Dept. 56, Snow Village, "Harley-Davidson Manufacturing," #54948 |
Dept. 56, Snow Village, "Harley-Davidson Fat Boy and Softail" #54900 |
James Dean and Marilyn Monroe in "Spellbound" by Paul Gasenhemier, http://www.best-motorcycle.com/posters/james- dean-marilyn-monroe.shtm |
This dream-like image of James Dean and Marilyn Monroe on a Harley sums up many of these feelings. And when you think about it, it is not a feeling based on logic. James Dean never even met Marilyn Monroe. James Dean died very young in a crash, but not on a Harley. Marilyn Monroe also died young, and as Elton John sang, "(Her) candle burned out long before, (Her) legend ever did." And, actually, the Harley's right side is shown in the picture, not the left, as it should. This is not reality. This is iconic, and the Harley is absolutely necessary to the image.
So I have put together a list of the 10 most interesting people who have owned a Harley, based on their iconic strength, individuality, and adventure. When you add Harley Christmas buildings and accessories to your miniature village, you can remember these images!
Brigitte Bardot, Image from bikematchmaking.com (which I do not use.) |
Dept. 56, Christmas in the City, "Ready for the Road," #58907 |
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NUMBER 9: Ann Richards: Prominent Democrat and former Treasurer and Governor of Texas. For her 60th birthday, Ann Richards said in an interview that she wanted to learn how to ride a motorcycle. Well, Harley-Davidson heard about it, and shipped her one! So when Texas Monthly wanted to do a cover story on her, the magazines's artistic director D. J. Stout came up with the idea of her on a Harley. "I had an image in my head of Ann, the feisty grandmother governor, decked out in all-white leathers--to match her famous white bouffant hairdo--straddling a hog. Ann Richards on a Harley seemed to me to be the perfect metaphor for capturing her salty wit and irreverent personality. It was an image that summed up all those things that people loved about her."
Dept. 56, Snow Village, "Harley-Davidson Water Tower," #54975 What a Texas water tower might look like. Original Snow Village Harley-Davidson Water Tower, 56.54975 |
Stout and Richards were unable to get a mutually convenient photo session, so she suggested Stout "photoshop" her head onto another person aboard the Harley. Stout did, and they shared many laughs over the picture. http://observatory.designobserver.com/feature/remembering-ann-richards/4757/
Dept. 56, Christmas in the City, "Harley-Davidson Detailing, Parts, & Service," #59214 |
Jay Leno and the 2005 Harley auctioned off to raise money for the Harley-Davidson Foundation Tsunami Relief Fund. Image from www.cycleconnections.com. |
Malcom Forbes's Harley-Davidson Hot Air Balloon, Forbes is in the gondola. Image from www.corbisimages.com. |
Dept. 56, Snow Village, "A Harley-Davidson Holiday," #54898 |
Dept. 56, Christmas in the City, "Harley-Davidson City Dealership, #59202 |
NUMBERS 5 and 6: Dennis Hopper and Peter Fonda: Actors in "Easy Rider". "Easy Rider" is an iconic movie about two bikers who travel through the south in the 1960's exploring the dark issues of this generation, drugs, alienation, intolerance, and violence. The film won a host of awards and the accolades of an entire generation. Dennis Hopper and Peter Fonda not only assumed the lead roles, but they also wrote it the movie, conjunction with Terry Souther, and Fonda produced and Hopper directed.
Dept. 56, Christmas in the City, "America's Finest," #58998 |
Harley-Davison frames and engines from four former police officer bikes were used to create the two bikes for the main characters, plus two back-ups. Fonda and others designed and had the bikes "chopper-built" for the film. One "Captain America" bike was demolished in the final scene. It was later rebuilt and was sold at auction. The other three bikes were stole and never recovered, though numerous replicas have been made. Department 56 Christmas in the City America's Finest 58998
"Easy Rider" is 88th on the list of the American Film Institute's List of 100 Years, 100 Movies. In 1998 it was added to the US National Film Registry, having been designated as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."
Arnold Schwarzenegger, "Terminator 2: Judgement Day," Image from www.starcarstn.com/T2_Harley.html |
In the hit movie, "Terminator 2: Judgment Day," released by Tri Star Pictures in 1991, the Governator rode a Harley-Davidson Softail Fatboy. Schwarzenegger plays a Terminator, a liquid metal shape-shifting T-1000 who defends humans in their attempt to prevent Judgement Day, when machines would begin to exterminate humanity. The film's visual effects, using computer-generated imagery, were very influential, and the movie won four Academy awards for technical feats. At the time, it was the most expensive movie ever made, but it also became the highest-grossing film of 1991. After the filming, Mario Kassar, the producer, kept the Terminator's bike in his personal collection, until he sold it to a private collector, who held it until it came into the collection of the Hollywood Star Cars Museum. http://www.starcarstn.com/T2_Harley.html
Dept. 56, Christmas in the City, 1930 Harley-Davidon VL W/Sidecar," #59409 |
Elvis Presley on his Harley-Davidson. Image from http://photos.elvispresley.com.au/1950s_2.html |
Dept. 56, Snow Village, "Harley-Davidson Motorcycle Shop," #54886 |
Elvis rode Harleys in several films, including "Roustabout," a 1964 film in which he plays Charlie, a rider who sings at whopping malls, and takes a part-time carnival job to pay for repairs of his bike. Presley also appeared on a Harley in "Viva Las Vegas," Clambake, and "Stay Away Joe." http://onmilwaukee.com/music/articles/harleymuseumelvisexhibit.html
Dept. 56, Snow Village, "Patrolling the Road," #54971 |
"The Warning," by Eric Richards. Image from www.motofoto.cc/Police_Motorcycles.htm |
Dept. 56, Snow Village, "A New HarleyDavidson," #4020224 |
NUMBER 1--THE MOST ICONIC USER OF A HARLEY-DAVIDSON:
SANTA CLAUS
Dept. 56, North Pole, "A Happy Harley Day," #56706 |