The GT is the one for me... However I'd feel the need to 'scrub up nice' before driving it and would be a bit more self concious than in an Aurelia.
One of the many wonderful things about the Aurelia was that it wasn't flash - in the sense that it would get a really positive response from everyone. Within the subset of car enthusiasts it would be as strong from a hotrodder outside the Little Chef as the lady with the Moggie Minor at the garden centre. As for those who really knew what it was you'd have to keep an eye on the time or the day would soon be gone. It was a car to use a lot, no need to save it for a special occasion.
Back to Flaminas: in the Berlina they'd wonder where the chauffer had gone, with the PF if there was just the one body in the boot, and with the GT you'd be guessing at just how much luggage the misses packed for a short weekend away. With the Supersports, to my eye, it would only look right parked up in London if it had Swiss plates.
David
Great observations. It struck me me when I got a B20 about 6 years ago (having come from Flaminia land - PF and GT) that the Aurelia had a wider appeal. One incident among many that really sticks in my mind was when a 5 year old boy approached me in a farm shop car park asking "is it really yours, how fast will it go?" (aka 'what'll she do Mister?'.) It made me think there must be something universal about some car shapes; that the 'iconography' doesn't have to be taught or learned. The kid was responding to a 50 year old car without having any idea how old it was or what it was.
Once I had the B20, I couldn't look at the Flam GT without thinking how dreadful the packaging was! It's a lot of car for two passengers. Elegant in their way though (as the Flam PF's are, in their way, from some angles, a bit frumpy looking).