Our Man In Havana

If you haven’t read the book or seen the film and you are thinking of visiting Havana, Cuba, then this classic Graham Greene is an easy entertaining read and a must see movie! Directed by Carol Reed with unforgettable roles played by Alec GuinnessBurl IvesMaureen O’HaraRalph RichardsonNoël Coward and Ernie Kovacs.

The novel was first published in 1958 and film shooting began the next year in Havana. It was just two months after the communist revolution of 1959 and Havana would never be the same again! Thanks to the cooperation of revolutionary leader Fidel Castro the city was made accessible to the film crew and Castro visited on set at the Cathedral Square! All filming was done on location; Calle Lamparilla where our hero Wormold had his shop, Hotel Sevilla which at this time had been known for its easily available cocaine and female company, and the opening scenes from the roof top of Hotel Capri which had a roof top pool and was like all hotels and casinos under mafia control.

Our hero Wormold (a vacuum cleaner salesman with an adolescent daughter) is reluctantly recruited as a spy for the British Government and submits false information to keep MI6 happy!  The backdrop of espionage and the threat from the enemies behind the iron curtain are the stuff and nonsense of this delightfully funny and slightly ridiculous story! However as with all Greene’s stories the events are based on true events and encounters he made in his extraordinary life!

Greene the man was easily bored and travelled extensively and compulsively throughout his life….Nicaragua, Liberia (where he was a spy) Haiti, Sierra Leon, Vietnam, Cameroon, Hungry, Indo China, Mexico, Egypt are but a few of the places he travelled and worked.

Starting off as a journalist in Nottingham, he moved eventually to become sub editor of The Times which he later gave up out of boredom! He converted to Catholicism and married his only wife Vivien whom he perused with a great passion but love quickly died. They had some children but he was an absent father, too busy travelling and having many affairs, but remained married to Vivien and in some strange sense “loyal” to her.

A great love of his life was a woman he met in Cameroon. She was married but they conducted a relationship that lasted 32 years! He once said ..”In Africa I learnt to love life again”

His childhood had been unhappy with mental illness in his family and he spent some time himself in a residential psychological rehabilitation centre when only a teenager!

He was a meticulous man with a huge regard for his own work and was very pushy with his books. Physically he was tall with bright pale blue eyes that people he met said, caught and held their attention!

Greene died 1991 in Switzerland; he had fled Britain partly due to being pursued by the tax man. His novels will remain classics of the highest quality.

His themes of the hunted man and his sense of guilt run through his writing. He had a huge sense of place and many of his novel read like film scripts. It’s said that during filming “Our Man In Havana” pages of the book were merely stuck to the story boards to work from directly!

If you want to retrace Greene’s or Wormold’s steps in old Havana you will not be disappointed. The appearance of the Spanish colonial buildings might have decayed since filming in 1959, but the streets and Hotels made famous in the film are still there to be enjoyed today. Room 510 Hotel Sevilla is celebrated as it was his inspiration for part of this unforgettable book. The casinos no longer operate but the ghosts of the mafia are very much alive!

 

Graham Greene was the subject of BBC Radio 4s “Great Lives” series broadcast on August 2nd 2011, and you can listen to it on BBC iPlayer or download it as a pod cast http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/greatlives/

 

Enjoy a tour of Cuba and life in old Havana with one of our delightful holidays.

https://encompasstours.com/tours/a-cuban-snapshot-7-days/

https://encompasstours.com/tours/cuba/mi-cubita-cuba14-days/

Teofilo Stevenson Gold Medal Legacy

The closing ceremony has passed and the London Summer Olympics 2012 have resulted in great success for Cuba’s boxing squad!

Cuba, despite its loss of top athletes through defection and immigration, still manages to achieve Olympic success in keys sports and Boxing is one in which medal winning is a long established tradition!

This year’s team successes have been topped by two of Cuba’s young boxers. Roniel Iglesias Sotolongo who won the gold medal in the men’s Olympic light-welterweight boxing against Ukraine’s Denys Berinchyk in the final on August 11th!

The result was 22-15

http://www.london2012.com/mm/Photo/sport/General/01/40/32/32/1403232_M01.jpg

Robeisy Ramirez Carrazana, only 18 years of age, took home a gold medal too against the Mongolian Tugstsogt Nyambayar in the men’s fly weight.

The result was 17 – 14

Barry McGuigan a former World Champion himself is quoted explaining the success of the Cuban team saying that; “a combination of good genes and their Latino temperament make them an explosive combination.” What exactly he meant by their “Latino temperament” he did not expand upon!

