Curbside Classic: 1969 Chevrolet Chevelle Nomad – Mrs. LaRusso’s Hooptie

1969 Chevrolet Chevelle Nomad wagon. Bucktown, Chicago, Illinois. Saturday, May 14, 2022.

I was an adolescent when I had first seen the North American teenage cinematic classic known as The Karate Kid.  This screening wasn’t in a theater, but rather in one of the TV rooms in the college dormitory where my brother lived.  Going to “Big Sibling Weekend”, a program sponsored by the university, was one of my very first experiences of staying on a college campus over the course of several nights, and was such an amazing and memorable bonding experience with my older brother.  Looking back, I’m not sure why Karate Kid was chosen for the program of activities as one of the featured films, given that it was already at least several years old by that time and most families had VCRs by the end of the ’80s.

Regardless, I immediately loved this movie and identified with actor Ralph Macchio’s underdog character, Daniel LaRusso, even if I had a fraction of the latter’s budding self-confidence.  This movie had an engaging story line with a triumphant ending, an excellent and uplifting soundtrack (I was singing Joe Esposito’s “You’re The Best” in my head for days, afterward), cool cars, and the beautiful Elisabeth Shue, which all combined to make this one of my favorite films at that age.  Bananarama’s “Cruel Summer” was a prominent part of my personal soundtrack the year my family moved from Michigan to Florida.  About eight years ago, CC contributor Robert Kim had written a feature about the various vehicles featured in this movie, which is excellent and highly recommended reading.

1969 Chevrolet Chevelle Nomad wagon. Bucktown, Chicago, Illinois. Saturday, May 14, 2022.

Just a few weeks ago, I was on my way to my friend Dina’s photography exhibition in the eclectic Bucktown district when I came across this ’69 Chevelle Nomad wagon street parked in front of a corner liquor store.  Approaching this car from the rear, my mind’s ears almost instantaneously heard the voice of a middle-aged female call out in a pronounced, New Jersey mom-voice, “Hi, kids!”  It was the voice of Mrs. Lucille LaRusso, played by the great Randee Heller, smiling broadly as she called out a greeting to her son’s bratty, entitled tormentors, oblivious to the fact that they had just disrespected her.  This is the mental place to which the sight of a 1968 or ’69 Chevelle wagon will almost always take me, with seemingly no choice involved.  (The lower placement of the front side marker light on a ’68 is one clue as to its model year if seen in direct profile.)

Scene from "Karate Kid" with Mrs. LaRusso's 1968 Chevrolet Chevelle wagon.

“Hi, kids!”  Mrs. LaRusso and her 1968 Chevelle wagon.  Picture sourced from IMDb.

You who have seen the movie know the scene I’m talking about.  Daniel and Ali (Shue) are finally on something that resembles a date at a local family fun center, and toward the end of their mutually flirty time together that evening, all of Ali’s rich friends with ridiculously expensive rides like new Corvettes and even an Avanti convertible are all rolling past the budding couple and inviting her, and not him, to join in some fun at the next place.  Beyond rude.  I remember wishing that some of those jerks could be transported to Flint (where I grew up) for maybe just ten minutes to see what treating others like that would earn them.  But again, that’s really the essence of this movie’s plot: Daniel came from a down-to-earth place and would ultimately triumph over unadvantaged circumstances and his own insecurity with his own true substance, hard work, perseverance, and grit.

1969 Chevrolet Chevelle Nomad wagon. Bucktown, Chicago, Illinois. Saturday, May 14, 2022.

“I really like your car, Mrs. LaRusso!”, one of them calls out from the Avanti, as Lucille keeps on smiling.  Her tortured ’68 Chevelle Concours wagon that was covered in an oxidized coat of that unappetizing shade of pea soup-green seemed perfectly emblematic of a parent showing up in the most embarrassing way possible, during the most inopportune time.  Lucille’s obliviousness to having been made fun of just makes it that much worse.

It did also occur to me that the theme of a broken-down station wagon being driven by a single mom from New Jersey was something I had seen before.  I was, and still am, a fan of the show Alice that started in the fall of 1976 and was still playing in reruns after the final, new episode went off the air in March of ’85.  That show’s early intros showed the titular Alice Hyatt, memorably played by Linda Lavin with expert timing, grace, and wit, driving along the expressway in a large, ’69 Ford wagon with Di-Noc wood on the sides before it broke down and had to be town away, presumably never to be seen again as Alice sticks her tongue out at it and bids it farewell.

1969 Chevrolet Chevelle wagon brochure page, as sourced from www.oldcarbrochures.org.

1969 Chevrolet Chevelle wagon brochure page, as sourced from www.oldcarbrochures.org.

Anyway, back to this blue Chevelle.  In this 2014 essay from Dave Skinner, it was noted that the ’69 Chevelle wagon was offered with an optional two-way tailgate, which this car has.  I’m sorry, but from the rear, this cut-line in the rear bumper resembles some sort of snaggletooth to me.  It’s only in select applications that automotive asymmetry has worked for me aesthetically, which is why the looks of the rear panel of those Toyota Tercel wagons from the mid-’80s used to drive me bonkers, and not in a good way.

The Nomad was the bargain-priced Chevelle wagon, slotting below both the middle-tier Greenbriar and range-topping Concours longroofs.  Surprisingly, the Nomad wasn’t the least popular Chevelle wagon in ’69, selling just over 13,100 units compared to 10,600 Greenbriars and 14,500 Concours models.  Combined sales of about 38,300 Chevelle wagons accounted for just under 7.5% of total ’69 Chevelle production of about 522,800 cars.  According to one source, there were just under 5,200 Nomad wagons that year with the two-way tailgate.  What could be the survival rate of cars in this exact configuration in 2022?  This one is rare.

1969 Chevrolet Chevelle Nomad wagon. Bucktown, Chicago, Illinois. Saturday, May 14, 2022.

The ’69 Chevelle Malibu coupe is one of my favorite Chevrolets of all time, so much so that I had one of my high school senior pictures taken next to a blue example that happened to be randomly street-parked in downtown Flint that day.  This is part of the reason why the overall look of any ’69 Chevelle wagon will probably always be met with immediate and involuntary resistance in the recesses of my brain.  That doesn’t mean I don’t like or respect this one.  Without knowing about the Cobra Kai franchise reboot and absent its existence from 2018 through the present, I’d like to think that Daniel San opted to keep the yellow, 1947 Ford Super DeLuxe convertible gifted to him by Mr. Miyagi in storage and souped up his mom’s ’68 Chevelle wagon for daily driving duties, with the end result looking something like this ’69.  Go ahead, Mrs. LaRusso.  And keep smiling.

Bucktown, Chicago, Illinois.
Saturday, May 14, 2022.