Anopera window is a small fixed window usually behind the rear side window of an automobile, originating with small windows mounted in the fabric of a folding top on horse-drawn carriages. They are typically mounted in an automobile'sC-pillar, usually within a padded,vinylled section of the roof as a reference to the original location in a fabric roof.[1] The design feature was popular, mainly with domestic U.S. manufacturers but also seen in Japan, during the 1970s and early 1980s..[1]
The origin was from "opera" vehicles of around 1915 with occasional collapsible seating for extra passengers.[2] The opera window was also a feature on "formal roof" and limousine models with higher than a normal roof to accommodate passengers with top hats.[2]
The design element of a distinct, fixed, centered opera window was borrowed from such windows in horse-drawn carriages and used during the classical era of automobile styling. For example, "theElcar in 1924 was good looking ... and even a fabric top in the style of abrougham with oval opera windows framed bylandau bars".[3] Opera windows saw their demise in the 1930s.
Perhaps the most notable return was the "porthole" in the 1956–1957Ford Thunderbird. It was provided as an option to improve rear-quarter visibility with the removable hardtop in place. "The hottest thing going was the 'porthole' window in the rear side pillar – called 'opera windows' – that came in during the horse and buggy [era]".[4]
Opera windows began reappearing in the early 1970s in such vehicles as the 1972Continental Mark IV. Almost allpersonal luxury cars would adopt opera windows, usually framed by a vinyl roof.[5] Most often, opera window variants were applied on two-doorhardtop orcoupé models, spanning all types of vehicles from economycompacts toflagshippersonal luxury cars, in which latter exploding realm they became "recognition elements" seeking to add a vintage element to their styling.[6] General Motors introduced an all-new line of mid-sized "Colonade" models for the 1973 model year. Standard on all the coupes was a fixed triangular rear quarter window while higher trim versions used a rectangular vertical opera window.[7]
In some cars, an additional feature was the so-calledopera light that was mounted on the outside of the B-pillar or C-pillar and illuminated when the exterior lights were switched on.
The windows also helped offset the significantblind spots created by wide C-pillars that were characteristic of many American cars produced at this time.[8] In an age of decreasing dimensions and increasingly common use of non-opening rear side windows on two-door models, a variety of shapes of rear windows may have helped passengers there to feel somewhat lessclaustrophobic.[citation needed]
These windows were usually non-functional; however, in the case of theAMC Matador coupeNASCAR racers, the standard roll-down quarter windows were causingaerodynamic drag.[9][10] Penske racing requested AMC a small "porthole" to smooth the airflow when open to the wind under racing conditions.[11] To qualify as a stock item for use on the tracks, NASCAR required 500 units must be available to the public.[10] The small opera window was first an optional "D/L Formal Window Package" on the Brougham models and then a standard feature on the Barcelona IItrim package.[10][12][13]
^Locke, William S. (2000).Elcar and Pratt automobiles: the complete history. McFarland. p. 71.ISBN978-0-7864-0956-3.
^Szudarek, Robert (2000).The first century of the Detroit Auto Show. Warrendale, Pennsylvania: Society of Automotive Engineers. p. 210.ISBN978-0-7680-0502-8.
^Stern, Milton (April 2018)."The Peak of Personal Luxury".Hemmings Classic Car.Archived from the original on 7 November 2021. Retrieved26 November 2022.
^Herd, Paul; Mueller, Paul (1994).Charger, Road Runner & Super Bee. Motorbooks International. p. 119.ISBN978-0-87938-844-7.
^'74 Ford Torino(PDF) (brochure), Ford Motor Company, 1973, pp. 4, 8, archived fromthe original(PDF) on 9 July 2025 – via xr793.org
^Hartford, Bill (October 1977)."Driving the 1978 Fords, Lincolns and Mercurys".Popular Mechanics. Vol. 148, no. 4. p. 110. Retrieved26 November 2022 – via Google Books.Two-doors get a gimmicky 'Twin-dow', a split opera window.
^カリーナバン 1400ー1600 [Carina Van 1400–1600] (in Japanese), Toyota, December 1975, p. 4, 135741—5012
^"History of the Toyota Crown".Toyota UK. 6 August 2015. Archived fromthe original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved3 September 2020.opera windows were added to the thick C-pillars to enhance rear visibility and give the model a distinctive design feature