70th Festival of Arts closes with a gala
OUR LAGUNA
Aglamorous gala Saturday night was a fitting finale to the 2002
Festival of Arts season.
The evening included a reception and entertainment on the grounds,
a sumptuous dinner, an art auction, a performance of the Pageant of
the Masters and a general feeling of bonhomie. There was lots to
celebrate, most especially the closure of the simmering feud between
the city and the festival board on the terms for a lease that would
keep the festival and the pageant in Laguna.
In line with the pageant’s serendipitous 2002 theme of “Heroes and
Heroines” --the theme was chosen well before Sept. 11 -- the gala
honored four fire captains who founded “Project Blue Skies” to raise
funds for families of fallen firefighters, police and port authority
officers.
Festival President Scott Moore presented the fire captains with a
commemorative artwork designed by exhibitor Brenda Bredvik.
“Firefighters enter into an agreement with society when they are
sworn in,” said Fire Captain Gary Walsh. “It is simple: Regardless of
the calamity, we will be there for you. When others are fleeing,
firefighters are going in.”
Scott also announced a $5,000 donation to the New York Art
Recovery Program, created in response to the financial crisis
undergone by artists and arts organizations in the wake of Sept. 11.
About 2,600 people attended the gala. Guests were greeted at the
entry to the grounds by team members who included Fran Hudzinski,
director of administration; Pam Peterson. administrative assistant
and her husband, Randy; Susan Davies, special events coordinator;
Lucia McLeod, director of ticket services; Caren Werfelmann, director
of ticket operations; the Sandies, St. John and Thornton; and Christe
Auerswald and Darren Higuchi, sister and husband of Sharbie Higuchi,
director of marketing.
Sharbie was everywhere. The 4-year-old gala is her baby and she
was on the move, checking every detail, from the artwork to be
presented to the fire captains to the dinners of velvety filets,
wrapped in bacon; mixed vegetables, perfectly al dente; stuffed
prawns and wedges of pure chocolate decadence.
“I’ll eat while the pageant is on,” Sharbie said after taking a
gander at the plates being served to between about 450 purchasers of
$300 tickets at the sit-down dinner at Tivoli Terrace.
“It was the first year we sold out the $300 tickets,” Sharbie
said.
Diners included board member Bruce Rasner and his wife, Helen;
“Mrs. Boardmember,” Lu Campbell, a festival exhibitor; Mayor Wayne
Baglin and his wife, Faye, sporting a new hair style; board members
Ann Webster and Bob Henry and his wife, Annette; and board secretary
Dianne Reardon.
Dianne had arrived at the grounds wearing a white crocheted
sweater, a long, pale, silk skirt and dainty diamond and gold hoop
earrings. She was nabbed almost immediately by lifetime festival
member Ernestine Raab Green, a jeweler.
Ernestine insisted that Dianne add a collar of woven gold wire and
pearls, every bit as elegant as Dianne.
Pageant Director Diane Challis Davy, for whom the gala was a
working night, wore a long black dress with an empire waist and a
family heirloom cameo pinned to the high neckline.
Arts Commissioner Joan Corman Block wore a modern iridescent
acrylic necklace from Wearable Art and her blond hair in a low pony
tail to accent her simple, black, full-length gown. Joanie, who
arrived a tick late, was seated at a table next to Arts Commissioners
Pat Kollenda, stunning in a white suit and pearls made edgier with
strappy high-heeled sandals; Linda Dietrich, who needed only a red
satin blouse to accent her silvery hair; Jan Sattler; and Michael
Tauber; At the same table: Sian Poeschl, city arts coordinator, and
her husband, Troy; Fred Sattler, Jim Kollenda and Bob Dietrich,
festival board member.
Seated at a nearby table: Actress Eve Plumb, whose husband was
ill, was escorted to the gala by Ben Simon, chair of the Design
Review Board, on which they both serve.
The gala was the first time City Councilman Steven Dicterow had
met Eve. But he had seen a documentary the night before on the “Brady
Bunch,” in which Eve starred. Steve was seated with his wife,
Catrina; City Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman, recently returned from a
vacation in Lake Tahoe; and former Mayor Kathleen Blackburn, a
festival board member, and her husband, Bill.
