Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
A CENTURY OF POWER AND INFLUENCE: THE ROLLS-ROYCE PHANTOM AT 100
Fri May 02 12:01:00 CEST 2025 Press Release
Phantom occupies a unique place in the history of Rolls-Royce. At any given time during the last 100 years, it has represented the very best in effortless luxury, engineering excellence, fine materials and exquisite, highly skilled craftsmanship. Across eight generations, each as storied as the last, Phantom has remained unrivalled – not just as the marque’s flagship motor car, but the world’s pinnacle luxury product.
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- 100 years after it was first conceived, Rolls-Royce reflects on Phantom’s global influence
- As the ultimate Rolls-Royce, Phantom is the world’s pinnacle luxury product
- Owned by cultural icons, Phantom has both reflected and shaped the world
- Phantom has been an inspiring stage for greatness at history’s defining moments
- Underscores the long history of elaborate, highly personal Bespoke Phantoms
- Today’s Rolls-Royce designers have been inspired to create eight artworks, celebrating Phantom’s centenary year
“Phantom is much more than a motor car. For 100 years, it has
stood at the pinnacle of all Rolls-Royce motor cars – a cultural
phenomenon that both reflects and influences the world around it.
From its earliest days, Phantom has been one of the most desired
rewards for success and a potent symbol of power and prestige on the
world stage. Beyond status, it has always offered its owners a
canvas for personal expression, transformed through Bespoke
craftsmanship into a moving work of art. Across music, politics, art
and beyond, Phantom has been present at many of history’s defining
moments. The stories that surround it – and the images they’ve
inspired our designers to create – reveal its extraordinary reach,
and its enduring connection to greatness.”
Chris Brownridge, Chief Executive, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
Phantom occupies a unique place in the history of
Rolls-Royce. At any given time during the last 100 years, it has
represented the very best in effortless luxury, engineering
excellence, fine materials and exquisite, highly skilled
craftsmanship. Across eight generations, each as storied as the last,
Phantom has remained unrivalled – not just as the marque’s flagship
motor car, but the world’s pinnacle luxury product – an icon of icons.
As it enters its second century, Phantom remains an authoritative
statement of connoisseurship, enjoyed by those who shape our world.
The stories of these individuals – and their motor cars – give
Phantom its own place in history. Phantom has been associated with
famous people and momentous events from its inception, signifying
power and influence through its sheer size, dominant presence and –
perhaps most significantly – its unique capacity to reflect its
owner’s personality and significance.
Rolls-Royce marks Phantom’s centenary by reflecting on some of
the fascinating stories where Phantom has played a role. The marque’s
designers have created a series of original artworks paying tribute to
Phantom’s legacy, celebrating this remarkable motor car’s cultural
impact through the decades and capturing the spirit of each of its
eight generations.
These artworks echo a historical precedent dating back to 1910,
when the artist Charles Sykes – who would later create the Spirit of
Ecstasy mascot – was commissioned to produce six original oil
paintings for the marque’s 80-page catalogue. These images showed
Rolls-Royce motor cars arriving at the opera, a country house, the
golf course and other venues, reflecting the tastes and lifestyles of
its almost exclusively aristocratic owners at the time. The
illustrations created by the marque’s designers in 2025 illustrate
just how much that client profile has diversified over the past century.
While these contemporary illustrations celebrate Phantom’s
evolving role in culture, they also echo a deeper truth: that for a
century, Phantom has been present at defining moments in politics,
society, and global history. From heads of state to stars of stage and
screen, it has served those whose decisions and presence have helped
shape the world we live in.
PHANTOM AS A STATEMENT OF AUTHORITY
One of the great commanders of the Second World War, Field
Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein,
was nicknamed ‘the Spartan General’ for his austere lifestyle. His
sole concession to comfort was in his personal transport. Recognising
the power of image and symbolism, ‘Monty’ used a pair of Phantoms to
communicate permanence, solidity and reliability, sending a clear
signal to his troops that he would stick with them through the darkest hours.
Montgomery’s day-to-day transport was a 1936 Phantom III with
coachwork by Freestone & Webb, requisitioned from the head of the
Talbot Motor Company, Frederick Wilcock. In the build-up to D-Day in
June 1944, he used this motor car to convey Winston Churchill, General
Eisenhower and even King George VI to planning sessions at the Supreme
Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force in Southwick House, Hampshire.
