Let's make atTarnowska’s!
O nosso Bar Americano é dedicado à figura controversa da condessa russa Maria Tarnowska, que ordenou o crime passional contra um dos seus muitos amantes que ocorreu em 1907 dentro do Palazzo Maurogonato, agora Hotel Ala. Um detalhe curioso é a fachada externa do bar, feita de madeira e representando uma cenografia do Teatro La Fenice do início do século XX.
SE RESERVAR AQUI, OFERECEMOS-LHE 1 WELCOME DRINK, AYEAH!
Venha conhecer Rey, o barman sorridente e contagiante. Desfrute de um Spritz clássico, beba um copo de vinho ou surpreenda-se com os cocktail preparados com perfeição pelo nosso Rey. As Moscow Mules de Tarnowska são conhecidas em toda Veneza e a simpatia do barman está incluída no preço.
No fim de semana, o Tarnowska's ganha vida com noites de música ao vivo que não esquecerá facilmente! Oferecemos uma mistura explosiva de talentos locais e internacionais com divertidos DJ Sets, noites temáticas dos anos 80 ou 90 que o farão cantar a plenos pulmões até à meia-noite. Prepare-se para enlouquecer connosco numa atmosfera única!
SCANDAL MARIA
In front of the Palazzo Maurogonato – now Hotel Ala – inside which Kamaroesky was killed, a banner was flown with a skull and the words: TARNOWSKA to the gallows!
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‘I may be pregnant, but you will never know whether it’s your baby I’m expecting’. She was consumed by the irresistible desire to drive him into a rage. ‘ I’ll defame you and make a fool of you’
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Maria was subsequently convinced by a Roman doctore to give up morphine by sniffing cocaine, as the effect was the same and the method of using is easy and harmless.
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...one morning Naumow took her a basket of flowers, put it by the bed and took off the tissue paper. Under the flowers there was a dog lash with which he begged her to beat him ...
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Maria would like to have shouted out that Naumow was lying, but knew that wasn’t exactly the case; Naumow was simply ignoring the truth. He wasn’t beaten because of Maria’s cruelty, but because it was he who implored her to do it.
She would have been cruel if she hadn’t satisfied him. She beat him as a reward, not to cause him pain, because both drew pleasure from it, he and she. The psychiatrists: an illness!
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And Prilukov; - ‘She called me her mugik’. Maria thought: once only, in a fit of anger, did I say that.
It was subsequently he who wanted to be called by this abusive term, hundreds of times:
-‘What I am?’
-‘A mugik’
That word, full of contempt, always excited him. Prilukov eas excited by hearing words, Naumow by beatings.