Sloppy Joe's Bar, Havana

Sloppy Joe's Bar is a historic bar located in Havana, Cuba. The bar reopened in 2013 after being closed for 48 years.[1]

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General information
TypeResidential/commercial
Architectural styleNeo classical
LocationZulueta and Animas Streets
Town or cityHavana
CountryCuba
Technical details
Structural systemLoad bearing
MaterialMasonry
Floor count3
Website
http://sloppyjoes.org

History

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Interior with clientele, c.1930s.

The building is a neo-classical 3 story masonry building located on the corner of Animas and Zulueta streets in Havana Vieja (Old Havana) on the same block as the Plaza Hotel. The bar, in its heyday, can be seen in the movie Our Man in Havana starring Alec Guinness as it is the bar in which the character (Jim Wormold) is attempted to be recruited into the secret service.[2]

Prohibition

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The advent of Prohibition in the United States spurred its original owner, Jose Abeal Otero, to change the emphasis from food service to liquor service[3] when American tourists would visit Havana for the nightlife, the gambling and the alcohol they could not obtain back home. Sloppy Joe's welcomed tourists for over four decades, and offered over 80 cocktails in addition to the bar's own brand of 12-year-old rum.[4] During the 1940s and 1950s it was a magnet for American celebrities as well as tourists wanting to mingle with them.[2] It has been described by the Los Angeles Times as "one of the most famous bars in the world" with "almost the status of a shrine."[5]

After the revolution

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The period after the Cuban Revolution of 1959 saw the bar's business nosedive, as some 90% of Sloppy Joe's clientele was American. A fire in 1965 closed the establishment for good.[5] The building in which the bar was housed remained intact, resembling a ghost town with its single-piece mahogany bar and photos of celebrities.[2] The slow-paced, extensive restoration, undertaken by The Office of the Historian of Havana, began in 2007.[6]

Renovation work on Sloppy Joe's was completed in early 2013, and its doors opened to the public on April 12 of that year.[1] The facade closely resembles the images from the 1950s, even down to the sign on the corner, above the arches.[7]

Inspiration

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It supposedly inspired the deli sandwich sold in northern New Jersey for over half a century by the same name, sloppy joe.

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Once Havana's most famous bar, Sloppy Joe's reopens after 50 years". Reuters. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  2. ^ a b c "Cuba's Sloppy Joe's died and it will stay that way", Reuters, cited at The Leader-Post, July 11, 1981
  3. ^ "Sloppy Joe's.org".
  4. ^ Havana Before Castro by Peter Moruzzi, page 84.
  5. ^ a b "Sloppy Joes Really Sloppy Now--and Empty, Too", Los Angeles Times, August 27, 1981
  6. ^ "Havana Before Castro by Peter Moruzzi".
  7. ^ "mercurynews.com".
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23°08′22″N 82°21′29″W / 23.139499°N 82.35803°W / 23.139499; -82.35803