Home » My Last Day With Tom Matano, Father Of The Mazda MX-5 Miata

My Last Day With Tom Matano, Father Of The Mazda MX-5 Miata

Tom Matano Ts2
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I met Tsutomu Matano, the renowned car designer known as one of the fathers of the Mazda MX-5 Miata, in San Francisco just over a year ago. You may know him as Tom. It was June 2024, and I was at a Mazda event with my husband, driving a new Miata from the ND3 generation. My friend Jake Stumph, a Miata enthusiast and Mazda representative who hosted a small group to drive the ND3, invited Tom to have dinner with us. The group was about eight people, and we’d all been around each other for about a day — thus, we had a casual rapport. If someone new gets introduced to a group like that, I plan ways to make sure they’re included in the conversation. When I heard Tom was on the way, I did that for him too.

When Tom arrived, I realized my plans were for nothing. He walked into the restaurant with a huge smile and pencil-straight posture, commanding the table and making everyone laugh. Unlike most people, he didn’t need help in an unfamiliar group. He was a star in every sky.

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Tom was born in Japan in October 1947. He spent his life and career all over the world, including large portions in the United States. Among so many other things, Tom is renowned for his design work on the original Miata and the FD-generation Mazda RX-7, both of which remain staples of car culture and the automotive industry. He had both in his garage at home.

The Miata Concept

Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo Courtesy Of Tsutomu Matano

But Tom’s work on the Miata went far past the design of the car. He studied the American market to create the perfect sports car for it, setting the Miata’s tone and personality to become what it is today: one of the biggest icons in the automotive industry. His pillars of the car included, as quoted from his 1986 “Miata Concept” document:

  • “I would like to see that Mazda’s image for the ‘90s, starting from the [Miata], will be recognized as a quality car that has great, fun-to-drive personality and has a cheerful character.”
  • “Various activities such as club members’ picnics and sporting events using the [Miata] help form camaraderie. The United States is an individualistic country, but making friends through hobbies is very common and the bond of friendship is tight. It is a fun and affluent society.”
  • “One of the important issues for strategies is controlling prices of used [Miatas]. It is necessary to have a substantial number of accessories and repair parts that the second owners are able to use to customize their vehicles.”
  • “It is very common to see vehicles 10 to 20 years old in the United States. If you stand on the corner of the street for one hour, you can see Mazda’s history (successive vehicles). Instead of making vehicles change for the sake of change, such as all new or something new, the continuity of Mazda philosophy, Mazda design and Mazda engineering policy has to be seen in all of Mazda’s products. Avoid thoughtless changes, and be patient.”
  • “If you can accept vehicles as an object of religion, you will be able to understand and love sports cars.”
Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo: Alanis King

One of my favorite Tom quotes, from another document called “Inspired Sensations,” was a blueprint for the Miata’s product strategy. It said: “The customer takes the car home, and, of course, takes the family for a ride, shows it to their neighbors and friends. Just before retiring to bed, you stop for one last look, and say ‘goodnight’ to the car, or maybe even sit in the car one last time.”

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Tom will always be known for his career achievements and contributions to the automotive industry, and I’m sure you’ll hear a lot about that in the coming days and weeks. But Tom was so much more than his automotive talents, so I want to tell you some of the beautiful things I learned about him in our year of friendship.

Lasting Impressions

Miata designer Tom Matano

The first night I met Tom, I was wearing a bright-turquoise vintage jacket from Leyton House, a Formula One sponsor and team from the 1980s and ‘90s. The Leyton House racing brand failed spectacularly when its boss, Akira Akagi, got arrested in connection with “questionable loans” from Japan’s Fuji Bank circa 1991.

Tom couldn’t believe I knew what Leyton House was, let alone the details of its failures. We spent the rest of the night sitting at a table on a sidewalk, eating ice cream and bonding over our similarities. Tom told me he liked a specific wristwatch so much, he bought a ton of them in case one broke. I told him I liked my 17-year-old shoes so much, I’ve glued them back together at least 10 times. We bonded over how we go to restaurants and order the same dish again and again, because we know what we like. We laughed all night.

Later that weekend, I saw Tom at a fancy car show, where he wore his usual outfit for those outings: a nice coat and a tie with Miatas all over it. He hugged me with a big grin and even bigger squeeze. That big squeeze was a Tom staple, communicating his love and joy to see people better than words ever could.

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Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo: Alanis King

We exchanged contact information, as people often do, but I didn’t expect to hear from Tom so often or so quickly. He was a big deal, after all — a famous designer with an assistant and adoring fans. I was one (loud and silly) woman in a sea of people.

But Tom had a fierce desire to connect with people and to love them. That weekend, he sent me an email titled “For your flight home” that contained his original planning documents for the Miata (part of which is quoted above). And from that point forward, he sent me every object, car, or photo he saw with Leyton House turquoise in it, so we could decide if it was “Leyton House” enough. He’d caption the texts:

“Too green, but pretty.”

“A little blue.”

“Very close.”