On occasion, during the war years, he used the ‘Butler’ Phantom
III, assigned to the Chief of the Imperial General Staff. This
particular motor car was so named because it was originally
commissioned for Alan Samuel Butler, Chairman of the De Havilland
Aircraft Company. With bodywork by HJ Mulliner, its most distinctive
feature was a front-sloping windscreen that made the Phantom 15% more
aerodynamic, a quality further enhanced by its swept-tail rear profile
and enclosed spare wheel and tyre. Montgomery bought the motor car in
1958 and kept the ‘Butler’ until 1963, during which time it served
many eminent passengers including the Prime Ministers of Canada,
Australia and New Zealand.
PHANTOM AS THE ROYAL STANDARD
While Montgomery’s Phantoms were present at events that shaped
the modern world, others took pride of place in royal households; none
more so than in Rolls-Royce’s home of Great Britain.
In 1948, the Duke of Edinburgh, newly married to HRH Princess
Elizabeth, paid a visit to Rolls-Royce. He was loaned an experimental
car with a newly designed straight-eight 5.3-litre engine nicknamed
‘the Scalded Cat’ by the marque’s test drivers. Shortly after, he
asked if the company could create a more formally bodied car for the
use of HRH Princess Elizabeth and himself.
The Duke’s request was accepted, and the first Rolls-Royce
Phantom IV chassis was laid down. With advice from Rolls-Royce, it was
finished to His Royal Highness’ design. The order was confirmed on 15
November, and to preserve secrecy during its creation, it was given
the code name Maharajah of Nabha. This historic motor car remains in
active service at the Royal Mews under the name Maharajah to this day.
The British Royal Family subsequently commissioned another
Phantom IV, two Phantom Vs, and two Phantom VIs to convey the
sovereign. One of these is the renowned Silver Jubilee Phantom VI,
which was presented to Queen Elizabeth II in 1977 by the British motor
industry to celebrate her 25 years on the throne. Famously featuring a
Bespoke raised roof, it would be used again in 2011 at the wedding of
the then-Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, conveying the bride from the
Goring Hotel to Westminster Abbey.
Across continents, another distinguished Phantom V became woven
into the legacy of leadership, this time at the dawn of a new nation
in the Middle East. Delivered in 1966 with coachwork by Mulliner Park
Ward, the motor car was originally commissioned by Sheikh Zayed Bin
Sultan Al Nahyan, revered as the ‘founding father’ of the United Arab
Emirates. It was present at his inauguration as ruler of Abu Dhabi and
played a pivotal role in his unification negotiations with the leaders
of Dubai and other neighbouring Emirates. In 1971, this Phantom
carried James Treadwell, the first British Ambassador to the UAE, to
the ceremony that formally established the federation on 2 December.
Eight years later, that same Phantom V would return to
prominence when it served as the official state conveyance for Her
Majesty Queen Elizabeth II during her historic visit to the UAE in
1979 – a moment that brought the two royal legacies full circle.
Beyond ceremonial duties, Phantom has long played a quieter role
in the theatre of diplomacy. In 1965, the use of Rolls-Royce motor
cars by UK government departments was formally debated in Parliament,
a reflection of their symbolic weight on the world stage. During this
period, Phantom Vs became trusted envoys in themselves, serving
British diplomats in postings as far-reaching as New York, Washington,
Tokyo and New Delhi, with earlier examples used in Rome and other destinations.
Over the years, Phantom has also been used in official
capacities in countries including Australia, Kuwait, Spain, Thailand
and the United Arab Emirates – a testament to its role in the subtle
language of statecraft. Indeed, the former British ambassador to
Paris, Sir John Fretwell, told British newspaper, The Times,
“My Rolls certainly helped when visiting the Élysée. The guards on the
gate had no excuse for not knowing it was the British ambassador.”
Whether navigating the world stage or serving closer to home,
Phantom has always been an imposing presence, as exemplified by
Phantom V, launched in 1959 at 5.8m (almost 19ft) long. While no
official documentation exists to prove it, some authors have posited
that the minimum statutory distance between British parking meters was
revised to accommodate its dimensions.
A PHANTOM FOR A BEATLE: ENTER JOHN LENNON
Not every Phantom V was destined for royal service or diplomatic
ceremony. Some would come to symbolise an entirely different kind of
cultural power. In December 1964, Britain’s disruptor-in-chief, John
Lennon, rewarded himself for the success of The Beatles’ A Hard
Day’s Night by commissioning his own Rolls-Royce motor car. In
typically iconoclastic fashion, Lennon specified his Phantom V should
be black everywhere, inside and out. (There are, however, lines that
even a Beatle can’t overstep; the motor car’s Pantheon grille and
Spirit of Ecstasy mascot retained their conventional bright finish at
the marque’s insistence.) This was one of the first cars in Britain to
have blacked-out windows, made from darkened, reflective Triplex
Deeplight glass.
