The Original Rat Fink
The story of Ed "Big Daddy" Roth
Few car cult figures are as renowned as Ed "Big Daddy" Roth. Born in Beverly Hills in 1932, Roth came of age in post-war Southern California, the cultural epicenter of hot rodding. During the 1960s, Roth was a celebrity, a larger-than-life character with a beatnik beard who spoke in hep-cat lingo and was always hamming it up for the camera. More than his contemporaries Von Dutch and the Barris brothers Sam and George, Roth grasped the marketing potential of the trappings of the custom car counterculture and understood how to promote them to teenagers.
During the mid-1950s, Roth established his reputation as a pinstriper and painter of scallops and flame jobs. He opened a successful custom paint shop called the Crazy Painters with fellow pinstriping artists "Baron" Crozier and Tom Kelly. Yet, while his brand of custom pinstriping was an important part of the 1950s car scene, it soon became apparent that the form of art did not have to be reserved exclusively for automobiles.
In the late 1950s, Roth began running advertisements in "Car Craft" and "Rod and Custom" magazines offering what he called "weirdo shirts." For about four dollars, Roth would hand airbrush the name of your car club on a sweatshirt along with a grotesque head covered in pustules or surrounded by flames—a "weirdo." The cover of the April 1961 issue of Sports Illustrated featured two hot rodders, backs to the camera, showing off their weirdo shirts—high fashion in the Southern California street racing scene. By 1965, Roth traded his airbrush for a silkscreen, turning the counterculture craze for customized shirts into a profitable, mass-market enterprise.
The Business of Monsters
In 1959, Roth left the Crazy Painters and opened Roth Studios at a nondescript little building at 4616 Slauson Avenue in Maywood, a suburb of Los Angeles. Through the following decade Roth and other talented artists such as Ed Newton, Robert Williams, and Dave Mann, were able to push the envelope of car customization thanks in part to the development of fiberglass, which could be easily molded into extreme shapes. Roth also conceived a highly recognizable corpus of automotive and monster iconography that was printed on shirts, decals, and virtually anything else that could be sold by mail-order or at car shows.
The 1960s came to be the high point of Roth's career and his entrepreneurial activities. The vehicles that he produced and the monsters penned by the studio artists under his direction are what he is best remembered for. Few could have predicted the market potential for T-shirts depicting cars driven by monsters. In his survey of mid-'60's American culture, The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby, Tom Wolfe quotes Roth's summation of the inspiration behind his T-shirt designs: "A teenager always has resentment to adult authority. These shirts are like a tattoo they can take off if they want to." Most historians credit Roth with popularizing the printed T-shirt. Today such silk-screened shirts are so ubiquitous that many do not realize that there was a time before Roth when all T-shirts were plain.
The Original Rat Fink
Of all the creatures conjured by Roth, Rat Fink was the most popular. Widely regarded as the alter ego of Disney's world-famous Mickey Mouse, Rat Fink was the archetypal Roth monster. He was fat, hairy, homely, sweaty, and had bloodshot eyes and a twitch, yet is credited with selling the most Roth T-shirts. Capitalizing on the popularity of his creature, Roth had his studios artists create dozens of Rat Fink-esque creatures, an army of monsters stuffed into stylized renderings of hopped-up Fords and Chevys. School-aged boys loved them; their mothers hated them.
Roth had many versions of the Rat Fink creation story. In his 1980 autobiography Confessions of a Rat Fink: The Life and Times of Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, Roth states that he first doodled Rat Fink on a napkin at a restaurant in about 1960. Although the first to admit he was no great artist (at least with a pen), Roth was very pleased with his drawing and the repulsive little character had personal significance to Roth. "Whenever I looked at that drawing," Roth said, "I felt I was looking, for the first time, at reality—my reality. The world that my parents, teachers, and responsible type people all around me belonged to wasn't my world. Why did I have to be like them, live like them? I didn't. And Rat Fink helped me realize that."
The Cars
Despite the fame and fortune afforded Roth by his mail-order monster shirts and decals, they were all secondary endeavors meant to finance his true passion: building custom cars. Roth's first car was a customized 1934 Ford Coupe, which he modified and pinstriped just like all subsequent vehicles he owned. Imagining ever more outrageous customs, he realized his ultimate automotive fantasy in 1959 when he fabricated a vehicle almost entirely from the ground up.
Roth's first scratch-built vehicle began as a custom-made frame into which he fitted a potent 1949 Cadillac overhead valve V-8 engine. To create the body, Roth laid fiberglass over a hand-carved plaster form, sculpting a unique custom body with swooping, fanciful lines. Known today as the Outlaw, the vehicle was first dubbed Excaliber (spelled incorrectly by Roth). Thanks to a revolutionary new material called fiberglass, Roth was able to create a wild custom that looked like no production vehicle before or since. Although Chevrolet had built Corvette bodies with fiberglass since 1953, it was still a relatively new material whose applications had not been fully explored. By pioneering the use of fiberglass on custom cars, Roth demonstrated that it was possible to create designs that were not limited by the uniform shapes of factory-built body panels.
Roth first used the handle of a sword as the Excaliber's shifter before replacing it with a more conventional shift knob in 1960, at which time he rechristened the car Outlaw. It was featured on the cover of "Car Craft" in January 1960, and immediately propelled Roth to star status on the custom car scene. Car-show audiences were mesmerized.
Beginning with Outlaw, every Roth creation was featured in a publication like "Car Craft" or "Rod and Custom." These magazines brought Roth and his creations to a national audience consisting of individuals who also purchased the Roth Studios products advertised within those same magazines. Through the early- to mid-1960s, Ed Roth rode a wave of financial success built on his celebrity, his custom cars, and the counter culture T-shirts and decals produced by his studios.
Many of those who grew up in the 1960s remember the model kits produced by Revell that were miniature replicas of Roth vehicles for which Roth licensed his name. Acting upon Revell's suggestion that he needed a more memorable name, Ed Roth added the words "Big Daddy." Much to the delight of custom car fans that were too young to drive, each new Ed "Big Daddy" Roth car (and a series of other fanciful designs as well) could be purchased as scale models. Roth claimed Revell paid him two cents for each model sold. Although a seemingly small amount of money, Roth says it "kept the bucks rollin' in for years." The October 1964 issue of "Life" magazine put sales of Revell's Roth models at three million units for that year alone.

