Colonel William A. Phillips

Cigarette girls in Florida in 1956
Cigarette girl at the Bellmansro restaurant in Sweden, 1940

In Europe and the United States, a cigarette girl is a person who sells or provides cigarettes from a tray held by a neck strap. They may also carry cigars and other items like candy, snacks, and chewing gum on their trays.

Uniform

The most common uniform is a red and black short saloon-style skirt above the knee dress accompanied with a matching pillbox hat,[1] but different colors and styles are possible. Another title for a cigarette girl is candy girl.

Aside from serving cigarettes and other novelties, the attractive girls acted as eye candy and were often employed to flirt with male customers as well.[1] Cigarette girls usually consented in the hopes of getting tips from wealthy businessmen.[1]

Popularity and decline

The modern image of the cigarette girl developed in the 1920s with the urbanization of the United States.[1] Though largely not seen other than in speakeasies and supper clubs,[1] cigarette girls were frequently shown in Hollywood films and soon became well-established among the general public.[1] The cigarette girl of the nightclub became a staple figure of film and theatre.[2]

With the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, speakeasies across the US closed and cigarette girls soon found employment in more popular business destinations.[1]

Cigarette girls were a common sight in restaurants, clubs, bars, airports, and casinos in the 1930s and 1940s in the United States.[1] From the end of World War II to the 1950s, cigarette girls further expanded into sporting events and the lobbies of theaters and music halls during intermissions.[1]

With the rise of cigarette machines in the mid-1950s, however, venue owners no longer needed to seek out cigarette girls who worked for a paycheck, and the girls largely vanished from the public eye.[1] There are still some casinos and nightclubs that employ cigarette girls today, especially on the Las Vegas Strip.[1][3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lou Tenney (31 March 2014). "History of the Cigar Girl". famous-smoke.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2014. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  2. ^ Nathan, George J.; Angoff, Charles (1974). The Theatre Book of the Year, 1945–1946. p. 148. All the boys and girls, along with the old night club setting, are again in evidence: the dumb-cluck minor mobster, the love-lorn cigarette girl in the abbreviated costume, the oily head-waiter, the imperturbable night club boss....
  3. ^ Stieg, Bill (10 March 1988). "Cigarette girls bring back romantic flavors". The Hour. Norwalk, Connecticut. AP. p. 2. Retrieved 10 September 2013.