For nearly a decade, one image defined Peaky Blinders: the razor-sharp silhouette of Tommy Shelby, eyes cold, mind calculating, a cigarette forever burning between his fingers. To fans, the smoke felt inseparable from the character—so much so that a bizarre rumor began circulating online: that Cillian Murphy must have destroyed his lungs playing the chain-smoking Birmingham gangster.
The truth, however, is far stranger—and far less toxic.
Despite portraying one of television’s most infamous smokers, Murphy is a strict non-smoker in real life. As the show’s popularity exploded, so did curiosity about how he survived six seasons of near-constant smoking scenes. Eventually, Murphy addressed what he jokingly called “the wildest rumor” he had ever heard about himself: that his lungs must be “finished” after Peaky Blinders. His response was simple and amused: “That was pretty interesting.”
Behind the scenes, the illusion of Tommy Shelby’s addiction was engineered not by nicotine, but by flowers.
The Anatomy of a “Healthy” Cigarette
To preserve the gritty authenticity of the 1920s while protecting the actor’s health, the prop department devised a clever solution. Instead of tobacco, every cigarette Murphy smoked on screen was a custom-made herbal prop. These weren’t modern vape-style substitutes either—they were hand-rolled, period-accurate cigarettes filled with a blend of rose petals, clover, and other herbs.
The ingredients may sound poetic, but Murphy has been quick to clarify that they didn’t taste particularly pleasant. Still, they did their job. With no nicotine or tobacco involved, Murphy could perform scene after scene without risking long-term damage. He later joked that they became his “five a day,” a tongue-in-cheek nod to healthy eating guidelines.
By the Numbers: A Botanical Marathon
The sheer scale of the illusion is what truly stunned fans. Murphy revealed that he smoked roughly 3,000 herbal cigarettes per season. Over six seasons, that adds up to nearly 18,000 cigarettes—or, as the internet delighted in pointing out, the equivalent of smoking an entire rose garden.
When the math was laid out for him, Murphy could only laugh at the absurdity. The rumor wasn’t that he smoked too much—it was that he had essentially inhaled thousands of flowers in the name of art.
More Than Just Smoke
The dedication to detail on Peaky Blinders, created by Steven Knight, went far beyond cigarettes. Tommy Shelby’s iconic haircut sparked a global grooming trend, while his near-total absence from eating scenes was a deliberate choice to emphasize the character’s obsessive, war-scarred mindset.
After the series ended, Murphy seamlessly transitioned into another historical role as a smoker in Oppenheimer, directed by Christopher Nolan—once again relying on herbal cigarettes to bridge authenticity and health.
A Legacy Built on Rose Smoke
In the end, Tommy Shelby’s world may have been soaked in violence, whiskey, and smoke—but the reality behind the camera was surprisingly gentle. While the character lived in clouds of danger, Murphy’s experience was defined by petals, herbs, and one of television’s most elaborate illusions.
Eighteen thousand cigarettes later, his lungs remain untouched—proving that sometimes, even the grittiest legends are built on flowers.