Plays And Movies For Cigar Lovers


Ann Knapp asked:


Since so many artists, writers, and other creative folks have been cigar smokers, it’s perhaps no surprise that some wonderful - as well as not-so-wonderful - films and plays center on the world of cigars. Some of these works are already well-known, while others might require a little help reaching their audiences. A few of them may not even succeed with help. But for those who celebrate cigar smoking, these dramas (screen and stage) may be special treats.

Anna In the Tropics

The 2003 Pulitzer Prize winner for Drama, this play, set in 1929, gives viewers a rare opportunity to view the world through the eyes of those who make fine hand-rolled cigars. It concerns the daughters of a family of cigar workers, whose lives are forever marked when the factory’s new lector - the person hired to read to the workers’ reads Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina to them. The book becomes part of the factory’s life, inspiring love affairs, jealousies and fights. Hailed by critic Christine Dolen as “a passionate, explosive, tender play filled with poetic-evocative imagery, language that almost seems tactile,” the play managed to beat out new works by the far-more-established Edward Albee and Richard Greenberg for the Pulitzer in Drama. For cigar smokers, it provides a glimpse of the industry’s glory years before machine manufacture and the dominance of cigarettes, before Castro and the trade embargo.

The “lector,” by the way, was a real position. Cigar manufacture is a laborious process requiring constant care, and for many years, for that reason, handmade cigar factories hired a lector (reader) to keep the rollers alert and entertained by reading books to them. Audio books have partly eliminated the need for lectors (at least in some factory owners’ eyes), but other factories still use a lector - perhaps the best symbol of the mental attentiveness necessary to produce well-made premium cigars.

Smoke

This 1995 indie film rendered writer Paul Auster something like a household name - or as close to a household name as authors of existential detective stories get. It’s also a virtual paean to cigar smoking, with its sprawling plot set at the Brooklyn Cigar Company, where owner Auggie Wren ponders the varied types of humanity who turn up therein. (His theory is that everyone in the world eventually shops at the Brooklyn Cigar Factory.) Within this framework, the movie ponders the random yet meaningful connections among disparate individuals - one of the themes of Auster’s writing, and a theme of several important 1990s American art films, including Grand Canyon, Short Cuts and Magnolia. Auster’s selection of a smoke shop as his setting renders the film, which is based on one of his own short stories, especially meaningful for diehard cigar smokers.

Smokin’ Stogies

An entire movie about the search for some missing Cohibas? This 2002 low-budget crime film may not have won any awards, but with two of the stars of “The Sopranos” (whose swaggering, smoking mobsters have done their own bit to promote the smoking of stogies) and its cigar-oriented plot, the film ought to hold at least some interest for cigar lovers. It is described by Cigar Aficionado’s David Savona as “B-level material, an R-rated, small-budget experience that nevertheless should appeal to cigar smokers.” [it] serves up a subject matter palatable to aficionados. The movie includes the search for the mob’s missing Cubans and a plot to put real Cohiba bands on a trove of horrendous counterfeit cigars. There’s also a hilarious cigar-sniffing Doberman Pinscher who can tell a real Cuban from a fake.” If only every cigar smoker in America had a dog like that…

Predator

OK, this eighties sci-fi opus is not about cigars at all - at least not on the surface. Rather, it concerns a scary invisible alien hunter-thing that crash-lands in a Central American jungle and cuts up an elite Arnold Schwarzenegger-led military unit after they’re tricked into illegal Black Ops action by a corrupt major (Carl Weathers). (But what cigar smoker can forget the sight of Schwarzenegger’s character, Dutch, lighting up the fattest imaginable stogie as he suits up?



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urWURLDnow asked:


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First Time in Havana ? This are the Best Places to Visit


vic asked:




1.Hotel Nacional.

A Cuban national monument and in the fifties host to revolucionaries and the Mob,lead by Meyer Lansky.

Enter via the palm tree driveway and go to the glamorous terrace bar, and enjoy the magnificent view over the Malecon sea boulevard.



2.Cementerio Colon. (Columbus Cementery)

The Columbus Cementery is one of the most impressive places to visit in Havana. It is said to be the second largest cementry in the world after the Pére Lachaise Cementery in Paris.



3.The Capitolio.

The Capitolio was built in the same style as the US Capitol in Washington DC by the dictator Machada. Nowdays the Capitolio houses the Cuban Academy of Sciences. At the lefthand entrance is an internet café.



4.Bodegita del Medio

This restaurant and bar is famous for its Mojito cocktails and was one of Hemingway’s favourites. The tiny bar is a real tourist magnet and the cocktails are expensive compared to the other bars.



5.Casa de la Musica - Havana Centro.

The house of the music, situated on Galiano street, Central Havana, is a big club where the hottest names in Cuban salsa play. Great ambiance and hot salsa dancing all night long. Be on time , there is always a crowd. The cover charge is up to 25 CUC (30 US$) when famous bands such as the VAN VAN or CHARANGA HABANERA make their appearance.



6.Farmacia Taquechel. (the Taquechel pharmacy)

A beautiful old style pharmacy with dark wooden shelves and white porcelain jars with motifs. The pharmacy serves mainly as a a tourist attraction, their stock of medicines is very limited.



7.Real Fabrica de Tabacos Partagas.( Cigar factory Partagas)

The biggest cigar factory in Cuba, situated on Calle Industria (Industry street) near the Capitolio. An interesting guided tour of the cigar factory gives a good impression how the cigars are fabricated. At the entrance is a big cigar shop where you can buy the famous brand names : Romeo y Julia,Bolivar, Cohiba, Cohiba, Partagas.



8. El Barrio Chino ( Chinatown)

China town is situated west of the Capitolio, the entrance is marked by a big pagode style gateway. Near 1900 Havana had a Chinese community of more than 10.000 people. Nowdays the estimate is that there are less than thousand Chinese in Havana. Be sure to visit the colorful food market.



9. Museo de la Revolucion

A spectacular attracion is the Museum of the Revolution installed in the former Presidential Palace An overview of the Cuban history as well as the battles against the former dictator Batista are shown. The yacht “GRANMA” from which Fidel Castro disembarked and launched the revolution,is shown at the side entrance together with a tank used in the Bay of Pigs invasion and air missiles that shot down the US spy plane.



10. Playas del Este.( East Havana beaches)

Lovely tropical beaches starting at 15km from Central Havana, with clear blue water and palm trees. Santa Maria del Mar is the most tourist oriented place. The beaches can be reached by Viazul bus or by taxi.