As Lennon told a Rolling Stone interviewer in 1965,
these were not only for privacy, “It’s partly that, but it’s also for
when you’re coming home late,” the Beatle remarked. “If it’s daylight
when you’re coming home, it’s still dark inside the car – you just
shut all the windows and you’re still in the club.”
But this would not be this particular Phantom’s most famous
iteration. In May 1967, just days before the release of Sgt.
Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, this motor car was reborn.
Inspired by the Romany-style caravan at his home in Weybridge, Lennon
reportedly took the advice of Marijke Koger, one of the artists behind
the design collective The Fool, and commissioned a complete transformation.
The once-black Phantom was repainted in vibrant yellow and
covered with swirling, floral motifs and zodiac symbols. Lennon
enlisted a local artist to realise the new design; the result was an
artistic manifesto for the Summer of Love the same year, and was often
parked proudly outside Lennon’s Kenwood home.
Not everyone approved. As the freshly painted Phantom drove down
a promenade in London’s Piccadilly area that summer, Lennon claimed
that an outraged Englishwoman shouted, “How dare you do that to a
Rolls-Royce!” before attacking the motor car with her umbrella – a
moment that only galvanised its legendary status.
Lennon’s Phantom moved with him to New York in 1971, where it
became a familiar sight on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. In 1977, he
donated it to the Cooper Hewitt Museum. When it was auctioned in 1985,
the Phantom sold for $2,299,000 – then a world record for any piece of
rock and roll memorabilia. A year later, it was gifted to the Province
of British Columbia, where it remains in the care of the Royal British
Columbia Museum: a countercultural artefact and perhaps the most
famous Rolls-Royce in the world.
The Lennon motor car is just one example of Phantom’s deep ties
to the creative industries. Since its inception, Phantom has been the
reward of choice for influential figures who have shaped the cultural
landscape, both as recognition for their success and as a canvas to
express their own personality and vision.
TO HOLLYWOOD AND BEYOND: PHANTOM TAKES THE LEAD
The era of silent movies effectively ended in 1927 with the
advent of the ‘talkies’ – feature films with both synchronised
recorded music and lip-synchronised singing and speech. Among the
pioneers of this transformational art form was the Warner Brothers
studio, whose co-founder Jack Warner rewarded himself with a Phantom.
While some ‘silent’ stars like Mary Pickford – whose Phantom was
famously fitted with a hidden compartment for carrying illicit alcohol
in defiance of America’s Prohibition laws – never enjoyed the same
success following the advent of synchronised sound, others including
Greta Garbo and Fred Astaire effortlessly embraced the new order to
become global icons – and, naturally, Phantom I owners.
In the years that followed, Phantom would make numerous
appearances on the silver screen. Its annus mirabilis was
1964, in which Phantom took leading roles in two of the year’s major
movie releases.
In Goldfinger, the film’s eponymous arch-villain uses
his black-and-yellow 1937 Phantom III Sedanca de Ville to smuggle gold
over the Furka Pass to his mountain lair, until he is finally thwarted
by his nemesis, suave super-spy James Bond. This would be one of 12
appearances by Rolls-Royce motor cars in the long-running 007
franchise. In 2024, the marque commemorated the 60th anniversary of
the film’s release with Phantom Goldfinger, a one-of-one Bespoke
Phantom VIII, faithfully replicating the original’s distinctive finish
and replete with innovative film-inspired details.
The same year also saw the premiere of The Yellow
Rolls-Royce, written by legendary British dramatist Terence
Rattigan and starring a 1931 Phantom II, with Sedanca de Ville
coachwork by Barker. A three-part anthology film, it charts the motor
car’s adventures with three different owners – an English aristocrat,
a Chicago gangster, and an American socialite – and their lives and
loves in the years prior to, and including, the outbreak of the Second
World War. The all-star cast featured Rex Harrison, Ingrid Bergman,
Shirley MacLaine, Omar Sharif, George C Scott, Alain Delon and Jeanne
Moreau; the soundtrack song Forget Domani won a Golden Globe
and was later recorded by both Perry Como and Frank Sinatra. The
latter would also own a Rolls-Royce.
