Rosenwald = Brian Rosenwald, the former Product Line Manager for the Coast Starlight and current (higher position, I forget).
"Rosenwald had found several vintage 1950s Santa Fe Railway lounge cars, possibly the same as he had traveled in as a kid, and had spent more than $3 million refurbishing them. The new Pacific Parlour Cars featured upstairs lounges with mahogany-paneled walls, glass sconces, domed viewing windows, swivel armchairs, couches, banquettes and full bars, and downstairs cinemas with big-screen TVs and classic movie theater seating for 19."
Rosenwald converted 5 coaches as "kiddie cars" downstairs and 5 of the hi-level lounges as above for the 4 trainsets plus a spare. 39971 was not included.
All of those things such as mahogany walls, glass sconces, swivel armchairs, downstairs movie theater, etc. were only a product of the refurbishing efforts. 39971 was indeed used in its unrefurbished state as a Parlour car
before any of this refurbishing happened. The Starlight had Parlour Cars from around 1996 or maybe earlier, and the refurbished cars only started showing up around 1999-2000 (if my memory serves me correctly). So for about two or three years,
all of the Parlour cars were unrefurbished and did not have any movie theaters, mahogany walls, plush swivel armchairs, couches, or a full bar. They were simply used in revenue service in the old lounge configuration, in the same fashion as today's Parlour cars are (as a First Class lounge).
"Rosenwald had found several vintage 1950s Santa Fe Railway lounge cars, possibly the same as he had traveled in as a kid, and had spent more than $3 million refurbishing them."
This sentence, between "as a kid" and "... spent more than $3 million refurbishing them" left out a key detail, and that is that the cars were run in an unrefurbished state for a few years, on the Starlight, as Pacific Parlour Cars.
I realize that 39971 did not have these new and upgraded "Parlour" amenities as we know them today, but certainly this car was designated as a Parlour Car during the time period when none of the other cars in service were refurbished, either. So at the time, this is all we knew a "Parlour" car to be, and hence it was just as much of a Parlour Car at that time, as the currently used ones are, now.
Am I missing something? :unsure: