From next week, one of France's most iconic institutions -- the smoky cafe -- will be but a hazy memory.
The extension of a smoking ban to bars, discotheques, restaurants, hotels, casinos and cafes on Tuesday marks a momentous cultural shift in a country where thinkers like Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir once held court while clutching cigarettes in Left Bank cafes.
For smokers, this is the most distressing part of a phased smoking ban that began last February in workplaces, schools, airports, hospitals and other "closed and covered" public places like train stations.
But many bartenders and restaurant staffers are looking forward to breathing easier and to clothes that don't stink of seeped-in odors from the clouds of smoke where they work.
Just about anywhere indoors will be off-limits for smoking, except homes, hotel rooms, and sealed smoking chambers at establishments that decide to provide them.
"The French culture associated with smoking is a 20th-century thing, but we won't forget the experience," ex-smoker Lisa Zane, a Chicago-born singer who lives in Paris, said at Le Fumoir restaurant and bar behind the Louvre. "Smoking seems insane now -- we have to adapt."
The Health Ministry says one in two regular smokers here dies of smoking-related illness and about 5,000 nonsmokers die each year of passive smoking. About a quarter of France's 60 million people are smokers.
The ban will likely mean more unsightly cigarette butts on sidewalks and in gutters. British American Tobacco's French arm on Wednesday began a pilot program in and near Paris of putting ashtrays outside bars where tobacco products are sold.
Countries like Italy, Spain, Belgium, Britain and Ireland already have smoking bans. But it's tough to imagine the style-conscious French bundling up in blankets to smoke on chilly restaurant terraces like Londoners.
Many cafe owners and disco operators fear lost business: Smokers who light up with a countertop morning coffee, on the dance floor or after a meal make up a huge customer base.
Some 10,000 protesters, mainly tobacco vendors, marched across Paris last month in an unsuccessful attempt to convince lawmakers to add flexibility to the new prohibitions.
In a minor concession, the government says it won't fully enforce the ban until after New Year's Day.
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