He attended the Revival last year, fitting right in with a two-piece suit and fedora, and liked what he saw enough to sign up for 2025.
“It looked like everyone was having fun and that’s the point in going down,” he says. “It’s a beautiful track, it’s got a good rhythm, and the cars are beautiful.
“You don’t go there to be a world champion. You go there to have fun, drive around, and hopefully everybody is in the same mindset. It’s fun in and out of the car: I go down with my wife and we dress up a bit.”
Hearing this, you could think that Villeneuve is simply there for an exhilarating weekend — and he wouldn’t be the only one. But his approach to historic racing is far more thoughtful, and follows from his experience driving some of the Formula 1 Ferraris raced by his father Gilles.
“What I love in those cars, when I get in them, is to start imagining what was going through the minds of the drivers that were actually racing them in the day, for whom that was the latest technology,” says Villeneuve. “That’s what they were pushing. That’s what they were working on.
Jacques in his father’s 1979 season Ferrari 312 T4 in 2012
Venturelli/Getty Images
“I remember seeing [Gilles] testing at [Ferrari test track] Fiorano, and then I jumped in the same car, and I was telling myself, when he sat in that car, the first time, he’d have thought, ‘This is so amazing, this is the new technology,’.
“That’s what I found amazing, trying to get into that mindset. Back then, that was the modern day, and to see them take the risk they were taking and pushing limits in those cars, that’s what I find fantastic.
“That’s what I enjoy when I sit in there to try and imagine what was going through their mind. That is part of our heritage. Those drivers, that era, everything before us made what we have today.”
Villeneuve recounted the “magic” moment when driving Gilles’ 1979 Ferrari 312 T4 at Fiorano. “It was still his original seat and original belt, and there was still this sweat in them and everything. I didn’t even need to do a seat fit. It fitted as if I’d moulded the seat myself. Yeah, that was cool.”
It’s here that the topic of safety comes up. Given the death of his father at Zolder when Jacques was 11, it’s unsurprising that he’d have qualms about competing in cars built long before modern safety standards, and he says that it’s one reason for taking his time before racing historic cars.