2013年6月10日星期一
Famous Cigar Lovers Including Groucho Marx And Mark Twain
As more and more entertainment venues close themselves off to the rich,
complicated odor of cigar smoke, perhaps it's time to remind ourselves that some
of history's great artists - writers, entertainers, musicians - were not just
smokers but cigar lovers. From comedians to social critics, from rockstar
pianists to Christian apologists, these luminaries found the taste of cigars to
be their eleventh muse.Groucho MarxWith his bushy eyebrows, ducklike walk and -
yes - that omnipresent cigar, Groucho Marx (1890-1977) was among the most
recognizable of American comedians. And with his legendary wit, he remains one
of the greatest. Born into a showbiz family tory burch outlet
(his uncle was a well-known vaudeville performer), Julius Marx - "Groucho" in
later life - was already singing onstage by the age of fifteen, both alone and
as part of a quintet with his four brothers. After an especially bad performance
in Texas, the brothers began cracking jokes to each other onstage; to their
surprise, the Texas crowd liked their jokes better than their singing. The
cheap
oakleys Marx brothers, lower case, became The Marx Brothers. They
conquered vaudeville, Broadway, and eventually Hollywood with their rapid-fire
comic repartee; their best films include Duck Soup (1933) and A Night at the
Opera (1935).In addition to his other accomplishments, Marx was a furious
autodidact and an avid reader - he once remarked, "I find television very
educational. Every time someone switches it on I go into another room and read a
good book." He maintained friendships by correspondence with such writers as
T.S. Eliot fake
oakleys and Carl Sandburg. He also maintained a long love affair
with cigars, quipping that "A woman is an occasional pleasure but a cigar is
always a smoke."G.K. ChestertonNobody ever wrote more eloquently about the taste
of a good cigar than the popular English author G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936). On
the other hand - in a career that spanned 80 books, 200 short stories, 4000
essays, and a scattering of poems and plays - there are few things Chesterton
didn't, at some point, write about eloquently. Loved for his religious works,
his mystery stories and fantasy novels, his essays, and his social criticism,
Chesterton left behind a fan club anyone would envy: Ernest Hemingway, Orson
Welles, Franz Kafka, Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Dorothy Day, Mohandas K. Gandhi,
and Irish Republican Army leader Michael Collins. Director Ingmar Bergman and
novelist/comic creator Neil Gaiman. Conservative pundits and liberal
journalists, literary critics and social activists, Christians (of which
Chesterton was one) and others - his influence knows no bounds.Chesterton's
unique philosophy was rooted in his robust enjoyment of all life's pleasures -
including his ever-present cigar. In an era when many well-known Christians
defined themselves by the pleasures they avoided, he championed the virtue of
moderation, writing "Let us praise God for beer and wine by not drinking too
much of them."Mark TwainSamuel Langhorne Clemens (1835-1910) was born, and died,
when Halley's Comet was in the sky. In the 75 years between those two
appearances, he led an appropriately unique, prodigious life, working as a
sailor, soldier, publisher, inventor, and lecturer, all the while creating the
most unique body of work in American literature. Of course he's best known for
the iconic Tom Sawyer (1876) and its infinitely better sequel, Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn (1886), but he could also be, by turns, a brave social critic,
a champion of the poor and persecuted, a savagely funny satirist, a genial
entertainer, and a devoted family man and friend. He was also devoted to his
cigars, rarely appearing without them.Franz LisztThe Hungarian composer and
pianist (1811-1886) once claimed that "a good Cuban cigar closes the doors to
the vulgarities of the world." So, for many listeners, does Liszt's passionately
Romantic music. Already a performing pianist by the age of nine, Liszt's mastery
of the instrument was so great that it freed him up to write works for the piano
that simply weren't technically possible before his ascendancy - no one before
him could have hit all those notes. His music influenced the future of
composing, while his playing has influenced every significant pianist since. And
his great fame - especially with women, who fought over his used handkerchiefs -
made him a prototype of the satyr-like, charismatic rock star, a
nineteenth-century Mick Jagger. (And what would a nineteenth-century Mick Jagger
be without a good smoke christian louboutin
replica?)
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