Ed "Big Daddy" Roth in his natural element: the junkyard. Roth was always clowning for the camera. (Photo collection of David Chodosh)

Roth's first fiberglass-bodied custom, the Outlaw, brought him national recognition in the custom car scene. Noted collector Bruce Lustman donated the iconic car to the Petersen Automotive Museum in 1999. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

Ed poses with the Outlaw and a Revell scale model of the car. (Photo collection of Verne Hammond)

The April 24, 1961 "Sports Illustrated" feature on "The Amazing Hot Rod Cult" documented the craze that was then sweeping Southern California and the nation. The article covered some of the top names in the industry, most notably Ed Roth. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

Regarded by many as Mickey Mouse's alter ego, Rat Fink was first penned by Roth in 1961 and the initials "RF" are often silk-screened on T-shirts. Roth Studios later created a large number of other playfully monstrous characters including Mother's Worry, Mr. Gasser, Chicken Shift, Drag Nut, and many more. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

Roth's Beatnik Bandit was featured on the cover of the May, 1961 issue of "Car Craft" magazine. His second fiberglass custom, Beatnik Bandit incorporated a bubble canopy and a futuristic joystick-style control. Roth was a favorite subject of "Car Craft," "Rod and Custom," and other custom car magazines from the early to mid-'60s. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

The cockpit of Rotar (The Roth Air Car) was a tight fit, especially for its creator Ed Roth. Powered by two Triumph motorcycle engines, and weighing 750 pounds, Rotar was able to hover several inches off the ground. A Roth Studios promotional postcard optimistically claimed "there is a remote possibility that this will be the first car to reach the MOON." (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

Roth advertised in a large majority of custom car periodicals during the 1960s. This early promotional piece from 1961 shows the airbrushed shirt designs available at the time. Sales of these shirts and other Roth Studios artwork financed the construction of his custom cars. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

The Roth Studios decal "Thou Shalt Drag" seemed to imply that this form of activity should be practiced with religious fervor. (Collection of David Chodosh)

Roth poses with the staff at Revell, all wearing his Mr. Gasser T-shirt. Revell paid a licensing fee to use Roth's name and many of his characters and also encouraged him to add the "Big Daddy" to his name. Roth claimed Revell paid him two cents for every model they sold. (Photo collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

Roth began publishing "Choppers" in 1967. He closed down the magazine when he closed Roth Studios in 1970, mere months after this September 1969 issue was released. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

During the 1980s, Ed Roth self-published numerous books such as this one describing "How to Build Custom Car Bodies." Other topics included pinstriping and lettering. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

Roth acquired a good reputation as a pinstriper and custom painter in the late 1950s before starting Roth Studios. After he closed Roth Studios, Ed Roth returned to pinstriping, operating out of La Mirada as this business card, probably from the 1980s, indicates. (Collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum)

Ed "Big Daddy" Roth's work rapidly found a following among the very young. Everything he created, from his cars to his monster T-shirt designs, had elements of fantasy, rebellion, and cartoon-like playfulness. (Photo collection of David Chodosh)
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