The Crowd -- B.W. Cook
The 2002 Winter Formal at Newport Harbor High School brought together
three generations of one Newport Beach family along with 22 teenagers in
black tie for a pre-event dinner under a white tent.
Robin Hobson grew up on the Back Bay of Newport Beach in much simpler
times. Hobson, a retired dentist with a USC diploma, now manages the
financial portfolios of real estate lender Franklin Financial in Corona
del Mar. The man who favors Ryen Spooner luau shirts to pinstriped
business attire is one of the most successful loan brokers in the
business.
Hobson and his wife, Aida, are known for their attention to detail in
both business and personal matters. So, it is no wonder that when their
daughter Michelle McKelvey, a sophomore at Newport Harbor High School,
came to them to ask if she could host dinner for her friends prior to the
Winter Formal dance and party at Knott’s Berry Farm last Saturday
evening, the Hobson’s responded with a generous and enthusiastic, “Let’s
do something special.”
Up went a white pavilion on the lawn in the backyard of the Hobson’s
mission-style Spanish home in the Newport Heights. A baronial dining
table was set up lengthwise in the tent, draped in white satin and
sprinkled with pink rose petals. Crystal vases held floating white
candles in the shape of roses that flickered and danced in the waters.
Twinkling white lights lined the ceiling of the tent, intertwined with
garlands of pale pink roses on green vines. Pink toile draped the back of
the white painted folding chairs, as well as the sides of the banquet
table. Elegant enamel miniature picture frames, as table favors, were
placed at each setting. Silver ice buckets chilled nonalcoholic sparkling
cider ready to serve the arriving young guests out on the town for one
very special night.
As Aida and Robin Hobson prepared the final touches for their special
formal dinner, parents of some of the other young guests joined in the
detail. Instructions were delivered to all volunteers to dress in black
and white, and all parents obliged reporting to the Hobson home to work
as waiters, servers and cooks. Now you are probably thinking this all
sounds very extravagant and very expensive. However, the evening was
lovingly prepared by the Hobsons and the other parents who, with the
exception of erecting the tent, did everything on a simple volunteer
basis to create some magic for a group of young people who hopefully will
never forget that their parents bent over backward to show them just how
lucky they are to live in this community.
Aida Hobson, who is by all rights one of most outstanding gourmet
chefs in Newport Beach, organized her volunteer kitchen crew to prepare a
dinner that began with a Chinese chicken salad, followed by a main course
of sliced teriyaki steak and chicken over rice with tempura vegetables
tied in a bouquet. For dessert, each couple was served an individual
heart-shaped cake decorated in pink and white roses with their names
etched in icing. Parents prepared the dinner, served the dinner and
cleaned up following the departure of the elegant young diners headed for
Knott’s Berry Farm in a rented coach.
Robin Hobson recalled his days as a youth in Newport Beach. “My
generation did not do this sort of thing. Instead, I remember the parties
we used to have where 400 kids would show up at my parent’s house for a
4th of July barbecue, and my mom and dad would actually grill 400
hamburgers for everyone there.”
Hobson’s parents, Helen and Al, were on hand for Michelle’s gala
dinner. They too recalled simpler times past, yet were proud and pleased
to see the handsome gathering of the young Newport generation celebrating
a unique right of passage.
In the crowd were Andrew Belden with Barbara Julien, Diana Carr with
Chris Smith, Tyler Deck with Carolyn Conway, John Dobrott with Alexis
Kerns and Jessica Ball with Andy Newsom.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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