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Phoenix: Secret speak-easy reopens at the Biltmore

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Jazz babies and their beaus can relive the Roaring ‘20s in the Arizona Biltmore’s Mystery Room, the newly re-created “secret” speak-easy in the resort’s main building.

The Arizona Biltmore opened in 1929 during Prohibition. But a desert resort with no hooch to satisfy the patrons’ thirst? Unthinkable. The owners found a way with the Mystery Room, a.k.a. the Men’s Smoker, up a staircase and hidden down a corridor.

Here gentlemen could purchase a set-up for the bootleg liquor stashed in a cabinet that converted into a bookcase in case of a raid. A high-powered spotlight on the hotel roof beamed into the room to alert guests if the coppers were on the way.

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The Mystery Room is open for flappers and their friends on Sunday nights from 8 to 11 p.m., with a bartender in period costume, Jazz Age music and ‘20s-era cocktails. The room features Frank Lloyd Wright-style “Biltmore blocks,” a restored gold-leaf ceiling and historic photos.

Admission is free, but a password is required -- just like a real Prohibition speak-easy. To access the password, search #speakeasy on Twitter. The resort will tweet a clue every week from its Twitter page, @ArizonaBiltmore.

Info: Arizona Biltmore, (602) 955-6600

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