Tropicana - place

The Tropicana is Havana's most famous cabaret and one of the great entertainment venues of the 20th century. Opened in 1939 in the Marianao neighborhood, it became a symbol of Cuban showmanship — elaborate choreography, live orchestras, and spectacular staging performed under an open-air canopy of trees.

History

The Tropicana opened on December 30, 1939, built on a former estate in Marianao. Its outdoor stage — "paradise under the stars" — allowed elaborate productions in the tropical air. Through the 1940s and 50s it attracted international stars and became a meeting point for Cuban and international musical cultures.

After the Revolution (1959), the Tropicana survived as a state-run venue, one of the few pre-revolutionary entertainment institutions that continued operating. It remains open today.

Musical Significance

The Tropicana's house orchestras and choreographic productions represented the peak of Cuban popular entertainment — Son, mambo"> Mambo, Cha-cha-chá, and Rumba performed at the highest production level. Many leading Cuban musicians performed here, including Benny Moré, Celia Cruz, and countless others.

The elaborate casino choreography seen in Tropicana productions influenced social dance culture by filtering theatrical movement vocabulary into the social dance floor.