The Real Fate Of The Furious
Automobile|February 2020
PaulWalker left behind a treasure trove of collector cars
Rory Jurnecka
The Real Fate Of The Furious

The massive folding door encompasses nearly one whole wall of the hangar. A push of a button sends power to a system of humming pulleys and cables that slowly, tediously raises the enormous barricade out of the way. You would normally see a private jet parked here, but today the hangar houses the cars left behind and mostly untouched after their owner, actor Paul Walker, died more than six years ago, in November 2013. All are scheduled for sale at Barrett-Jackson’s 2020 Scottsdale auction in January.

It’s impossible to think of Walker and not recall the wildly successful “Fast and Furious” movie franchise that made him a hero to legions of fans. As Brian O’Conner, an undercover cop whose assignment to break up illegal Los Angeles street racing gangs ultimately endears him to the scene, Walker helped to transform car culture. He played other roles in his onscreen career, of course, some arguably better developed and grittier than O’Conner was. But he is best known for the “Fast and Furious” films.

Like Steve McQueen and Paul Newman before him, Walker proved he wasn’t just another good-looking actor, but also a talented wheelman and knowledgeable enthusiast, often requesting to do his own driving stunts for movies and reviewing “Fast and Furious” scripts for accuracy when it came to automotive dialogue. He was so into cars that he co-owned the Valencia, California-based tuning shop Always Evolving. But distressingly, like James Dean 58 years prior, a freak road crash in a Porsche (unlike Dean, Walker was a passenger) cost him his life. Walker was 40 years old.

This story is from the February 2020 edition of Automobile.

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This story is from the February 2020 edition of Automobile.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.