Sometimes actors do something so memorable at the beginning of their careers that is tends to define them for the rest of their lives; actor Bud Cort was one such actor. Fortunately for him, that work that he would come to be associated with for the rest of his life became a cult classic, the 1971 dark comedy about a peculiar but loving relationship between a quite old woman and a quite young man, Harold and Maude. My sister told me that Cort died yesterday, at the age of 78.
I’ll leave the real obituaries to other, more qualified outlets, but I’ll just note that Cort was an engaging and versatile actor (he even voiced a computer in the weird-AI-predicting 1984 film Electric Dreams) , and while most people just know him as the suicide-and-death-obsessed sullen rich kid Harold from Harold and Maude, he did so much more – and, I learned, was an accomplished painter as well.
But I’m not going to fight the Harold and Maude associations, because that lets me drag this back to cars, specifically the legendary Jaguar E-Type that was used in the movie, and was converted into what may have been the world’s fastest hearse, at least at the time.
The car is first introduced as a 1971 (?) Jaguar XK-E, a US-spec model, and a convertible. It’s a gift from Harold’s mother to Harold, intended to replace the 1959 Cadillac hearse Harold was driving, in hopes that this stylish sportscar would make Harold more appealing to the ladies:

Of course, Harold had other plans:
Yes, he converted the Jag into a hearse. Of all the events that happen in this movie, this transformation of a car by one young man in a garage in the course of a couple days at most is the one that demands the most determined suspension of disbelief. But it’s worth it, because the end result looks so damn good.
The Jag was converted into the hearse by SoCal-based customizer Red Harden, who was known for working on such cars as Dragula and the Munster Coach, perhaps in cooperation with legendary customizer George Barris, or perhaps Barris took credit as is sometimes insinuated; it’s not exactly clear. Regardless, these cars do have some manner of thematic ties to an E-Type hearse, so it all sort of makes sense.
The hearse wasn’t made from the XK-E convertible seen in the movie; it appears to have been made out of a 1967 Jaguar E-Type Series 1 fixed-head 2+2 coupé, with landau bars taken from a Ford Thunderbird (top):

…and, interestingly, the roof and low-mounted taillights were taken from a Datsun 510 wagon:

The conversion was genuinely beautiful; the curvy haunches of the E-type were retained, and even called out with chrome piping that bordered the vinyl roof, and the wreath etched into the rear glass (also from the Datsun, along with the whole cut-down hatch; look at the two vents on either side below the window to confirm) was an inspired touch. Really, if you replaced the landau bars with windows, you’d have a fantastic E-Type shooting brake.
Sadly, this shooting brake was definitively broken during the shooting of the movie, as it was launched off a cliff and completely pancaked itself upon the rocky ground:
You may notice that there’s a strange freeze frame just after the hearse launches into the air and hangs, nose down, before continuing to plummet:

This is because the complex remotely-triggered camera setup didn’t entirely work, and two of the cameras set up failed, so this dramatic freeze-frame was used to cover the gap. Luckily, the other two cameras did work, so the Jag didn’t give itself up for nothing.
The car is a genuine movie icon, and there is at least one extremely faithful reproduction that was built at considerable expense:
That’s all impressive. But before I wrap this up, Let’s just appreciate Bud Cort’s acting chops a bit more, even when not behind the wheel of a custom-built Jaguar hearse. I always thought he was fantastic as the bond company stooge Bill Ubell in Wes Anderson’s The Life Aquatic:
He does a great job of speaking Tagalog in the scene, especially the literal rendering of “shitstorm,” or so I’m told.
Also, I had no idea, but Bud Cort was originally going to be a main character in Pumping Iron, the documentary about body building that introduced the world to Arnold Schwarzenegger. It seems wildly improbable, but it’s true; he decided not to continue with the movie and the footage was not in the final release, but the cut footage was eventually released:
Amazing, right? Who knew?
Anyway, rest in peace, Bud.









