Hemingway's Cuba, Cuba's Hemingway
His last personal secretary returns to Havana and discovers that the novelist's mythic presence looms larger than ever
- By Valerie Hemingway
- Photographs by Robert Wallis
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
"It is as though he still roamed the streets of Havana, with his corpulence, his broad shoulders," Cirules writes. In his first decade there, he goes on, Hemingway spent his time "exploring the streets and taverns, observing, listening, inebriated at times, on nights of drinking, on nights of cockfights, womanizing in the most splendid places, and acquiring habits that would lead him hopelessly to seek refuge on the fifth floor of a peaceful and protective little hotel on Obispo Street" (the Ambos Mundos).
To me, Cirules' Hemingway is a blend of the man I knew, his fictional characters (especially Thomas Hudson of Islands in the Stream), local lore and the waning memories of aged locals. "Until 1936 there was an intense and scandalous affair between the writer Ernest Hemingway and the voluptuous Jane Mason," Cirules writes, naming a young woman who was then married to the head of Pan Am in the Caribbean. She and Hemingway, the author says, spent four months together on the Pilar, cruising the northern coast of Cuba.
This affair has been the subject of speculation—part of the Hemingway lore—but if it ever took place, it must have been uncommonly discreet. There was certainly no scandal. And however Hemingway may have acted as a young man, the man I knew was slightly shy and surprisingly puritanical.
Cirules and his wife, María, took me to Havana's Barrio Chino, or Chinatown, where Hemingway used to favor the cheap eateries. Enrique drove us in his 20-year-old Russian-French car, which hiccuped seriously each time it started. Near the restaurant, María pointed to the imposing Pórtico del Barrio Chino (Chinatown Gate), erected in 1999 and paid for by the Chinese government. (Since Cuba began relaxing its rules on foreign investment in the 1990s, the Chinese have funded several Chinatown renovation projects.) We ate a simple but tasty meal, paying $18 for four people, about half what a tourist restaurant would charge.
After dinner we went to the Hotel Nacional, the historic landmark built in 1930, favored by Winston Churchill and still Havana's premier hotel, to meet Toby Gough, a 37-year-old British impresario who travels the world seeking exotic dancers to put into stage shows he produces in Europe. Gough lives in Havana a few months of the year. In the last half-decade, he has taken his pre-Castro-style productions—The Bar at Buena Vista, Havana Rumba, Lady Salsa—to a dozen countries with, he boasts, astonishing success. "Cuba sells the image of Cuba in the '50s the whole time while rejecting its values," Gough told me. The Cuban government gives its blessing to such enterprises because they stimulate tourism. I suppose that for a Communist country in dire need of foreign exchange, the image of a decadent capitalist playground helps pay the bills.
Gough calls his new show Hemingway in Havana, and it features an Irish-Canadian actor/writer Brian Gordon Sinclair as a Hemingway surrounded by Cuban dancers. Gough said he "took the music of Hemingway's era, the mambo, the cha-cha-cha, flamencos during the bullfight stories, a song about fishing, a song about drinking, and then contrasted the local Cuban people then and now with a contemporary dance piece." Apparently, the Cuban Hemingway has become an export, like Cuban rum, cigars, music and art.
Gough recently staged a private performance of the show for Sir Terence Conran, the furniture retailer (Habitat) turned nightclub-and-restaurant entrepreneur, who, Gough said, was considering it for his London El Floridita. It came as news to me that Hemingway's old haunt had been franchised.
On the long flight home I had time to compare the Cuban Hemingway, with whom I'd spent the last few days, with the Hemingway of my memories. The man I knew did not belong to any country or person (though maybe to his alpha male tabby cat, Cristóbal Colón). He enjoyed the land, the sea, great ideas and small ones too, plus sports, literature and everyone who plied an honest trade. He let nothing interfere with his work, not even drink. He had an excessive love for animals and would show unusual kindness to people, but nothing could match his anger.
I felt lucky never to have incurred that wrath. He could be ruthless or cruel with friends and, especially, family if they did not meet his expectations. I watched the manuscript of his brother Leicester's autobiography go up in flames in the burn barrel on the terrace outside the library while Ernest muttered, "Blackmail." I noted the ostracizing of his son—my future husband, Gregory—after a series of false starts and academic missteps that would be explained only much later as the result of deep emotional distress. And I remember Hemingway venting, in some of the letters I transcribed in the finca library so long ago, what can only be called hatred for his third wife, Martha Gellhorn. (It was she who had found the finca, which the couple first rented, then purchased, to celebrate their 1940 wedding.) If her name, or Gregory's, came up, even accidentally, everyone in the house walked on tiptoes and spoke in whispers.
