One of France's most iconic
cars, the Citroen 2CV, is celebrating its 60th birthday this October.
The BBC's Emma Jane Kirby in Paris has been looking at how this vehicle
revolutionised the
French motor industry.
The 2CV exhibition tells the colourful
story of the car
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Some may dismiss it as nothing more than an old tin can. The BBC Top Gear programme's Jeremy Clarkson wrote it off as a "weedy, useless little engine". But enthusiasts like Xavier Audran who owns a dozen of them, worships the 2CV "not just as a car, but as a way of life". It may be 18 years since the 2CV went out of production, but Mr Audran is adamant that its charm has never gone out of fashion. His maroon 2CV is illegally parked in the middle of the pavement by the Paris canal but he laughs when I suggest he is asking for a fine.
"Usually, 2CV owners don't get tickets. Policeman just smile. Almost everybody in France had a 2CV at some time in their youth - so they're nostalgic and not angry with us," Mr Audran says.
'Umbrella on wheels'
In 1948, when the Deux Chevaux
first appeared at the Paris car show, it was hard for motoring enthusiasts
to
get excited about this odd-looking little car.
It had one headlight, no starter
motor and even its own designer, Pierre Jules Boulanger, admitted it looked
like an
umbrella on wheels. It
was originally destined as a cheap country round-around for farmers, designed
to be able to carry
four people (or sheep) and a basket of eggs across a ploughed field without
breaking any shells... or indeed bones.
But its cheapness meant that
the low-income segment of the French population could afford one, and soon
there was
a waiting list of five years. Economical on fuel, cheap to repair with
an almost indestructible air-cooled engine and with a
comically soft suspension that made it springy enough to bump along off
road, the 2CV was the perfect family holiday car.
Its removable back seats handily
doubled up as a picnic bench, saving generations of skirts and trousers from
unsightly grass stains.
'Symbol of France'
These days it is fairly rare
to see this most quintessentially French vehicle trundling along the roads.
But in Paris, a fleet of 2CVs offers sightseeing trips to tourists.
Florent Dargnies says driving the 2CV
is "an experience in itself"
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Florent Dargnies, who runs such tours, says the Deux Chevaux is the epitome of Gallic charm.
"The 2CV is a symbol of France, I mean like the Eiffel Tower or the French baguette," Mr Dargnies says.
"When you are in a 2CV you escape. It is an experience in itself. Its an adventure, and you feel like you're in a cosy cocoon."
'Indestructible'
France is celebrating the 60th anniversary of the 2CV with a special exhibition of the car at the Cite des Sciences et de L'industrie in Paris.
The fascinating display takes
the visitor through the birth of the Deux Chevaux, with one of the five remaining
examples of an abandoned early production run from 1939, and follows the
car through its numerous
renaissances and modifications.
Wistful ex-owners stroke the exhibits fondly, reminiscing about their 2CV salad days.
The standing 2CV joke was that it managed
to do 0 to 60km in one day
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Only five million 2CV cars were
ever sold, but no-one knows how many people were 2CV owners
- the little car was so tough that it rarely needed repairs and was the
perfect hand-me-down vehicle.
Perhaps, its indestructibility
was its downfall - a car which never needed spare parts was not going to
make big profits for manufacturers. Its lack of vroom also became a bit
of problem in the modern age
of speed.
The standing 2CV joke was that it managed to do 0 to 60km/h (37mph) in one day.
I remember driving with my French
friend Francoise in our university holidays in Devon - her 2CV happily
took us to the beach but - at the first sign of a hill - I had to get out
and help push her up.
The Deux Chevaux is often unfairly
accused, however, of earning its name because it only had a two-horse power
capacity - in fact it had an eight-chevaux capacity and its name refers to
the very low tax category
into which it fell.
Mr Audran will not hear a word
said against his favourite French car. He has been all over Europe in his various
2CVs,
and this summer is off to attend a 2CV convention in Italy. What other car, he asks me, can do 40
miles (64km) to the
gallon, has a soft top and never suffers from electrical faults? His friend, he boasts, has even carried
his donkey in his
2CV with its head sticking out of the roof.