[attach id=249585 size="medium"]Sloppy Joe’s is expected to be a lucrative tourist attraction. Photo: Reuters[/attach]

Sloppy Joe’s, one of Havana’s most famous pre-revolutionary bars and a former haunt of American tourists and film stars like John Way­ne, Spencer Tracy and Clark Gable, reopened its doors this month, almost 50 years after it closed.

Waiters dressed in black and orange uniforms served drinks and tapas to a mix of tourists and Cubans, some of whom had waited years for the reopening of the historic watering hole.

Sloppy Joe’s Bar was founded by Spanish immigrant Jose Garcia, who capitalised on the US Prohibition era from 1920-1933, when American tourists flocked to Havana to drink and gamble to their heart’s content.

The bar was nationalised along with most businesses in the early 1960s after Fidel Castro’s revolutionary forces took power and languished until it closed in 1965.

The restoration, undertaken by the office of the Historian of Havana, began in 2007.

The office is in charge of a massive remake of Havana’s historic Old City, considered one of the best-preserved jewels of colonial architecture in the Caribbean, as well as a lucrative tourist attraction for Cuba’s cash-strapped, communist-led government.

The building was painstakingly restored using period photos and materials donated by people who were associated with the bar, both in Cuba and abroad.

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