Glamorous Pan Am back from the dead, and it’s coming to Australia

4 hours ago 3
By Chris Leadbeater

July 18, 2025 — 5.00am

There is a small chance that, if you have been staring at the skies over the course of the past few weeks, you have seen a ghost. A flying phantom – flashing across the heavens.

There is an even smaller chance that, if you have been looking really closely, you have spotted the white livery – and the classic circular blue logo, filling out the tailfin – and asked yourself what seems a very improbable question: Hang on, is that a Pan Am plane?

Cabin crew were clad in classic Pan Am uniform of pastel-blue jackets and hats.

Cabin crew were clad in classic Pan Am uniform of pastel-blue jackets and hats.

It just might have been. Because, last month, the most glamorous of all airlines returned from the dead. It is a resurrection that has sparked waves of emotion and nostalgia – not least at New York’s JFK airport, where the Lazarus act began on June 17.

For a short time on that sunlit Tuesday, Terminal 7 looked as if it had fallen through a wormhole into the 1970s. The information board at Gate 5 was illuminated with Pan Am branding, touting a 12.30pm departure to Bermuda. And passengers arriving for this lunchtime service to the mid-Atlantic archipelago were welcomed by cabin crew clad, unmistakably, in Pan Am uniform – all pastel-blue jackets and hats, and 100-watt smiles.

If this was not exactly a Stars-in-Their-Eyes impersonation of the golden age of air travel, then all was not quite as it seemed either. Pan Am has indeed been reborn: the name was bought by an investment group in February 2024, and has been put back to work as what is, in effect, a luxury tour operator. The hop from New York to Bermuda was the start of a 12-day odyssey, marketed as “Tracing the Transatlantic”, that has continued to Lisbon, Marseille and London, zooming towards an eventual stop at Foynes, in County Limerick. An upcoming trip will add Australia to the itinerary.

Pan Am’s 757-200 landing in Marseilles, France. The plane has been leased from Icelandair.

Pan Am’s 757-200 landing in Marseilles, France. The plane has been leased from Icelandair.Credit: Getty Images

Participants have paid a pretty penny for this pretty product. The aircraft in question – a Boeing 757-200 – has been fitted out in an all-business-class configuration, with just 50 berths for ticketed guests. There is no rowing over baggage space, no shuffling for sleep in cramped seats – each city layover comes with a five-star hotel. “Cattle class” it is not.

But it is also, as it stands, the new Pan Am’s only plane – and even this is something of a mirage. The 757-200 has been leased from Icelandair. As has the crew which operates it.

So is this the return of what was perhaps the most celebrated airline of the 20th century – 34 years after its original incarnation disappeared from view? Perhaps. And perhaps not. When the purchase was announced last year, Craig Carter, the CEO of what is officially listed as Pan American World Airways LLC, was quick to temper expectations that his new toy could amount to a complete regeneration of an aviation icon.

“You can’t really bring Pan Am back … and honour it well with those iconic routes in the era we are in,” he said in August, citing the many difficulties facing airlines in these current turbulent times.

The aircraft has an all-business-class configuration, with just 50 berths for ticketed guests.

The aircraft has an all-business-class configuration, with just 50 berths for ticketed guests.

As of the “inaugural” flight last week, however, he has changed his tune. Having announced a partnership with AVi8 Air Capital – a merchant bank and consultancy firm which specialises in the aviation industry – Carter is now talking of timetabled services and distant horizons.

“Pan Am remains a cherished name in aviation,” he comments. “Through this collaboration, we aim to assess a sustainable, forward-thinking approach to reintroducing scheduled commercial service under the Pan Am name; one that not only honours [the airline’s] legacy – but also makes the Pan Am experience more accessible.”

If Carter is able to accomplish this not inconsiderable feat, he will have succeeded where several others have failed. Because this month’s re-emergence of the “blue meatball” logo is not the first attempt to restore Pan Am to the present tense. It is actually the fifth rekindling of the airline’s embers since the original fire burned out in 1991.

There was the low-cost carrier which flew from the US to the Caribbean between 1996 and 1998. There was a short-haul operator, based at Portsmouth in New Hampshire, which offered flights in the American north-east between 1998 and 2004, and a sister company which had another go at repolishing the holy grail, from the same base, between 2004 and 2008. All of them had the Pan Am name. As did Pan Am American Airways Incorporated, which picked up the baton in 2010, running cargo planes out of Brownsville in Texas, with the promise of passenger services to come. It collapsed in 2012, in a haze of scandal.