Hemingway was a born teacher and lifelong student—of nature, sports, history, of everything he engaged in—and his sense of humor is often overlooked. (He loved wordplay, as you might expect of a writer, but he was also a gifted mimic.) He taught me to fish for marlin in the Gulf Stream, to evaluate a fighting cock, to shoot a rifle—then told me what to read, and how good writing must be based on an intimate knowledge of a subject. My apprenticeship may have been the most transformative any young secretary has ever experienced.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (6)
Does anybody know of a man named Luke who would be seen with Hemingway from time to time when He moved to Cuba. The reason I asked is because He is mentioned in stories about Key West and Havana when He did some work on Papas boat in both countries, I happen to know quite a lot about Him. Thanks
Posted by gb Peevey on October 14,2009 | 05:25 PM
Valerie...TANTO MONTA, so the Royal Spanish Coat of Arms says...This is my first visit to this site which I found most interesting. My name is Hugo… a native “Cojimero” born in 1941.Of course, we do not know each other, but with all due respect, we share a few things in common. Your husband’s name Gregory, rung a loud bell, named after Gregorio (Fuentes), Captain or Patro’n of his father's Pilar. That photograph of the Cojimar Castle transported me to my birthplace, where both of my parents were born and and alas, about 13 Generations more, before the construction of the Castle began in 1643. My paternal Great Grandfather settled in Cojimar in 1853, having migrated from central Catalonia, Iberia....so much for my part. ...I had fallen asleep in the open Sun on the wide Sea Wall bordering the seashore and "Big Pier" facing the Lower Park - worn out by the salty Cojimar breeze and pounding surf. One of my friends woke me up yelling that Gregorio called us to give us some Ballyhoos(used for Bait). It was around 1949 - I was about 8 years old. That was my first recollection with Gregory’s Father but I had been on The Pilar when Hemingway was not there. Gregorio, a good friend of both of my families would let us on board, starting the engine for several minutes getting it ready for the late afternoon outing...I recall, it was 1953 when the movie crew and Director Zimmermann began filming The Old Man and The Sea. Katherine Hepburn would show up ocassionally to keep an eye on Spencer Tracy (her Platonic love of her life). Several of my uncles and my father were photographed as they played their role in thefilm. After filming finished, the Townspeople pinned the medal on Hemingway’s shirt for winning the Pulitzer Prize by the Finca Vigia's Pool side. We left Cuba for the States in 1956 and brought the photographs with us in 1957.caring for them ever since.
respectfully, Hugo L. Alpizar
Architect
Posted by Hugo L. Alpizar on August 20,2009 | 03:15 AM
Hi I was wondering if Ernest Hemmingway's 1955 Chrysler was there @ able to be seen i am going to Cuba soon Thank You norm.
Posted by norm frey on January 7,2009 | 12:18 AM
Anne, Did you get a response to your inquiry concerning the Smithsonian providing assistant to Cuban museums? If not, I think that the Cubans may have been confused about the technical assistance that has been provided them by the Finca Vigia Foundation, a non-profit of which I am a board member. We have provided technical assistance ranging from architects to structural engineers to paper conservators to marine architects. You can find more information at our web site http://fincafoundation.org/
Posted by Marty Peterson on September 25,2008 | 12:44 PM
My name is Ruben Santos Claveria and I am American born Puerto-Rican and Guatemalen and I studied Hemingway while I was a student at Wilbur Wright College in Chicago. I went to visit the Hemingway musuem in Oak Park, Illinois and was soon recruited to be a tour guide and volunteer. Valerie Hemingway's article is very insightful and shows a very loving side of a man who had four wives. I am very interested in Hemingway's life in Cuba, since Cuba was a commonwealth of the U.S. just like Puerto Rico is now. There are more American tourists to Puerto Rico though because you don't need a passport to travel their if you are American. I still give one day a month for volunteer work as a Tour Guide at the Hemingway Birthplace House, that attracts tourists from all over the world. The Ernest Hemingway Foundation has spent over a million dollars in donations and grants to recreate the house to make it look as it did when the Hemingway and Hall family lived there. It's not fully clear whether Hemingway is partially liberal or completely liberal because of his Cuban experience but this article suggests that Hemingway was one of the greatest writers of his time, inspiring every one who came in contact with him. I wish that relations between Cuba and the U.S. would improve to find partial, temporary solutions if not permenant solutions to social ills like poverty. The Olympics in China made me think the world is ready to respect all forms of government to create a pluristic, democratically liberal world where humanism matters the most. Writers, poets, peacemakers at Nobebprize.org keep renewing my faith in human progress.
Posted by Ruben Santos Claveria on September 24,2008 | 02:33 PM
Is there any information about Hemingway's fishing expeditions (and friends) in Cuba in the early 1940's. I am trying to verify that George T. Northern, who was grandson of William Northern (Gov. of Georgia), went on a fishing trip w/ Hemingway in Cuba during that time.
Posted by Steven Soboroff on March 30,2008 | 01:41 PM
I need to confirm that any type of support was given to any of the museums in Cuba by the Smithsonian. Papers, documents, help in planning and setting of artifacts. This may just be a myth as I have found one cuban says yes, the other says no. Between the museaums of Hemingway and the Capitol of Cuba, did indeed the Smithsonian actually give advisors or any other assistance. Do you have dates and names by chance. Thanks Anne
Posted by Anne on February 13,2008 | 12:30 PM