Bill was not among the men at the gala in black tie. His tie was
printed with surfboards, which drew the attention of fellow surfing
enthusiast John Campbell. John, a festival board member, began
surfing when he was 13. He could identify the different models of
boards on Bill’s tie from his long years of riding the waves.
Among the celebs who attended the dinner: Sally Struthers and
Christa Jackson, stars of “Always ... Patsy Kline” at the Laguna
Playhouse; “The Young and the Restless” hottie Greg Vaughn; and the
delightful Wendy Braun, whose impeccable timing makes the Mervyn’s
television ads worth watching.
And: Veronica Hamel, who played an attorney and love interest on
“Hill Street Blues;” Bill Brochtrup of “NYPD Blue;” Lee Reherman,
sports commentator on “The Best Damn Sports Show Period;” Sean Kanan
from “The Bold and the Beautiful;” Lisa Folies from Nickelodeon’s
“All That;” Kathleen McClellan of “Ladies Man” and host of E!
episodes; Cindy Ambuehl from “Jag;” and a plethora of “Days of Our
Lives” cast members.
Rob Minkoff’s face may not be as familiar as was some of the other
celebrities, but his credentials couldn’t be better. He directed
“Lion King” and both “Stuart Little” movies. Furthermore, he donated
a sketch to the auction.
Sponsors for the gala included Kendall-Jackson Vineyards, KOST
103.5 FM, Mercedes Benz, Ritz-Carlton, Ruby’s Diner and Gelson’s.
SUMMER’S HERE
Regardless of what the calendar says, Lagunans know that summer
begins for us with the annual Exchange Club Pancake Breakfast on
Labor Day.
The breakfast was started as a celebration of the last day of the
tourist season. Nowadays, the season never really ends, though it
slacks off, but Take Back Tuesday is still something to which
residents look forward.
“It’s not the same as it used to be,” said David Schaar, still
willing to give thanks for small blessings.
The weather is better now than in June or July, the beaches are
less crowded and at 11:30 a.m., Monday parking spaces were still open
on Forest Avenue.
One thing that hasn’t changed: The chow at the Exchange Club
breakfast is still $3 for pancakes, sausages, orange juice and
coffee. Reserve firefighters John Lunn, Pat Baughman, Tony Jordan,
Scott Guff and Richard Sutherlin flipped flatjacks and seared
sausages. Bill Morris sold bottles of water and cans of coke to pay
for the rental of the grills.
Cody La Tendresse served syrup and butter. Dewar Scott oversaw the
coffee urn. Councilman Steven Dicterow also was on hand.
Not all the breakfasters were from Laguna Beach.
“We have come every September for nine years,” said Debbie Huber,
standing in line with her 5-year-old grandson, Jared, who wanted
seconds.
Others who feasted: Vesta Curry, Carolyn and Andrew Wood, Walt
Cabanillas, Bill Atkins, City Councilwoman Toni Iseman and Steve
Miller, Gary and Carole Alstot, artist Patricia Turnier, Michael
Myers and Ken Garcia.
Also: Diane and Doug Hand, a 1960 Laguna Beach High School
graduate; Dick and Jane Evans, whose mom bought a summer home in
Laguna in 1943; John Hoover, a candidate for the Festival of Arts
Board of Directors; Coastline Pilot reporter Mary Castillo, spending
a day off with husband, Ryan Gilmore; Sherry Ford, who teaches at the
Laguna School of Art and Design; Yonnus and Robert Weaver; Rick
Evans, a Laguna Canyon wood worker; and Bruce Burr, a local artist
specializing in pencil.
The breakfast was organized by, who else? Sande St. John. She and
sidekick Sandy Thorton had a table set up to raise funds for Joey
Masella, the 10-year-old Laguna Beach boy with an incurable disease.
The Sandies also arranged for young flautist Evren Ozam to
entertain.
Proceeds from the breakfast help fund the Exchange Club’s national
project of preventing child abuse and donations to local community
service organizations.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call 494-4321 or fax 494-8979.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.