Cigarettes, Cigars & Tobacco
New brands of cigarettes introduced in Britain in the 1960s
included B&H Special Filter (1961), Embassy (1962) and
Player's No. 6 (1965).
A report by the British Ministry of Health in 1969 showed that
100,000 people a year were dying from diseases connected with
smoking.
Previously, most people had not realised that smoking was
connected with cancer and other illnesses.
The last cigarette commercial shown on American network TV was
aired on 1 January 1971. The Virginia Slims
commercial was shown during The
Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.
Cigarette manufacturers tried out a tobacco substitute in 1977,
sometimes referred to as NSM (New Smoking Material).
It did not contain nicotine, but nor did it 'taste' right for
smokers, so the brands were withdrawn.

Chesterfields
Embassy Number 1
Hamlet - Hamlet Cigars (with "Air on a G String"
music)
John Player Specials : The glammest of glam fags. They came in
a black box with gold lettering. They were the sponsors of the
British Formula 1 race-winning Lotus team. Lotus were so grateful
for the funding that they designed a car which looked just like
the John Player Specials packet and painted it black and gold (The
Europa).
John Player Vanguard
Lambert & Butler King Size
More
Park Drive
Players No. 6
Players No. 10 - In 1973 a packet of Players No 10 (20 pack)
cost 181/2 P (while a pack of Silk Cut King Size would set you
back 30p)
Rothmans
Senior Service
Silk Cut
Sovereign
Strand - "You're never alone with a Strand" was the
advertising line for Strand Cigarettes. The TV ad featured an
actor called Terence Brooks (who looked like Frank Sinatra)
standing on a street in London, wearing a trench coat, with a hat
on the back of his head, stopping to light a cigarette to the
strains of The Lonely Man Theme.
The advert was hugely popular and Brook became a celebrity
overnight, with the accompanying Lonely Man theme reaching number
39 on the charts. Yet, much as people loved it, they didn't buy
the product and the campaign was soon discontinued. The theory was
that viewers believed that if they smoked Strand they would end up
as lonely as the chap on the deserted street corner in the
commercial.
For the record, Strand cost 3s 2d for a packet of twenty at the
time.

Woodbine

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