Bronze medals were also won by Yasniel Toledo Lopez in the men’s lightweight and by Robelis Despaigne in the +80kg category.

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In June this year the early death of legendary Olympic Gold Medallist  Teofilo Stevenson was announced! Teofilo or “Pirolo” as he was known locally, died aged 60 of a heart attack. He had two children. He was born in Las Tunas province in eastern Cuba and fought his first bout at the age of 14.

The Cuban revolution of 1959 outlawed professional sports and Teofilo, ever loyal to his island, never accepted the many offers from foreign boxing association to defect and turn professional. He was considered one of the world’s finest amateur boxers of his time!  In response to offers of millions of $ he replied that he preferred the affection of millions of Cubans.

He won Olympic Gold medals as a heavyweight in three consecutive Olympic Games – 1972 in Munich, 1976 in Montreal and 1980 in Moscow – sadly he missed a shot at a fourth Olympic gold when Cuba joined the Soviet boycott of the 1984 Games in Los Angeles and announced his retirement in 1988 after Cuba decided to skip the Seoul Olympics!

After retiring, Stevenson became a coach and served as vice president of the Cuban Boxing Federation.

He said that the Olympic Games in Munich and Montreal were the fondest memories he had in his life and the best stage of his career!

He welcomed Muhammad Ali to Cuba in 1998 but he was never able to take up the opportunity of a bout against the world most celebrated boxing giant.

Reporting his death, state newspaper Juventud Rebelde said Cuban sport had lost “one of its greatest exponents of all time”.

Cuba made other sporting successes gaining;

Gold medals for Judo, Shooting and Wrestling

Silver medals x2 for Judo and one for athletics

Bronze medals for Wrestling, Weightlifting Taekwondo

 

Fancy a tour of Cuba?
Why not reserve your place on one of our small group tours this year!

A Cuban Sanapshot 7 days in Cuba
https://encompasstours.com/tours/a-cuban-snapshot-7-days/
Mi Cubita 14 days in Cuba
https://encompasstours.com/tours/cuba/mi-cubita-cuba14-days/

Meet the artist!

Street Art of Camguey, Cuba!

Camaguey will enchant and seduce you! It is a UNESCO world heritage site and one of the seven founding cities of colonial Cuba. It is also home to some great artists. Works of art are everywhere! Camaguey oozes art! Paintings and reliefs are worked into the walls, and art is embraced by young and old in the many parks and street corner installations.

One artist you will not fail to encounter is Martha Jimenez Perez (b 1948)

Outside her studio, in plaza del Carmen, a number of life size human figures cast in bronze depict life as seen through her eyes. Her open studio is a delightful gallery of both 3 dimensional and 2 dimensional works, spanning many years.


Her life size figures in the plaza are what catch your attention and everyone enjoy the interactive quality of these pieces. Situated in front of the Church of Carmen, where she grew up, her sculptures have become the more popular attraction! Her model for the man sitting reading a newspaper often arrives in person to sits beside his bronze double and of course loves to be photographed adding a 4th dimensional twist to the pose! The group of three gossiping ladies are perhaps a little more discrete, but the empty chairs in this group invite you to join the circle and pass on the local news!!!

Camaguey is famous for its huge water jars and another figure on the street is the old man who delivers water in jars. Sadly he is dead now but his bronze self reminds everyone of their history!

Much of Martha’s work revolves around the role of women in Cuban society and in the world at large. Martha has been honoured by leading Cuban art critics and has received prestigious awards for her work.

The plazas main focus is the twin towered church of Carmen built in 1823 – 1825, and the convent of the Ursulin order adjoining. Post revolution and the banning of religion, all these historic buildings fell into disrepair and ruin. This building and church has recently been restored thanks to the UNESCO award!

You can imagine what a delightful place it is to stop and pose for photos!

The best way to tour this historic city is by bici taxi who will take you to all the historic sites. The winding streets make finding your way around somewhat difficult and your driver will be able to tell you proudly about his home town!

Luckily for us Camaguey received a UNESCO world heritage site status and the historic centre has been improved and maintained to preserve its colonial and pirate past!

Why not book your tour “Mi Cubita” and enjoy Camaguey for yourself
https://encompasstours.com/tours/cuba/mi-cubita-cuba14-days/
For a shorter tour try our “A Cuban Snapshot” and enjoy Havana, Vinales and Trinidad!
https://encompasstours.com/tours/cuba/a-cuban-snapshot-7-days/