-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
'Want to go home': Indonesian crew abandoned off Africa demand wages
-
Arguments to begin in key US social media addiction trial
-
Trump says China's Xi to visit US 'toward the end of the year'
-
'Send Help' repeats as N.America box office champ
-
US astronaut to take her 3-year-old's cuddly rabbit into space
-
UK foreign office to review pay-off to Epstein-linked US envoy
-
Storm-battered Portugal votes in presidential election run-off
-
French police arrest five over crypto-linked magistrate kidnapping
-
De Beers sale drags in diamond doldrums
-
What's at stake for Indian agriculture in Trump's trade deal?
-
Pakistan's capital picks concrete over trees, angering residents
-
Neglected killer: kala-azar disease surges in Kenya
-
Chile's climate summit chief to lead plastic pollution treaty talks
-
Spain, Portugal face fresh storms, torrential rain
-
Opinions of Zuckerberg hang over social media addiction trial jury selection
-
Crypto firm accidentally sends $40 bn in bitcoin to users
-
Dow surges above 50,000 for first time as US stocks regain mojo
-
Danone expands recall of infant formula batches in Europe
-
EU nations back chemical recycling for plastic bottles
-
Why bitcoin is losing its luster after stratospheric rise
-
Stocks rebound though tech stocks still suffer
-
Digital euro delay could leave Europe vulnerable, ECB warns
-
German exports to US plunge as tariffs exact heavy cost
-
Stellantis takes massive hit for 'overestimation' of EV shift
-
'Mona's Eyes': how an obscure French art historian swept the globe
-
In Dakar fishing village, surfing entices girls back to school
-
Russian pensioners turn to soup kitchen as war economy stutters
-
As Estonia schools phase out Russian, many families struggle
-
Toyota names new CEO, hikes profit forecasts
-
Bangladesh Islamist leader seeks power in post-uprising vote
-
Japan to restart world's biggest nuclear plant
-
UK royal finances in spotlight after Andrew's downfall
-
Undercover probe finds Australian pubs short-pouring beer
-
New Zealand deputy PM defends claims colonisation good for Maori
-
Amazon shares plunge as AI costs climb
-
Deadly storm sparks floods in Spain, raises calls to postpone Portugal vote
-
Carney scraps Canada EV sales mandate, affirms auto sector's future is electric
-
Lower pollution during Covid boosted methane: study
-
Carney scraps Canada EV sales mandate
-
Record January window for transfers despite drop in spending
-
Mining giant Rio Tinto abandons Glencore merger bid
-
Davos forum opens probe into CEO Brende's Epstein links
-
ECB warns of stronger euro impact, holds rates
-
Greece aims to cut queues at ancient sites with new portal
-
ECB holds interest rates as strong euro causes jitters
-
What does Iran want from talks with the US?
-
Wind turbine maker Vestas sees record revenue in 2025
-
Bitcoin under $70,000 for first time since Trump's election
-
Germany claws back 59 mn euros from Amazon over price controls
Croatia hotel toasts dizzying century of stars, sovereigns and champagne
East met West and often went for cocktails afterwards in Zagreb's Esplanade hotel.
The most glamorous and storied hotel in the Balkans is 100 years old this month and is still packing in the stars from Shakira to David Beckham.
Richard Nixon and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev were both guests in its heyday with a galaxy of Hollywood legends from Elizabeth Taylor to Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock crossing the Iron Curtain to hang out in its Art Deco bar.
Others came to gamble in its casino -- the only one allowed in then Communist Yugoslavia.
Robert Mitchum, Pierce Brosnan and Richard Chamberlain all starred in films shot in the hotel, which was built close to the Croatian capital's main railway station to accommodate passengers on the Orient Express, the luxury train that ran between Paris and Istanbul.
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II loved its Dalmatian seafood dishes so much she asked to see the chef before presenting him with a gold coin.
But it has not been all glitz for the grand hotel since it opened its doors for the first time on April 22, 1925.
- Gestapo -
The Nazis turned it into a Gestapo headquarters during World War II and it served as a soup kitchen for the city's starving population after the Germans surrendered to Yugoslav partisans in May 1945.
From the beginning, the Esplanade was the centre of Zagreb's social whirl, hosting the Danish silent screen superstar Asta Nielsen as well as Josephine Baker, the US-born queen of the Paris cabarets, who was greeted by a huge crowd on her arrival.
Despite calls to ban her notorious banana skirt dance, Baker's Zagreb show went ahead.
In 1964 the Esplanade became the first Eastern European hotel to join the US Intercontinental Hotels Corporation, which was owned by the Pan Am airline.
"It was revolutionary," former manager Amelia Tomasevic told AFP.
In those days "the West and capitalist way of doing business were not (seen as) compatible with socialism," she added.
But somehow the "larger than life" hotel pulled it off, hosting fashion shows from top French designers and serving French cheeses and champagne by the glass.
- 'Window on world' -
"The Esplanade was a window on the world for Zagreb and the whole country... bringing a lot of good, interesting and international things during rather difficult times," Tomasevic said.
The great Croatian writer Miroslav Krleza described the hotel's Oleander Terrace, a popular dining venue with a beautiful view, as the "border between Europe and the Balkans".
And during the Balkan wars of the 1990s it was the de facto headquarters for many foreign journalists.
But since the conflict ended in 1995 the hotel has gone back to hosting an ever-changing cast of celebrity guests.
General manager Ivica Max Krizmanic said he has been under the Esplanade's spell for 33 years.
He began working there while a student as a doorman "but I'm still here", he joked.
"I fell in love with the hotel, it got under my skin." He stayed on to work as a porter, concierge and on reception before becoming manager 13 years ago.
And guests also pick up on that too, with French businessman Benjamin Besquent saying its "nice to stay in a hotel with history".
S.F.Lacroix--CPN