The ladies who lunch
- Share via
Young Chang
Give Dianne Felton an occasion to cook dinner and she’ll throw a
lavish little party with decorated tableware to match whatever theme the
season demands.
Ask Felton to choose where to dine out and she’ll pick a restaurant
she’s never been to, one that’s known to be lovely and mood-setting and,
of course, savory.
Surround her with a waterfront Newport Beach home and a family full of
men and she’ll sprinkle the life with flowers and colors and other
pretty, feminine touches that start with a large, well-kept garden and
end with the tiniest crystal drops on the dining room chandelier.
Felton loves to have fun. She finds reason to celebrate whenever she
can and rejoices in the things that are taken for granted -- loved ones,
teatime, being 57.
Her friends choose “ambience” to define Felton in a single word.
As the founder of the Vintage Vixens, Felton has chosen a colorful and
playful ambience to celebrate being older than 50.
She and 14 other women are the official, newly-formed Newport Beach
chapter of the national Red Hat Society. The Vixens meet every two months
to lunch somewhere nice and have “Literary Tea” at a member’s home. There
are no rules to this club and no goals except to have fun. You just have
to be older than 50, wear a purple outfit and don a red hat.
“It’s sophisticated and silly at the same time,” said Felton, the
chapter founder. “It’s the freedom to do whatever you want and not have
to worry about what other people think. And you make such a statement
when you’re in a group.”
BECOMING A VIXEN
Last month, during a luncheon at the subtly-decorated Napa Rose
restaurant in Anaheim, heads turned as the Vixens made their way in and
out of the dining room with their flamboyant red heads and purple
clothes.
Felton wore a red straw hat with violet flowers and a purple suit
lined with satin purple prints. Paula Croswell also wore a purple suit
but with a bluer, satin button-down shirt and a red hat that sprouted
blue and red flowers. Linda Sutherland layered a purple dress over a
white shirt and topped the ensemble with a red felt hat fluffed up with
an Angora trim.
The Vixens were poster women for fun.
“It’s a wonderful stage of life,” said 58-year-old Becky Coleman, one
of the original five members.
Felton thought to start the Vixens two years ago, after reading an
article about the Red Hat Society in an issue of “Romantic Homes
Magazine.”
The story chronicled the origins of the group. In the late ‘90s, a
Fullerton woman named Sue Ellen Cooper gave her friend a red fedora and a
poem by Jenny Joseph titled “Warning.” The first few lines of the poem
read: “When I am an old woman I shall wear purple / With a red hat that
doesn’t go and doesn’t suit me / And I shall spend my pension on brandy
and summer gloves / And satin sandals and say we’ve no money for butter.”
The hat and poem gesture caught on and Cooper’s circle soon began
going out for tea in purple outfits and red hats. The Fullerton chapter
spread nationally and women in different cities formed a following.
“It’s just amazing how it’s blossomed,” Coleman said. “Women have just
taken to this idea with wild abandonment.”
Having just been diagnosed with breast cancer at the time she read the
Red Hat article, Felton took a year and some months to undergo a
lumpectomy, chemotherapy, grow her hair back, fully recover and then
start the group.
“Each of us find a way to cope to make it better,” the former school
teacher said. “For me, it’s planning and looking forward to things. I’m
very motivated by fun and things that are pretty.”
Last December, she held the first meeting of the Vixens with four
close friends who’ve celebrated birthdays together for more than 20
years. Each person invited a guest and so the group numbered 10.
They decided on the chapter name Vintage Vixens because the American
Heritage Dictionary defines “vintage” as “characterized by excellence,
maturity and enduring appeal,” noted Susan Rinek, a Vixen.
Last month, each guest from the first meeting invited five new members
and 15 women met at the Anaheim restaurant. The expanded group decided to
keep the membership at 15, and everyone jokingly calls Felton the Queen
Mum.
They chatted and giggled through the afternoon about where and how
everyone got their red hats and purple outfits. Rinek had the best hat
story, as she found hers at a consignment store for $2 and then bought
flowers to adorn the rim. Felton found her hat at a Palm Desert swap meet
and the suit at a store called the Dress Barn.
“I was on my way to TJ Max and I noticed it in the window,” Felton
said. “My eyes have just been going to anything that’s purple.”
After the Sunday champagne brunch, the group, which includes
accountants and school teachers and artists and even a pilot, had a
literary tea at a member’s home to discuss Nicholas Sparks’ “A Bend in
the Road.”
“I don’t think it has anything to do with the Red Hat Society,” said
Rinek, a graphic designer and Newport Beach resident. “But Dianne thought
it’d be really fun to have a book assigned each time and have that be the
second part of each day.”
Rinek admits that before she joined the group, she wondered for a
second whether she wanted to officially celebrate something “you kinda
wish you didn’t have to celebrate.”
“But I was only slightly torn because the real enthusiasm was Dianne’s
joy and delight in putting this together,” said Rinek, who has been
friends with Felton for about 25 years. “Dianne’s approach was like a
little girl planning a tea party -- really tongue-in-cheek seriously.”
FAR FROM 106
The two friends spent the early years of young motherhood as neighbors
in Lido Sands. They swapped kids to baby-sit and took turns taking time
off from work when all the little ones caught chicken pox, and took more
than three weeks to collectively recover.
Through the decades, Rinek painted couch cushions for Felton while
Felton threw fun dinner parties for their two families. They became best
friends through being helpful neighbors, both resulting today in good
health and with enough peace of mind to just have fun being the ages they
are.
Lately, the 55-year-old Rinek has spent her afternoons painting,
sometimes in Felton’s garden, and looking for a more chic red hat and
purple outfit to wear to the April meeting of the Vixens.
She found both recently. The hat came from Michael’s -- a wide-brimmed
straw number that cost $1.98 but is meant more for decorating and hanging
on the wall than for wearing. She also bought -- she giggles at this -- a
can of red spray paint for $4 and some fake flowers to turn the plain
blond straw surface into an accessory worthy of the Red Hat Society.
She found her outfit at Ross Dress for Less -- a whimsical, chiffon
purple dress paired with a light jacket -- for the discounted price of
$19.99.
“I’m going to look like a lady at tea,” Rinek said of her April
outing. “I will try to look less frumpy. Just because I’m wearing weird
purple and red hats doesn’t mean we have to look 106 years old.”
Felton also looks anything but 106.
She spent part of her past week getting her nails done by a
professional manicurist who regularly visits her home. With Spring
approaching, she opted for hot pink hands.
Wearing large red earrings that matched the red stripes on her
button-down shirt, Felton even sported a big gardening hat as she planted
yellow flowers.
In the shadow of her wide straw brim, Felton’s blond hair jutted out
in trendy, layered wisps. Since getting radiation therapy last year, her
hair’s begun to grow and is on its way to the shoulder-length bob it once
was.
“It’s just fun to get haircuts and have bad hair days,” Felton said.
Her definition of fun includes surprising her husband with a birthday
party at an old estate in a desert, decorating gingerbread houses with
her two sons and their girlfriends on Christmas Eve and having lunch with
friends in a beautiful garden.
While wearing red on the head and purple everywhere else, of course.
Rinek agrees. When it comes to being a Vixen, the number one goal is
to have a good time being vintage.
“It’s to find the lovely and fun things,” she said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.