Fla. man wins Hemingway look-alike prize
By The Associated Press
Posted: July 23, 2007
In this photo released by the Florida Keys News Bureau, Larry Austin, right, of Palm Harbor, Fla., celebrates his 'Papa' Hemingway Look-Alike contest victory late Saturday, July 21, 2007, at Sloppy Joe's Bar in Key West, Fla. Austin is surrounded by past winners including 2006 victor Chris Storm, lower left, from Amarillo, Texas. The zany contest was the highlight event of the six-day Hemingway Days festival that celebrates the literary prowess and vigorous lifestyle novelist Ernest Hemingway experienced when he lived in Key West in the 1930s. The festival ends Sunday. AP Photo/Florida Keys News Bureau, Andy Newman
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KEY WEST, Fla. - A white-bearded insurance agent from Florida won the Ernest Hemingway Look-Alike Contest, a highlight of the annual festival honoring the famed writer.
Larry Austin defeated 122 other contenders in the competition at Sloppy Joe's Bar, Hemingway's favorite watering hole when he lived in the Keys in the 1930s. The final round was held late Saturday, which would have been Hemingway's 108th birthday.
Austin, of Palm Harbor, said he shares Hemingway's fondness for Key West, cats and having a good time, though he has never attempted writing anything except insurance policies.
"When they called my name, I was in shock," said Austin, a 10-year veteran contestant who said his favorite Hemingway novel is "The Old Man and the Sea."
Contestants dressed in sportsman's attire paraded across the stage at Sloppy Joe's during preliminary rounds Thursday and Friday. Twenty-five prospective "Papas" made it to Saturday night's finals.
Ernest Hemingway's granddaughter Lorian Hemingway said the contest would appeal to her late grandfather.
"I think if he were to walk into Sloppy Joe's to see dozens of men hoping to look like him, he would be honored," she said. "In fact, I think if he might even break into tears, because the connection with him here in Key West goes so deep and all the look-alikes love this man."
Ernest Hemingway wrote many of his classic works, such as "For Whom the Bell Tolls" and "To Have and Have Not," in a small studio adjoining his Key West home.
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