While each of these failed projects had their issues, they all, ultimately, struggled to compete with the weight and the mystique of a beloved brand. Because, for more than half a century, Pan Am was the biggest – and most shimmering – fish in the global pond.

Pan Am first launched in 1927.

Pan Am first launched in 1927.Credit: AP

The airline first emerged in Florida in 1927, as the brainchild of Henry Arnold, Carl Spaatz and John Jouett – three US Army Air Corps officers who began offering flights between Key West and Havana. But it began to bloom in the 1930s, under the astute leadership of Juan Trippe, an American entrepreneur who understood that the future of travel had wings.

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That decade saw Pan Am lead the way with its Clipper planes – doughty flying boats that, come 1931, were whistling their way down to South America. Within eight years, Europe was in focus. On March 30, 1939, Harold Gray piloted the first ever transatlantic flight with passengers; a Pan Am service aboard the Yankee Clipper which made the oceanic crossing from Baltimore to Lisbon – via a refuelling pause at Horta, on the island of Faial in the Azores – in a total flying time of 24 hours, 39 minutes.

By the dawn of the Jet Age in the early 1950s, Pan Am was the US flag-carrier in all but name, flinging itself into the new arena of international travel with flair, finesse and a reputation for luxury. Its state-of-the-art hub, trademarked as “Worldport”, was inaugurated as JFK’s Terminal 3 in 1960, its futuristic “flying-saucer” design suggesting trips to space as much as to Paris.

Pan Am was a major player in the advent of the Boeing 747 jumbo jet, seen here behind its smaller predecessor, the 707, in 1970.

Pan Am was a major player in the advent of the Boeing 747 jumbo jet, seen here behind its smaller predecessor, the 707, in 1970.Credit: Fairfax Media

Ten years later, it was playing host to the jumbo jet. Pan Am was a key player in the advent of the Boeing 747. Its desire for bigger, better, faster and more – and, specifically, its placing an order for 25 of these revolutionary giants in April 1966 – kickstarted the production line in Seattle. The first commercial flight of a 747 was a Pan Am endeavour – from JFK to Heathrow, on January 22, 1970.

It was all so fabulous that you might wonder how so feted an airline could have ceased to exist. But behind the roar of engines and the clink of champagne glasses, Pan Am was starting to flounder. It had risen via its protected status – granted an effective monopoly as America’s international airline by the US government. The Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 pulled down that ring-fencing, leaving Pan Am blinking uncertainly at issues it had never had to face.

In its original guise, Pan Am developed a reputation for luxury and attentive service.

In its original guise, Pan Am developed a reputation for luxury and attentive service.Credit: Getty Images

Suddenly, it had American rivals in foreign skies, but no domestic network to help keep it competitive. The acquisition of Florida-based National Airlines in 1980, for an eye-watering $US437 million (about $US1.5 billion [$A2.3 billion] today), was a bid to redress this imbalance – but only loaded the company with a debt that would prove to be its undoing.

Pan Am flight attendants in Melbourne in 1970 on a promotional visit ahead of the arrival of the airline’s first 747 in Australia.

Pan Am flight attendants in Melbourne in 1970 on a promotional visit ahead of the arrival of the airline’s first 747 in Australia.Credit: Fairfax Media

In the end, there were two fatal blows. The Gulf War of August 1990 to February 1991 would stamp on a suffocating Pan Am’s throat, sending oil prices soaring just as demand for air travel fell sharply with a nervous public; the airline would file for bankruptcy on January 8, 1991, seven weeks before the guns fell silent in Operation Desert Storm.

The last Pan Am flight from Sydney to the US ahead of its departure from Sydney Airport in 1986.

The last Pan Am flight from Sydney to the US ahead of its departure from Sydney Airport in 1986.Credit: Ian Cugley

In truth, though, Pan Am had not recovered from the Lockerbie Disaster. The bombing of Flight 103 on December 21, 1988 sent 270 people to their graves, tragedy crashing down onto the shocked Scottish town in the week before Christmas. The image of Clipper Maid of the Seas, its broken cockpit disembodied on Tundergarth Hill, would become as inerasably linked to the airline as any sepia photograph of first-class fizz and 1960s style.

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Maybe, just maybe, this latest comeback will be for good. In the meantime, Pan Am’s newest reincarnation will offer another sophisticated adventure next year – a grand jaunt out of San Francisco, slated for take-off in April 2026, with landings in Japan, Cambodia, Singapore, Australia (in Sydney), New Zealand and Fiji. The cost – a mooted $US94,495 – will not be to everyone’s tastes, or pockets. But perhaps you cannot put a price on history.

The Telegraph, London

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