Bud and Arnold. It’s like looking in a mirror. I’m a big Brewster McCloud fan. I loved the Bullitt parody included.
I was at a diner with a friend in the L.A. suburb of Glendale around 20 years ago when Bud came in a sat at the booth next to us. At one point he overheard us talking about movies and leaned over and said, “you know, they wanted me for Robocop, but I hated the script so much, I threw it across the room. One of the worst mistakes I ever made.” I said something like, “jeez, Bud, you would have made an incredible Robocop” which really satisfied him. I mean, it certainly would have been an interesting choice. RIP Bud
Perfect size for getting Oompa-Loompas into the ground quickly before the ants get to ’em
That was a guy who featured in a few movies that really resonated with me. I got a lot out of Brewster McCloud, for instance – another movie that featured some distinctive cars.
Thanks for this – lots of details I had not known or had forgotten (such as Cort being the voice of the computer in Electric Dreams, a film I still have the laserdisc of. I adored both “Harold and Maude” and “Brewster McCloud”.
Fun fact about Electric Dreams: Bud Cort didn’t do his lines in post as they had him actually deliver his lines on set but inside a box to avoid interacting with the other live actors in person.
In an interview Bud Cort told a charming anecdote about how one day Boy George was visiting the set (some of the film’s music was by Culture Club) and he went up to the box just as Cort was struggling to get out of the box; he said to Cort something like “you’re the bloke that played Harold, I wanted to meet you!”
(To put that in context at the time Boy George and Culture Club were among the biggest names in the music scene; 1984 was arguably the height of fame for them.)
That is both awesome and hilarious.
Adding more context: Harold and Maude gained status as a cult film pretty quickly but was still relatively obscure for many years. Almost nobody in my high school had even heard of it when I talked about it despite the school being fairly sizeable and in an affluent suburb (with a lot of access to VCRs and premium cable TV) of a college town; I graduated in 1983 which is in fact the year that Harold and Maude finally started making a profit even though it was a rather low-budget film. (In today’s dollars the budget was just under 10 million so the fact that it took a good 12 years just to break even speaks to its relative obscurity back then.)
I actually saw it in high school during the same time period – had an oddball English teacher who was known for such eccentricities. We also watched the Zeffirelli version of Romeo and Juliet, which generated its own controversy b/c all the nudity.
One reason for hating the sobriquet “clown shoe” given to the BMW Z3 coupe is that it tends to deter people from seeing just how much the car actually resembles Harold’s Jaguar hearse.
IIRC, many years ago, in the dial-up internet era I saw an interview online with one of the coupe’s designers (either Chris Bangle or Joji Nagashima) talking about how he explicitly and specifically used Harold’s Jaguar hearse as an inspiration during the design process.
Hard to find citations thereof, though, given the age of aforementioned online source, lol, so a grain of salt might be warranted though a few sources do reference that idea like this one: https://automozeal.blogspot.com/2013/10/from-hearses-to-jaguar-e-types-and-back.html?m=1
Not a series 1 car, they didn’t have side marker lights or the turn signals in front mounted under the bumper. Only 68-on cars had side marker lights….and Series 1 cars ended in 67.
Another classic from Bud: Electric Dreams from 1984
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aH39gQu-X8&pp=ygUUZWxlY3RyaWMgZHJlYW1zIDE5ODTSBwkJhwoBhyohjO8%3D
Great movie – I forgot it came out clear back in 1971. I didn’t become acquainted with it until 20 years later when my then quite goth girlfriend introduced it to me. She predicted correctly that the ending might make me sad. As I was working in a body shop at the time, seeing the transformation of the Jag-hearse may have been the largest suspension of disbelief I had made during a movie up to that point.
How’d you like the end of Deadend Drive-in?
A little bittersweet. It was great watching Jimmy “crabs” get away, but busting through that premo neon sign was a little tough to see. Reminded me a bit of the old Starlite drive-in I watched many a movie at growing up. Never thought of the place as a sort-of concentration camp for young delinquents, but I did get to see Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome there, so maybe there’s a connection.
