Hemingway ‘wannabes’ celebrate author with lookalike contest | Photography

Ernest Hemingway is survived as much by his macho mythology as he is by his writing. Hemingway was in two plane crashes in two days. Hemingway shot himself in both legs while wrangling a shark. Hemingway had at least nine major concussions – and four wives. He had brain damage. He won the Pulitzer and the Nobel prize. He hunted and fished and wrote plays and books and articles and stories, for ever in pursuit of the truest sentence. He was rageful, charming, violent, brilliant and drunk.

Hemingway is also something of a Key West mascot, especially for a week every July, when a festival called Hemingway Days, which coincides with his birthday (this year, he would be 122) honours his legacy by gathering his lookalikes together.

A portrait of Ernest Hemingway seen inside the Hemingway Home and Museum located in Key West, Florida on July 24, 2021.

Weaving through the drunken, sunburnt revellers who pack Duval Street, it can be hard to picture Key West as