Convention-style auto shows, such as the Detroit and Los Angeles events covered in this issue, are nothing new. These multi-make affairs allow attendees to look at, touch, and sit in nearly everything on the market. More than 50 years ago, just after post-WWII automobile production recommenced, General Motors did the industry one better by hosting its own chest-beating, razzle-dazzle spectacles. These GM-nameplates-only productions were called Motorama.
What grand, uniquely ’50s-style spectacles they were. Held on and off from 1949 through 1961, Motorama was a traveling road show of new products, technology, dream cars, and showmanship. Though Motoramas were staged in many cities around the country (among them Chicago, Detroit, Boston, Kansas City, and Los Angeles), it was the New York rendition at the glitzy Waldorf Astoria hotel that really walked…