Full disclosure, I had never even heard of that movie until reading your comment, and it almost stuns me to say so given how many car movies, 80’s movies, and post-apocalyptic movies I’ve managed to consume. Seriously, my watched list on Prime is stuff like Fallout, Mad Max, Cherry 2000, and Convoy. How in the hell was this never recommended? Luckily it’s also streaming on Prime currently – just had to search for it, so I went ahead and gave it a watch after getting back from the office and coincidently enough, going for a run 🙂
It was indeed a fun watch – thanks for bringing that to my attention!
Glad to find a good one for you.
I highly recommend the commentary track on that film also.
I assume you realized that leap was a one shot take?
No cgi in Australia then.
There’s a film called Not Quite Hollywood that reviews Australian film history.
Quinton Tarentino said Deadend Drive-In was his absolute favourite Australian film.
They were doing purely physical stunts long after the USA had been using effects.
There was a film package of Australian film that ran here at 3 am for months, then disappeared.
Everything from brilliant stuff to average police plots, but a great look at the culture.
The Australian Film institute used to rent films out, or send you DVDs of them, many unobtainable.
Look Both Ways is special.
Stone was a biker film with some character precursors that show up in Mad Max.
There are a number of real bikies in Stone and possibly some actual fights.
Smash Palace is interesting, especially for car reasons, and I assume you’ve seen the docko that led to Worlds Fastest Indian?
Not Australian, but I also recommend Psychomania, a film I got Netflix DVD, RIP, to save from vanishing.
Best biker film ever made, worst bikes.
Worth seeing if only for that one scene in the graveyard!
The Last Chase is an amazing post apocalyptic film using a Canam car.
Rare now.
If you missed it I have to mention the prescient Max Headroom drama series from Abc in america, astonishingly!
Disturbing that most of it has already come true.
I didn’t think about the truck shot being one take, but it looked impressive and I wasn’t pulled out of the element by a cut to an obvious model of some sort – great stuff. Still no substitute for practical vehicle effects. And, I could completely see that whole movie being one of Tarantino’s favorites.
Thanks for the further list of great-sounding stuff I need to keep an eye out for! The only one out of that list I recognize is the classic Max Headroom. I got to see that on good old network TV when it first aired here in the US. Luckily, at least some of the rest are available on one streaming service or another.
It’s getting late, I think I’ll crack a cold one and start with Offerings to the Gods of Speed (I’m guessing that’s the Fastest Indian documentary you mentioned). It’s interesting, I hadn’t even thought about that movie for a number of years and my uncle was excited about watching it for the first time just a few weeks ago. I’m certainly due for a rewatch.
As far as I know, that truck went airborne for 162 feet going through the neon sign.
Political science fiction, but never marketed that way in USA.
Some of the Max Headroom episodes never aired on American TV.
Too accurate about corporations and news.
Remarkable it got on the air at all.
I think they produced The Job, the forerunner to Rescue Me.
Another one too good for broadcast TV.
Gods of Speed is the original docko. I highly recommend the extras and commentary on Indian also.
I was afraid to watch it until I went to speed week, then after I went, more afraid it wouldn’t be good.
I always stopped at the salt lake, but never had the chance to be there during runs.
I was delayed leaving the high desert, and when I stopped there was some activity so I drove out until I reached a stand, like Lucy’s psychiatry desk.
I couldn’t believe they were doing speed runs out of season.
A truly surreal experience for so many reasons.
Top speed runs are the center of weirdness of the automotive world.
The movie and the default world experience both exceed expectations.
Take note of the rare museum pieces owners brought out on the salt for the film!
With some almost imperceptible changes to the rear roofline of that E-Type hearse, you’d have a beautiful kammback that probably cut the Jag’s Cd value by 1/3 or more. Consider the E-Type’s Cd is around a 0.5, while the hearse-like Lotus Europa scored a 0.29.