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Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo Courtesy Of Tsutomu Matano

Tom and I talked about everything. He strongly believed that cars should make you look back at them after you park, due to their design and their sentimentality. A few weeks ago, I sent him a photo of my Miata to tell him I always look back at it.

“Lasting impressions,” he said.

“Always,” I responded.

Knowing Cars Means Knowing People

Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo: Alanis King

Tom had an incredible ability to study people and society, then turn those studies into automotive design and product planning. His studies of American culture — how we’re an individualistic society but form friend groups through hobbies, clubs, and shared interests, like car models — were the basis of his strategy for the Miata. His 1986 Miata Concept document planned the Miata’s exact trajectory from debut through the year 1999 (and he sent me the shortened version!). All of Tom’s years-out predictions and plans for the car, including how it would be seen from a market and sentimental perspective, were exactly right. He knew his car and his audience better than most people know themselves.

Miata designer Tom MatanoTom kept meticulous documentation of his life, digitally scanning and archiving everything from childhood and young-adulthood photos to an old paper letter he received as blackmail from a guy claiming to be the “true designer of the Miata.” Tom once showed me a pre-smartphone photo he took on a digital camera, which was him in a mirror with a plank of wood strapped to his back because he injured it. He loved simple solutions — in this case, forced spinal posture by 2×4 — and he told me: “That was the best night of sleep I ever got.”

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Tom was mischievous, always plotting little jokes and harmless pranks. One time, when we were snacking at the bar of a nice hotel with some friends, Tom told us about the time he got personally invited to the White House. He wanted souvenirs for loved ones, and when he went to the bathroom, he noticed the disposable hand towels had fancy presidential seals on them. He grabbed the whole stack and stuffed them in his pocket, then went back later that day when the staff restocked them and did it again.

Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo: Alanis King

After Tom told this story, he got up and walked away. I figured it was a bathroom break he forgot to announce. He came back a few minutes later with a giant stack of fancy disposable hand towels from the hotel bathroom, passing them out and putting a final punchline on his story. We all signed a towel, and I took it home.

My Last Visit With Tom

Tom loved plotting things like that. But if you plotted things back — like when I flew to California a few weeks ago to surprise him with gifts and company — he’d point at you and scrunch his face with a little smile, shocked but secretly thrilled you got away with the same mischief he loved to pull.

Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo: Alanis King

Tom loved Italian food and bread. He had a better memory of the 1980s than I do of last week. He liked to read the first few chapters of a murder-mystery novel, guess the killer, skip to the end and see if he was right, then finish reading the book to see how the author dropped hints about the guilty party.

He signed everything with “Always Inspired – T. Matano,” and he was, truly, always inspired. He always joked about the quality of his English writing, but I told him there was no need to joke because his writing was beautiful. I meant it. He loved Hallmark movies, no matter how bad they were, because they gave him a nice happy cry at the end. When I told him I was looking at a Leyton House-themed kei truck in Japan once, he told me to call him if I bought it, and he’d park it at his house there until he could connect me with someone to import it. When he would hang up the phone, despite knowing me for such a short time, he’d say: “Okay, love you, bye!” Even if he felt ill or unwell, you couldn’t tell, because he was always so happy and positive. When I visited Tom last, he’d set up his laptop and desk in the garage so he could be with his Miata all day.

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Tom loved the Miata, and the Miata was where he wanted to be — so that’s where we spent the day. It meant the world. He showed me photos from the time he grew his hair out in his 20s, and he said that as soon as he saw his grandmother, she couldn’t believe the sight of him and gave him money to get it cut. I told him he looked very California surfer, and I liked it.

Miata designer Tom Matano
Photo Courtesy Of Tsutomu Matano

Tom meant so much to me. We met when I was 28 and he was 76, and we formed one of the best relationships I will ever have, all because of his fierce pursuit of love and friendship. Tom spent his life and career surrounded by the coolest people in the world, including himself, yet he still put in so much effort to get to know me. He was one of the most special people I will ever know, and I’ll miss him for the rest of my life.

Tom loved life. He loved people. He loved teaching his skills. He loved cars. And he loved his Miata. If I can tell you to do one thing, it’s this: Live your life as if it’s short, because it is. Find peace and joy every day. Call people and tell them you love them, even if you haven’t known them very long. Fiercely pursue happiness and relationships and the things that bring you a sense of purpose. And please, enjoy your cars. Put the top down if you can. One day, whether it’s sooner or later, you won’t have the ability to drive them anymore. That’s sad, but it’s also a reminder of how happy they make you. Do this with everything and everyone you love.

Grief is love, and I loved Tom. I always will. I hope I can love people as well as he loved me.

Thank you for listening, and I hope you remain Always Inspired. Tom would want that.Miata designer Tom Matano

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Grey alien in a beige sedan
Grey alien in a beige sedan
2 hours ago

Wow. Thanks for sharing that Alanis. I hope he made your life just a little better by being a part of it, for however brief that was.

