Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

John DeLorean

 
Who2 Biography: John DeLorean, Car Designer
John DeLorean
Source

  • Born: 6 January 1925
  • Birthplace: Detroit, Michigan
  • Died: 19 March 2005 (Complications from a stroke)
  • Best Known As: Creator of the DeLorean car

John DeLorean's self-named sports car, with a gaudy stainless-steel body and gull-wing doors, was the talk of the auto world in the early 1980s. DeLorean himself was already an auto industry legend for having designed the hotrod Pontiac GTO in the 1960s, and for his fast rise through the ranks at General Motors, where he gained a reputation as a rebellious visionary. He quit GM in 1973 and later formed the DeLorean Motor Company. The snazzy DeLorean car debuted in 1981; by 1983 financial difficulties had doomed the company and it closed down after building fewer than 10,000 cars. DeLorean was arrested in 1982 and charged with smuggling cocaine to raise money, though he was later acquitted after accusing the government of entrapment. Ironically, the now-defunct DeLorean car got a huge popularity boost when it was driven by actor Michael J. Fox in the 1985 film Back to the Future. DeLorean talked of resurrecting his sports car company, but he never really shook off his financial troubles and was forced to declare bankruptcy in 1999.

DeLorean's third wife was the fashion model Christina Ferrare; the couple divorced in 1985. DeLorean was married four times in all... In 2000 DeLorean launched a new venture, DeLorean Time, which sold expensive watches over the Internet... DeLorean cars were manufactured in Northern Ireland under an agreement with the British Government... Talk show host Johnny Carson was a major investor in the DeLorean Motor Company and was behind the wheel of a DeLorean when he was cited for drunk driving in 1982.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: John Zachary DeLorean
Top
DeLorean, John Zachary, 1925-2005, American automobile executive and entrepeneur, b. Detroit. Son of a Ford Motor Co. worker, he attended the Lawrence Institute of Technology (B.S. 1948) and later earned masters degrees in engineering and business. Beginning his automotive career at Chrysler, he moved (1952) to the Packard Motor Co. as an engineer. In 1956 he joined General Motors (GM), where he was a key figure in creating (1964) the Pontiac GTO, the first muscle car, and by 1965 he was general manager of the Pontiac division. An unconventional and flamboyant executive, he was named a GM vice president in 1972 (and regarded as a future GM president), but differences over his business style led him to leave GM in 1973. He opened his own auto company, based in Northern Ireland, in 1981; it produced the DMC-12, a pricey stainless-steel sports coupe with gull-wing doors. Fewer than 9,000 cars were made before the company closed in 1982, and DeLorean ran afoul of the law, charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine (1982) and) fraud and other financial misdeeds (1985; he was acquitted of both charges.

Bibliography

See his autobiography (1985, with T. Schwarz); memoir by W. F. Haddad (1985); biographies by H. Levin (1983) and I. Fallon and J. Srodes (1985).

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the John DeLorean biography from Who2.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more