I never realized he was in the Movie MASH. Cool.
I really hope he takes (or took?) his final ride in one of those Jag Hearse tributes.
Yeah, I feel bad hating on what was clearly a lot of hard work, but the recreation’s roof looks… really bad.
That gentle slope down on the original fits in very well with the lines of the Jag. The repo slopes up, which is very distracting.
I had no idea about M*A*S*H. I know this much, Gary Burghoff played Radar in both the movie and the TV show, but on TV he carefully morphed the character into something much more lighthearted, more an innocent foil to the other staffs’ more cognizant disenchantment.
Remove the vinyl top and landau bars, add side windows and it would have made a cool shooting brake. The recreation has the roof all wrong.
This was one of my favorite movies in my adolescence. I loved how Ruth Gordon just takes any car she wants and drives off it with it “people shouldn’t get too attached to things”. Here’s a great scene in a stolen El Camino: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ooboieA_eE
Pour a little out for Bud. Harold and Maude is one of my favorites.
The Jaguar hearse tail lights are nothing like the Datsun tail lights.
I respect, Torch’s tail light knowledge, but come on look at the picture. They’re not even close.
Rotate them 90° and look again.
Maybe the Jag in the picture is a replica and not the movie car? Because the lights on the pictured Jag have much larger reverse lamps and the lamps curve greatly at the amber portion. The Datsun lights bend, not curve, in the middle. I’m seeing different lights
I agree – having owned a Datsun 510 wagon (Datsun 1600 wagon in Australia, and quite rare here) I know what the Datsun lights look like firsthand (and I think I still have them in a box in the shed). They have no curve to them at all, just a slight kink, which is actually flatter than that viewing angle makes them appear.
Normally I don’t mind and I don’t like editing from the comments, but you switched between Cort and Court four times in the first four mentions of the guy, in the headline and the first two paragraphs. It’s driving me crazy.
I saw that too. I assume he’s putting it in correctly and autocorrect is messing it up.
Thanks for the shoutout, Jason!
He took the name ‘Cort’ to avoid being confused with Wally Cox (Bud Cort was born Walter Cox). Court was his mother’s maiden name which he changed after Broadway’s Cort Theatre.
I got the above from Wikipedia, but I’m sure that info’s on more reliable sites as well.
Your right!
But isn’t it true that he had a great part in Young Frankenstien?
oh yeah! that was him!
Oh man, he would have been an amazing, though definitely distracting, addition to Pumping Iron. That’s so cool!
Shame about the 510 too.
Rolling an E-Type off a cliff seems like something Adrian would enjoy.
An E-Type hearse seems like something Adrian would enjoy, even if he may not like the original E-Type. You have to admit that this car is about as goth as cars can get.
I thought I was the only one that remembered Electric Dreams
Likewise!
IIRC, it was actually in the theaters for only two weeks!! The head of the studio was fired and the new people promptly yanked the film from its theater run.
Not only do I remember it, I have it on laserdisc!
I still have the VHS my dad recorded off HBO in probably 86. I wonder if it’s streaming on anything, since I no longer have a VHS player
I remember this movie and ended up buying a blu-ray from amazon.uk. It was unclear whether the disc was unlocked. Sadly it was region locked and I had to watch it on the computer with a software player. As far as I know, there is still no US release on blu-ray. Bye Moles.
You can feed a computer into a TV.
There are region free players too.
Oh no, he was such a sweet guy. RIP.
Quite frankly, a hearse conversion is the only satisfactory way to make a 2+2 not look ungainly…
Correct.
That being said, I’m surprised they didn’t start with a roadster and make the top detachable with nothing under the padding but chicken wire.
There’s also this bizarre-looking film where he plays Sigmund Freud:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fo2Imyj-ZmM (Duet between Cort and Carol Kane)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbBkhiDmjgs (Full Film)
I love Carol Kane!
I’m looking for a copy of the musical she sings Counting in.