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October 31, 2008
Joe Sulpy's Parisienne
By Rob Einaudi
Editor-in-Chief
I saw the photo below in the New York Times coverage of the Lead East show and was like, WTF??? But after a bit of sleuthing on Moparts and the H.A.M.B., I managed to unearth the story. The car was built by Joe Sulpy of Ledgewood, New Jersey. It’s a replica an old custom called the "Parisienne," built by Dick "Korky" Korkes back in the late 1950s. The original Parisienne is long gone, so Joe Sulpy recreated the car based on magazine pictures and memory. Apparently it’s a Chrysler with T-bird fenders. More pics after the jump, including a photo of the original Parisienne on the cover of a May 1960 copy of Cars Magazine. And you can see a bunch of shots of the build on Sulpy’s site.
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clickforluck
Aug 26, 2009 at 5:46 pm
The original was built by Richard Korkes aka Korky Korkes. The original is at Gale Black’s house in Arizona. Korky and Gale both worked on the Batmobile and many other cars at George Barris’ shop in California. Korky won many shows with his customs and that was the reason George Barris recruited him to move to California and manage the Barris shop. I believe the car that was over the top was the Jaguar v8 with the bubble top that won all three major US shows that year. The Parisienne has been the subject of conversation lately and Korky is considering rebuilding it. Korky is opening a new shop in Palm Springs this winter. He is considering building a few Corvette Summer replicas and is taking orders for specialty cars or personalized cars. He will also have a custom golf cart shop for celebs and lovers of very cool ‘one of a kind’ golf carts. See http://www.korkyskustomstudios.com for more information. 8/2009
Bill MacKenzie
Dec 8, 2008 at 10:57 pm
I know quite a bit about this (the original “real” car)….It was purchased new in 1954 by Richard Korkess of Highland Ave. in Whippany New Jersey. The car was customized originally by “Korky” with a red and white paint job separated by ’55 Pontiac side chrome. In front it had frenched headlights, 1954 Pontiac grille, spot lights, skirts and a continentle kit. The tail lights were 1956 olds 98 that were frenched in. At that time it had a 272 cu. inch OHV with overdrive transmission. The second makeover started in the late 50′s and had two different versions of front ends. The rear end was nearly the same on both versions. Korky was doing a lot of 1/2 tops at that time. He did one for Art Gugliemme and another for George Pillion. Those cars were also beautifully done. Bob Giblock worked for Korky during this era, and was responsible for a lot of the fabrication on these cars. Later in life Korky lived in Canoga Park California caring for his aging mother, and the car was stored in its original condition in the garge behind the house. When I visited him, the car looked like a storage bin for whatever would fit inside. It showed all of the splendor it once had if you looked hard enough to find it. The original car is now owned or should I say is “cared” for by a gentleman in Chino Valley, Arizona. It needs a complete restoration. As a side note, Korky is still doing bodywork and his talent with lead and metal is undisputed. He recently chopped a top on a ’40 Mercury here in Arizona for Dave Hawkins. The clone tribute to Korky’s original was built and is owned by Joe Sulpy. Joe has recently relocated from New Jersey to the Phoenix area in Arizona. He is starting his new shop and we expect him to enjoy the good weather and build some exciting cars.
Evan
Nov 2, 2008 at 4:22 pm
Different but cool!
Rob
Nov 1, 2008 at 9:54 pm
Thanks Fred!
7urtle
Nov 1, 2008 at 12:15 pm
so wats the car based off of?
Tony Cassa
Nov 1, 2008 at 12:08 pm
That is awesome. Very custom and very cool!
fred kanter
Nov 1, 2008 at 7:31 am
The original was built by John Korkes of Morris Township NJ and that’s why it has NJ plates. It was common to see it in my home town of Morris Plains NJ. Korky THEN went to Claifornia to work for George Barris. This car was not built for Barris , Korky built it for himself. Dick Sulpy worked for Nostalgia Motors in Boonton NJ in the late 90′s, I rented one of my industrial properties ot Nostalgia Motors from 1992 to 2006 and it was during that tiem that their employee Dick Sulpy built the “new” Parisienne on his own time both at his own shop and at the place he worked at, Nostalgia Motors.
The internet is great, but much unverified information gets posted and then it becomes “fact”. See the postings here that say the origial car was “discovered”.
NOte the magazine is a 1960 issue and the hood of the Parisienne Sulpy built is from a ’61 or ’62 T-Bird. Korky modified the original front of the Parisienne and used a newer hood. I do not recall exactly what hood was on it when I saw it in the 50′s.
And , no, Elvis did not own it!!!
Fred Kanter
Kanter Auto Products
Boonton NJ
Rob
Oct 31, 2008 at 10:51 pm
Dave–if you can find the article, let us know and we’ll do a follow up. Thanks!
craig
Oct 31, 2008 at 10:25 pm
wow it actoually looks modern still. And it sure beats a ferrari
dave
Oct 31, 2008 at 8:42 pm
This isnt a replica, this is the original, someone found it in a barn or something a few years ago, just read the whole article in the most recent kar kulture deluxe or ol skool rodz magazine, forget which one.
photo editor
Oct 31, 2008 at 6:46 pm
those photos are awesome, you did a great job on those..perfection!
Anonymous
Oct 31, 2008 at 5:39 pm
that is the nicest oldskool I have ever seen very nice 5*****
Highspeedhijinks
Oct 31, 2008 at 5:17 pm
Those crazy body guys from the 50′s and 60s really knew how to dream up a car. What happened. No one customizes cars to this extent anymore. Its a shame
cknarf
Oct 31, 2008 at 5:00 pm
I think it’s pretty cool.