Etymology • The old phrase "from soda to hock", meaning "from beginning to end" derives from the first and last cards dealt in a round of faro. The phrase evolved from the better known "
from soup to nuts". In turn, "soda" and "hock" are probably themselves derived from "hock and soda", a popular nineteenth-century drink consisting of
hock (a sweet German wine) combined with
soda water.
Geography • The town of
Faro, Yukon, Canada was named after the game.
History • The 18th-century adventurer and author
Casanova was known to be a great player of faro. He mentions the game frequently in his autobiography. • The 18th-century Prussian officer, adventurer, and author
Friedrich Freiherr von der Trenck makes mention of playing faro in his memoirs (February 1726 – 25 July 1794). • The 18th-century Dutch cavalry commander Casimir Abraham von Schlippenbach (1682–1755) also mentions the game (as
Pharaon) in his memoirs. Apparently, he was able to win considerable sums of money with the game. • The 18th century
Whig radical
Charles James Fox preferred faro to any other game. • The 19th-century American con man
Soapy Smith was a faro dealer. It was said that every faro table in Soapy's Tivoli Club in
Denver, Colorado, in 1889 was gaffed (made to cheat). • The 19th-century scam artist
Canada Bill Jones loved the game so much that, when he was asked why he played at one game that was known to be rigged, he replied, "It's the only game in town." • The 19th-century lawman
Wyatt Earp dealt faro for a short time after arriving in
Tombstone, Arizona, having acquired controlling interest in a game out of the Oriental Saloon. • The 19th-century political boss
Robert J. "Doc" Slater ran the principal gambling club in
Baltimore, Maryland for 30 years primarily dealing faro bank. • The 19th-century dentist and gambler
John "Doc" Holliday dealt faro in the
Bird Cage Theater as an additional source of income while living in
Tombstone, Arizona.
In popular culture '' (1921) took its name from an alternate name for Faro ;Literature and its adaptations • The well-known author of
Regency romances Georgette Heyer wrote a novel entitled ''
Faro's Daughter''; it tells of a young lady forced to deal faro to support her family and her ensuing romance with one of the gaming hall's patrons. • In
Edna Ferber's novel
Show Boat, the gambler Gaylord Ravenal specializes in the game of faro. • Faro is mentioned extensively in
John D. Fitzgerald's semi-autobiographical Silverlode/Adenville trilogy, which consists of the books
Papa Married a Mormon, ''Mama's Boarding House
, and Uncle Will and the Fitzgerald Curse
. It is one of the primary games played at the Whitehorse Saloon, owned by the character Uncle Will. In Mama's Boarding House'' the character Floyd Thompson, one of the tenants in the boarding house, is a faro dealer. Faro is also occasionally mentioned in Fitzgerald's corresponding Great Brain series, which focuses on the children of Adenville. • In
Oliver La Farge's story "Spud and Cochise" (1935), the cowboy Spud plays faro when he is in a very good mood. Aware of the widespread dishonesty of American faro dealers in his time, he nevertheless bets heavily, viewing his gambling losses as a form of charity. • In
Jack London's novel
White Fang, the owner of the bulldog, Tim Keenan, is a faro dealer. • In the Giulietta act of
Jacques Offenbach's opera
The Tales of Hoffmann (based on three short stories by
E. T. A. Hoffmann), Giulietta invites Schlemil to take his place at the table of pharaoh. • In
Jules Massenet's opera
Manon, the game at the Hotel Transylvania is faro, and Guillot accuses des Grieux and Manon of cheating at it. •
Lord Ruthven in
John William Polidori's "
The Vampyre" plays faro in Brussels. • The miners in
Puccini's opera
La fanciulla del West (
The Girl of the Golden West), based on
David Belasco's play
The Girl of the Golden West, play a contentious game of faro in Act One. • Faro is central to the plot of
Alexander Pushkin's story "
The Queen of Spades" and Tchaikovsky's opera adaptation,
The Queen of Spades. • In
Wesley Stace's
Misfortune, the character "Pharaoh" is named after his father's profession, a faro dealer. • In
Thackeray's novel
The Luck of Barry Lyndon, the main character runs a crooked faro bank, alternatively to his great fortune or ruin. In its film adaptation,
Barry Lyndon, one of the famous candlelit scenes shows Barry and his employer cheating at faro. In the background a
Moorish servant holds a casekeep showing which cards have been played. • In a famous scene from
Leo Tolstoy's book
War and Peace, Nicholas Rostov loses 43,000 rubles to Dolokhov playing faro. • In
Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel "
The Brothers Karamazov", Dmitri Karamazov is cheated out of 200 rubles by two Polish officers in a game of faro when they switch an unopened deck of cards for a marked set. • In
Oakley Hall's Western novel
Warlock (Hall novel), loosely based on historical events in the town of Tombstone, Arizona, Clay Blaisedell (inspired by
Wyatt Earp), deals faro at Tom Morgan's gambling hall in stints between his duty as Warlock's marshal. ;Games • In the video game ''
Assassin's Creed Unity'' (2014), the main character
Arno Dorian, in the early stages of the game, plays a game of faro with a blacksmith but loses after the blacksmith cheats. Arno loses his deceased father's pocket watch and breaks into the blacksmith's house to steal it back. ;Radio and motion pictures • In the HBO TV series
Deadwood, Al Swearengen mentions Faro, rather than poker, is played in his Gem Saloon, and the game is referred to frequently throughout the series. • Numerous references to Faro are made in both the
Western radio drama
Gunsmoke, starring
William Conrad, and the television drama
Gunsmoke starring
James Arness. • Tombstone Territory,
The Lady Gambler (S1, E33) aired May 28, 1958, and featured Diane Brewster (Beaver Cleaver's teacher in season one) as a newly hired
Faro dealer. The game is shown in brief, yet good detail including some esoteric rules (a 'Cat hop' and that the man's bet was 'coppered' ). Peter Breck shows up to gamble there, years before The Big Valley. •
The Magnus Archives episode "Cheating Death" (2016) centers around a
Yankee soldier who
rigs a game of Faro. • The
Murdoch Mysteries episode "Staircase to Heaven" involves a murder during a game of Faro. • In the American western
The Shootist (1976), Jack Pulford (
Hugh O'Brian) is a professional gambler and a faro dealer at the Metropole Saloon. • When planning
The Sting (1973) on New York gangster Doyle Lonnegan (
Robert Shaw), one of the conmen researching their mark mentions that he "only goes out to play faro", making him a hard target for the big con. • In the film
Tombstone (1993),
Wyatt Earp, played by
Kurt Russell, becomes a faro dealer after arriving in Tombstone. • In the Australian TV series
Harrow, the episode "Alea lacta est" features a murder plot centered around the fictional
Brisbane Faro Society. ==See also==