Stryker_T
Member
Stryker_T
2 hours ago

this was wonderful, thank you.

Huja Shaw
Huja Shaw
2 hours ago

A lovely tribute to a man who “got it.” I’m sorry for you loss, Alanis.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
2 hours ago

**SNIFF** When the answer is always: Hire the right designer.

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
3 hours ago

Thanks Alanis. Nice story. Such a guy, we were lucky to have him in the industry for sure.
Ironically I was up all night searching for older gen Miatias for sale. They are getting really rare in my neck of the swamp.

RIP Tom, and thanks man.

Kevin Rhodes
Kevin Rhodes
3 hours ago

Very nicely written, and he seems like a wonderful person to have gotten to know.

I have been privileged to know a few automotive world people who have now passed, and I miss their stories very much. Bob Sinclair, Erik Carlsson, and David E. Davis Jr were highlights.

IRegertNothing, Esq.
Member
IRegertNothing, Esq.
3 hours ago

This is a lovely tribute to your friend, Alanis. I hope writing it helps you process your grief.

Black Peter
Black Peter
3 hours ago

Thanks so much for that Alanis..

John Crouch
Member
John Crouch
3 hours ago

Lovely remembrance, I teared up a bit-RIP Tom.

FndrStrat06
FndrStrat06
3 hours ago

Very touching eulogy. Thank you for sharing it with us.

STX 4x4
STX 4x4
3 hours ago

Bro, I envy you.

Nice Eulogy.

ImissmyoldScout
Member
ImissmyoldScout
4 hours ago

Magnificent piece, Alanis. The world has lost one of the greats.

Dan Pritts
Member
Dan Pritts
4 hours ago

May his memory be a blessing.

excellent piece, Alanis.

Rapgomi
Member
Rapgomi
4 hours ago

A well written and touching tribute to a friend. Thanks for your insight, and my condolences on your loss.

It is a loss the whole car world shares.

Holly Birge
Member
Holly Birge
4 hours ago

This is so beautiful Alanis. Thank you for writing this.

Operatoring
Operatoring
4 hours ago

Wow. Wonderful piece of writing, Alanis. Thank you!

Mike F.
Member
Mike F.
4 hours ago

Wow – great article. To have known someone with such a rare combination of intelligence, empathy, humor, drive, and who was also obviously a car guy of the highest order is such a wonderful treat. He made the world a better place, and your article made my day a better one. Thanks, Alanis!

Banana Stand Money
Member
Banana Stand Money
4 hours ago

Wonderful tribute Alanis. We all deserve to be inspired by and touched by someone like Tom in our lives. Truly a life well lived and a man well loved.

Rick C
Rick C
4 hours ago

Nice rare 1968 Fiat Abarth 1300 he posed with.

LTDScott
Member
LTDScott
4 hours ago

Great tribute!

Jdoubledub
Member
Jdoubledub
4 hours ago

Absolutely beautiful! Tearing up at work reading this.

ESO
ESO
2 hours ago
Reply to  Jdoubledub

Me too. 🙁

Mrbrown89
Member
Mrbrown89
4 hours ago

As a proud owner of a Miata NB, thank you! Its the only car that I look back at it after I park.

3WiperB
Member
3WiperB
4 hours ago

This was a lovely tribute.

I’ve only had a Miata for a little over a year, but I bought a 2nd for my son just a few months after the 1st. It puts a smile on both of our faces. It’s the first car that I crave to drive when the winter months hit and it’s stored in the garage. As Tom planned, I can daily a 19 year old car all summer without a concern in the world. I can have fun with fellow owners in the local Miata Club. I can modify it in so many ways, or just keep it stock and enjoy. I can spend time with my son working on his ND and my NC.

Thank you Tom for being the father to a car that continues to bring so much daily joy to our lives.

Endlesstee
Member
Endlesstee
4 hours ago

What a touching tribute, Alanis. Thank you for sharing this special experience and friendship. Although I’ve not really had a Miata on my list of cars to own, I’ve always felt like there was something special to them. This is proof that there is. Tom sounds like such a special person who’ll be deeply missed and I love the idea that someone so unique will have a special legacy that’ll be on the road for many more decades.

Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
4 hours ago

I didn’t know he passed. What a loving tibute. “He strongly believed that cars should make you look back at them after you park” should be the guiding principle for car designs.

Revolver
Revolver
35 minutes ago
Reply to  Jesse Lee

I agree. There have been a few cars that I’ve gotten out of, and silently thought “yeah, that’s *mine!*” while looking at it from the door. And it can’t just be for the first week you own it.

I have proof a Porsche can do that too, and I could guess various supercars will evoke that.

But the truth is, more cars than people would think can do that, and the Miata can do that too. Its silly little grin is so infectious that you’d have to be sociopathic not to smile a little too. Even if it’s just on the inside.

edit: it doesn’t even have to be mine, haha! Every time I see one I shout “miat!!” and point, and smile. Thanks, Mr. Matano.

Last edited 33 minutes ago by Revolver
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