THE KING’S MOTOR CAR: A PHANTOM FOR ELVIS
Other titans of popular culture naturally gravitated to Phantom
as their fame grew across the globe. Elvis Presley, the ‘The King’
himself, loved cars and in 1963 bought his first Phantom V with
coachwork by James Young. The suitably rock’n’roll extras included a
high fidelity Blaupunkt Köln stereo system, Firestone whitewall tyres,
a microphone and a rear armrest containing a writing pad, mirror and
clothes brush. It was shipped in Midnight Blue with a grey cloth
interior, but in a delightful domestic detail, Elvis had it repainted
after his mother’s chickens started pecking at their reflections in
the mirror-polish finish. The chosen lighter Silver Blue reportedly
didn’t show the blemishes in the paintwork.
In 1968, Elvis donated his Phantom to the SHARE charity – an act
which later inspired the song Elvis’s Rolls-Royce byLeonard
Cohen and Was (Not Was).
A NEW GENERATION
For decades, Phantom owners tended to fall into two groups:
those born into wealth and those who rose to prominence in business,
the arts or entertainment. Then, from the mid-1970s, a wave of
personal technology began to shift this balance. The arrival of home
video, personal computers, mobile phones and eventually the internet,
gave individuals the tools to build influence and wealth on their own terms.
A new kind of success story was taking shape. Technology allowed
people to make their own fortunes much earlier, and much faster than
ever before. It also meant those who already had a public profile –
sportspeople, movie stars, musicians and other celebrities – could
capitalise on their own image, on their own terms.
This new generation of younger, self-made, entrepreneurial
figures was new to luxury. Their tastes were eclectic, individual and
unconventional; most importantly, they wanted products that would
allow them to express not only their wealth and success, but also
their own unique tastes, creative visions and personality.
Phantom VII arrived at the perfect time. As a true Rolls-Royce,
it fully met the requirements and expectations of the marque’s
traditional clients. But as an entirely new motor car, hand-crafted at
the new Home of Rolls-Royce at Goodwood, West Sussex, it was the
contemporary product this new generation was looking for. And while it
was a complete motor car, it was explicitly positioned as the perfect
blank canvas for Bespoke individualisation – just as the coachbuilt
Phantoms that preceded it had been.
PHANTOM ENTERS THE SOCIAL MEDIA AGE
For these new owners, Phantom was a motor car in which to be
seen; and thanks to social media, they could be – by millions, around
the world. In a neat full circle, many of the people who made their
fortunes via YouTube and Instagram chose to invest in a Phantom, then
used their platforms to share their ownership experience with the
world. As its presence grew, Phantom became a fixture at award
ceremonies and gala events; in 2012, three special edition Phantom
Drophead Coupés made a surprise appearance at the closing ceremony of
the London Olympics. The roof of the first retracted to reveal Jessie
J, who sang as the motor cars performed laps of the stadium. A
suitably grand arrival for such a momentous occasion, this event,
along with numerous others in more recent history, was broadcast
directly to the devices of millions, making Phantom a social media
star in its own right.
PHANTOM TODAY
For 100 years, Phantom has been a quiet but imposing presence in
some of history’s most defining and memorable moments. Now in its
eighth generation, it remains a potent symbol of power, influence, and
success. As well as continuing to attract many of the highest
achievers in modern culture, it transcends the automotive world,
serving as both the pinnacle of luxury and a cultural icon in its own right.
Whether making cameo appearances in music videos, from Calvin
‘Snoop Dogg’ Broadus and Pharrell’s Drop It Like It’s Hot to
Drake’s Started From the Bottom, being represented in
cultural institutions like the Saatchi Gallery and the Serpentine, or
serving as a collaborative canvas for brands including Hermès and Iris
van Herpen, it continues to reflect and shape the world around it.
Phantom continues to serve as the ultimate canvas for personal
expression, facilitating the finest creative hand craftsmanship. Since
the dawn of Rolls-Royce’s Goodwood era, it has inspired some of the
most extraordinary Bespoke commissions in the marque’s modern age –
each a reflection of its commissioning client’s imagination, values
and legacy. From intricate expressions of cultural heritage to
contemporary works of art, these remarkable motor cars reaffirm
Phantom’s position not only as the pinnacle of luxury, but as a medium
for self-expression.
As Phantom enters its second century, its journey through
culture, communities and continents continues, gathering more momentum
than ever. Each new commission adds another chapter to a story still
being written – one shaped by the achievements of those who commission
it and the timeless commitment to excellence and individuality that
have always defined Phantom. In a rapidly changing world, it remains a
reassuring constant: the ultimate expression of presence, purpose and
personal legacy.
Throughout Phantom’s centenary year, Rolls-Royce will be marking
this historic milestone with a series of celebrations around the
world. You can find an overview of key moments and highlights here.