Watusi Theme -
Dealers hated it. "What does a dance have to do with a car?" they asked. Buyers were confused. Most Darts sold in '63 and '64 were the standard, drab, penny-pinching versions. The Watusi lasted two model years, then vanished. By 1965, the British Invasion (Beatles, Rolling Stones) had arrived, and the African dance craze was dead. The Watusi was discontinued.
If you scroll through vintage car classifieds or wander the carpeted aisles of a suburban classic car auction, you will eventually hear the whisper of a strange, captivating word: Watusi . Watusi Theme
It’s not a place. It’s not a tribe. In the lexicon of American nostalgia, “Watusi” is a vibe. Specifically, the “Watusi Theme” refers to one of the most peculiar and beloved automotive aesthetics of the early 1960s: a factory-custom trim package offered on the 1963-64 Dodge Dart. But to understand the trim package, you have to understand the dance, the fear, and the frantic search for identity that defined pre-Beatles America. Dealers hated it
Today, a surviving 1963 Dodge Dart Watusi is a unicorn. Estimates suggest fewer than 300 were ever built, and maybe 30 exist today. A pristine, numbers-matching Watusi convertible can fetch upwards of $60,000 at auction—ten times what a standard Dart of the same year would bring. Most Darts sold in '63 and '64 were
The Watusi Theme exists in the same space as the Hawaiian-shirted Tiki bar and the faux-Polynesian "Aloha" trim on station wagons. It is a whitewashed fantasy of the "other." For a modern collector, appreciating the Watusi requires a double consciousness: You can love the design, the colors, the audacity of the wavy stripe, while also acknowledging that it was a clumsy, commercial extraction of African culture.