So, in 1939 I came out to California. I was hired by Eleanor Powell, the famous tap dancer, to build custom cars for her and to help out Sid Luft. Sid Luft had been her public relations man and she wanted to get him started in the customizing business. He had tried several other things, but now was concentrating on customizing Cadillacs. The first one he built was a very nice custom Cadillac, but instead of selling it he started running around with the car. Pretty soon it got used, so when Eleanor Powell came to Chicago she hired me to go to California to put Sid’s business on a business basis. So I came to California.

One of the Tremulis-modified Cadillacs for Eleanor Powell
We had a small little shop across the street from the Luau Restaurant in Beverly Hills called Custom Motors. One day I was having lunch at the bar in the Luau when all of a sudden I saw a little American Bantam Roadster pull up outside. There was a man in a polo uniform and two little polo sticks were sticking up out of his small little car. The chap comes in and sits down next to me. I looked at him and said, “Pretty ridiculous, big boy like you driving around in a kiddie car like that”. Of course he gave me a real funny look. He ordered a drink and then he said to me, “Do you know anything about those people across the street, Custom Motors?’ I said, “Yeah, I know them.” He said, “I’m looking for a guy by the name of Alex Tremulis, do you know him?” I said, “I know him pretty well”. He wanted to know when Custom Motors opened up, and I told him they were probably out to lunch. He said, “I’m anxious to talk to Alex Tremulis.” So I told him to finish his sandwich and then I would take him over to meet this Alex. So we walked across the street and into the shop. I had all my drawings on the wall… some real wild stuff too. He gets impatient and says, “When do I meet Alex Tremulis?” I tell him,” You’ve already met him”. We laugh and then he introduces himself. “I’m Roy Evans, President of American Bantam,” he said.
His problem was that he had this little Roadster and he wanted me to build him some glass curtains. We had no plexiglass in those days. “Isingiass?” I asked. “Well, I want my car to be comfortable; it is awfully cold driving around in these roadsters.” He said. So I told him, “Look, why don’t you let me build you a real roadster, a convertible.” “No, no, no, we can’t afford it!” So I said, look, give me a day and I’ll show you what I can do in a way of a convertible. Putting isinglass curtains on this car isn’t going to make an automobile out of it. You need a car that is a real true convertible.” He repeated, “We can’t afford it.” “I’ll show you a cheap way to do it.” I told him. I want a couple of your old coupe bodies and I’ll cut the roof off. I’ll keep the doors, I’ll make a new windshield, a new rear deck lid, and I’ll need your doors. Wouldn’t it be nice to have a roadster with windows that will roll up?’ He replied, “Yes, but it will be impossible.”
So I came up with a drawing. The next day he came in. He boldly told me he did not believe I could do as I promised because “you stylists are all a bunch of liars.” He went onto tell me that he had had a count so and so from Austria do some work for him, but his work never turned out like his drawings. 1 assured him that I was working with a scaled drawing and the car couldn’t help but end up looking like the drawing. I guaranteed him that his car would look like the scale drawing. I told him I would put a custom interior in it, and promised to paint it the same color as Eleanor Powell’s Cadillac. I think I quoted him $550.00 for the complete job. So he said, “Alright, when do you want to start?’
That afternoon a Bantam Coupe arrived. I got the shop guys in to work. Told them to get a torch and cut the entire roof off.

Hollywood Styling Proposal
The next day Roy Evans came in and said, “I’ve changed my mind. You should have waited. You didn’t even have a contract, how do you know you are even going to get paid for this. Now you’ve wrecked a coupe.” I really got mad at him so I told the two shop men “Alright, weld the damn top back on.” He said, “Wait a minute, wait a minute. I want to think this thing over. I’m going on vacation; I’ll be back in Buffalo. You finish the car and drive it back there,” and he left.

