On February 22, 1941, Ernest Hemingway arrived in Hong Kong's Victoria Harbour as part of his first (and only) trip to Asia.
The reason for his journey is still contentious among researchers. According to Pete Moreira, Canadian author of Hemingway on the China Hunt, the purpose was "surreptitiously gathering intelligence for the [American] government.”
Other professionals argue that Ernest Hemingway, perhaps at the zenith of his popularity when he arrived, was more Austin Powers than 007, and was in fact dutifully accompanying his wife, Martha Gellhorn, who was on assignment for Collier’s magazine.
Hemingway and Gellhorn's visit as reported by the South China Morning Post.
What is clear is that Hemingway arrived by ship with Gellhorn, his third of four wives, herself a literary luminary. (Gellhorn recalled the trip in her 1978 memoir, Travels With Myself and Another).
Hemingway wasted no time getting started doing Hemingway things, and setting the standard for expat behavior for decades to come, by drinking heavily, attending horse races at Happy Valley and, per firsthand accounts, introducing the Bloody Mary to Hong Kong.
Hemingway in Hong Kong.
Hemingway and Gellhorn traveled to Chongqing, Chengdu and Shanghai during their visit, and were often appalled at the living standards in the countryside that was wracked with the effects of the Sino-Japanese war. They were also able to meet key historical figures such as Chiang Kai-Shek, his wife Soong Mei-ling and Zhou Enlai.
Hemingway with Madame Chiang Kai-Shek and Gellhorn.
Gellhorn, Hemingway and friends.
Hemingway was said to have coped with the squalor and destitution around him by staying drunk, at one point allegedly drinking over a dozen Chinese officers under the table. Ganbei!
This perturbed Gellhorn, and by the time they left Hong Kong on May 6, the seeds of discontentment were sown. They would divorce a few years later.
The trip was reenacted in the 2012 HBO film Hemingway and Gellhorn, starring Clive Owen and Nicole Kidman.
READ MORE: Ernest Hemingway's Guide to Tense, Haunting Hangovers
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[Images via SCMP, China in WW2, HBO]
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