve Barton

1959 Cadillac Eldorado Brougham

Cadmad[66]

Jordan Quintal Sr. @ Super Rides by Jordan

2020

Brad, Brady, and Cory Ranweiler

1963 Chevy 2-door station wagon

Impressive[67]

Bradley, Brady, Cory Ranweiler @ Show Cars Automotive

2021





2022

Rick and Paddy Bird

1931 Chevy Coupe

Sho Bird[69]

Bruce Harvey @ Pro Comp Custom

2023

Luigi Deriggi

1950 Mercury Coupe

Maximus[70]

Bruce Harvey @ Pro Comp Custom

2024

Davey and Tracey Maxwell

1953 Chevy Corvette

TwelveAir

Kindig-It Design

*The 2021 show was cancelled due to the COVID-19 Pandemic.




Text from Wikipedia

Photos by Street Machine Central

 
 
 

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