Tremulis on the cross-country trek with the first Hollywood
Then the dealers heard about the new Bantam Roadster and started to place orders for it. So then Roy Evans didn’t wait for me to drive it to Buffalo. He flew back to see it, and liked what he saw. So he said I should go down to the factory and build a four passenger convertible model also. This was American Bantam at Butler, Pennsylvania.
So I drove the new Roadster across the country. It had the new three main bearing engine in it which was a new experimental item over the old two main bearing engine. We got the horsepower up from 16 to 24 then to 25. Roy said to give the new engine hell. This was not the overhead engine, it was the little flathead. I drove it across the country and got there in three days. I really did what Roy asked me to do… I gave it hell. In fact I rolled it over in Amarillo, Texas.
I drove from Los Angeles through some terrible rain storms. I was doing over sixty when I fell asleep and rolled the thing over twice. I turned over in a cow pasture out in the country. Finally a car stopped, and it took just two of us to roll the thing over. It started up perfect; this is an advantage in a light car, you don’t crush a darn thing. The car was drivable. All it really needed was a new top that had been scuffed, and the fenders on both sides had been crinkled a little bit. I think I had sixteen dollars damage when I got to Chicago and got the fenders banged out. So, having rolled over in one of the lightest cars in the world as well as a big Duesenberg - you have no idea of the awesome fury of crushing metal in a big car as compared to the little Bantam.As I recall I averaged 42 miles to the gallon in that car, and that was with the throttle open all the way. My total bill - for gasoline from Los Angeles to Chicago - was seven dollars and seventy-five cents.
When I finally arrived at the American Bantam factory in Butler, Pennsylvania I discovered that they had no styling section. I set my drawing board up in the first aid room. It was kinda amusing, I remember that when someone got hurt, they would bring him in and the doctor would say “Alex, excuse me…” I’d leave, and they would have to move my drawing board over to make room for the patient.

Bantam Convertible Proposal #2
In cramped quarters with no styling section at all, we committed ourselves to building an outstanding four passenger convertible. When the car was finished we really wanted to do something different to show it off to the 250 dealers who were coming up to the factory to get a look at our new models. There wasn’t much we could do because we had no
showroom, all we had was a dilapidated factory. There was a chap that worked for American Bantam by the name of Clay Ballenger. He used to be a race car mechanic. He taught us how to drive those little Bantams. When we drove through with those cars we could handle the loading ramp. Someone would announce the new line of American Bantam cars, and then Clay Ballenger would drive the first car out of the factory and off the loading ramp. I was to follow in the new four passenger convertible and someone else would follow me in the Roadster.
All we had were the three cars. We were going to be real dramatic. While the people gathered and waited out on the lawn… I imagine they were wondering what we were going to do... this crummy factory with the door open to the loading platform? With the mufflers removed from the cars they really made a lot of noise. We wanted a lot of noise because we wanted the people outside to think we really had a lot of cars. Then all of a sudden we burst out of the open factory door, down the platform, and bang! right on to the lawn.. This had shock value. When Clay Ballenger came out and landed people just went crazy. Then came car number two and then number three. The crowd swarmed around those three cars. They literally sprinkled holy water on them. Oh how they raved about those cars!

Bantam Coupe Proposal

Rear-Engined Bantam Coupe Proposal (supercharged?)
Meanwhile, I was going to do another small little job for Roy Evans. It was to be a small super-charged speedster. We were just going to build a handful of them. I was busy working on this when I got a call from Eleanor Powell. Sid Loft had thought he could sell the last Cadillac I customized for her up in San Francisco. I had lowered the roof 3 1/2 inches. Sid had somebody in San Francisco that was willing to pay $6500 for the car. He had taken the car, no insurance, and eight miles out of San Francisco he went off the road at 100 miles an hour. He totaled the car which ended his automobile business.
I left American Bantam in 1940. I really wanted to design cars. Lincoln had just come out with its first Continental, so I figured Cadillac needed a car to cross swords with the Lincoln. So I designed a LaSalle Monte Carlo. I extended the hood seven inches. It had nice drop-down doors. It was a pretty car, only a little on the sporty side with its cut-down cowl. I took it to General Motors. They were pretty excited about it. They told me to go build the automobile; bring it back, if it looked good they were to give me three pages on their brochure. They also said they would be ready to order 100 immediately. I was all set to come to California to open up the shop again and build the first prototype car when I got nailed by the draft. This was June, 1941. This was when my automobile career came to a halt… for a while…
1974 Yearbook, Tremulis on Tremulis