(shown here shaking hands with
Harry S. Truman from the seat of a Maxwell Roadster) kept the Maxwell familiar in U.S. popular culture for half a century after the brand went out of business. In 1920, the Maxwell Company contracted with actress and producer
Nell Shipman to create a short promotional film featuring the Maxwell. She was able to stretch the money budgeted for the project into a
multi-reel feature entitled
Something New. The Maxwell's abilities were prominently featured in this melodramatic film, which had Nell Shipman and Bert Van Tuyle escaping a band of Mexican bandits by racing the sturdy little car across the Mexican badlands where they overcame obstacles such as boulders, rivers, gulches, and all other sorts of rough terrain. Maxwell dealers presented this motion picture at various venues to promote the car, often with the now-battered Maxwell on display. The Maxwell Company had assisted in the film's production by supplying a car and by deploying a mechanic to the filming location. The mechanic's job included repeatedly replacing the car's
transmission, which kept getting torn up by the harsh desert landscape. A decrepit old Maxwell was famous as the car
Jack Benny drove, for decades after it had stopped being manufactured, on his long-running radio (and later TV) comedy series
The Jack Benny Program. The running joke was that Benny was too stingy to buy himself a new car—or even a newer
used car—as long as his old one still ran, however poorly. The sounds used for it initially were pre-recorded, but when a technical fault prevented one of the records from playing,
voice actor Mel Blanc himself improvised the sounds of the sputtering car starting up. His performance was received well enough for him to continue that task permanently. In one gag from the show
Rochester tells Benny that he reported to the police that the Maxwell had been stolen although he didn't make the report until three hours after the theft; when Jack asked why Rochester delayed so long, Rochester explained that it was because that was when he stopped laughing. The gag of the Maxwell as Benny's car was used in the classic cartoon
The Mouse That Jack Built. Many people erroneously assume that the antique automobile Jack Benny is seen driving during his cameo appearance in the 1962 comedy film ''
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World'' is a Maxwell; that car is, in fact, a 1931
Cadillac convertible coupe. In the "
Mr. Bevis" episode of
The Twilight Zone, Bevis (
Orson Bean) is talking to a police officer (
William Schallert) about buying his wrecked 1924 Rickenbacker. The officer responds facetiously that he has his eye on a 1927 Maxwell, which is two years after the Maxwell company closed. ==See also==