What Scooter Is in ‘Roman Holiday’?

the Vespa on the set of the movie Roman Holiday

In Roman Holiday, a film that made us all wish for an Italian escapade, the scooter that stole the show alongside Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck is none other than a Vespa. Now, this is not just any two-wheeler. The Vespa, with its quirky charm and buzzing little engine, became a star in its own right, helping to define the postwar European dream of freedom and adventure.

You see, the Vespa wasn’t designed to turn heads with brute power or flash like a Harley or a Norton. This scooter was built for the masses, for the folks who needed to get around the narrow, cobbled streets of Rome without burning through rationed gas or oil. But on the silvery screen, it had just the right amount of class. Sleek lines, that iconic wasp shape (which is literally what “Vespa” means in Italian), and a buzz that hums like life itself. In the hands of Gregory Peck’s character, an American journalist, and Audrey Hepburn’s princess on the lam, the Vespa became a vehicle of escape, of joy, and of discovering life outside the confines of duty.

The Vespa: A Postwar Phoenix

To understand the significance of this little beauty, you’ve got to step back in time. The Vespa was the brainchild of the Piaggio company, who up until World War II, were making planes. When the war ended, their factory was bombed to ruins, leaving them needing a new direction. Italy was rebuilding itself from the ground up—there was rubble to clear and streets to navigate. A car was out of the question for most, but something smaller, more practical, and easier on the pocket was just what the doctor ordered.

The Vespa from the movie Roman Holiday

Enter Corradino D’Ascanio, the aviation engineer who designed the first Vespa in 1946. D’Ascanio wasn’t much of a motorcycle guy, but he had the know-how to create something light, functional, and easy to ride. The Vespa was his answer to postwar transportation needs—a machine that was cheap to run, easy to handle, and stylish enough to appeal to Italians with their inherent flair for fashion.

The Vespa on the Silver Screen

Fast-forward a few years to 1953, and the Vespa finds itself alongside two of Hollywood’s most iconic stars in Roman Holiday. This was the moment when the Vespa made the jump from being an Italian workhorse to a global symbol of freedom.

The film’s story is about a runaway princess, played by Hepburn, who just wants a break from the pressures of royal life. Enter Gregory Peck, the journalist who senses a scoop but ends up on a joyride through the streets of Rome instead. Together, they hop on the Vespa for what becomes one of cinema’s most famous joyrides.

Now, if you’ve ever been to Rome, you know those streets are a rollercoaster of ancient stones and unpredictable turns. But that Vespa? It weaves through the chaos with grace. The chase scenes, the tight corners, the lean and twist of the road—there’s something infectious about how that little scooter dances through it all. It’s not about speed; it’s about the feeling of liberation. On a Vespa, every road feels like a new discovery, every turn a new adventure.

The Legacy of the Roman Holiday Vespa

What’s remarkable is that this film didn’t just immortalize its stars; it skyrocketed the Vespa to fame. People walked out of theaters across the globe, not just swooning over Hepburn’s elegance or Peck’s square-jawed charm—they wanted that Vespa, too. In fact, Piaggio sold over 100,000 Vespas after Roman Holiday hit the big screen.

The Vespa scooter became an international icon, and it wasn’t just about getting from point A to point B. It was about freedom, about seeing life in a new way, whether you were a princess trying to blend in with the common folk or just someone looking to embrace the open road.

Today, the Vespa remains a symbol of style, practicality, and a certain nostalgic romance. Sure, motorcycles may rumble louder, roar faster, and give you that wind-in-your-hair thrill, but the Vespa? The Vespa whispers to you about simpler things, quieter dreams, and the joy of just being out there.

In Roman Holiday, the Vespa was more than just a prop; it was a co-star, playing its part with elegance, charm, and a little bit of that Italian magic.

Author: Wade Thiel

Wade started Wind Burned Eyes and runs it. He's always up for chatting, so feel free to reach out.

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