Gala does festival fund well, again
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BARBARA DIAMOND
Under a full moon as bright as a spotlight, the Festival of Arts
staged a star-studded gala Sunday to close out the 2004 season .
Award winning actor Joe Mantegna hosted the fund-raiser, heading a
cast of television and film luminaries, local VIPS and appreciated
festival supporters that attended the sixth annual gala. The event
raised more than $200,000 for the Festival Building Fund.
“It’s been such a wonderful season, I am sorry to see it end,”
festival board President Anita Mangels said.
The season ended on a positive note. Art sales were up.
Mixed media artist Kate Riegler was still on pins and needles all
night and still on Tuesday, waiting to hear a decision on an 11th
hour sale that would double her income for the summer.
Dona Blurock was awarded the 2004 Fickle Finger for jewelers.
Selection of the recipient from among the numerous participating
jewelers is always difficult. Also difficult: adding embellishments
on the award.
The gala was a sold-out conclusion to the grueling 60-day run of
the Pageant of the Masters.
“I am looking forward to spending an evening with my family and a
day off,” Pageant of the Masters Director Dee Challis Davy said.
“Then we start work on next year’s show.
The theme of the 2005 show will be “On the Road.”
“That is kind of ironic, because everybody knows the pageant isn’t
going anywhere; it’s staying right here in Laguna,” Challis Davy
said.
Board member Ann Webster celebrated her 31st year with the
festival. She spent 27 years backstage doing makeup before running
for the board. Her term ends this year and she is on a slate with
incumbent Bob Henry and Fred Sattler.
Sattler sat at the Arts Commission table for dinner with his wife,
Jan, a commission member. Commissioner Mike Tauber also was seated at
the table. City Arts Coordinator Sian Poeschl, a festival exhibitor,
joined them later. They were among the last to leave Tivoli Terrace.
“We are having way too much fun,” said Commissioner Pat Kollenda.
Festival Board member John Campbell said it hardly seemed possible
that it had been a year since he and his wife, Lu, a festival
exhibitor, sat at a table with actor Elliott Gould.
“He was President of an actors group and we talked about working
with boards and unions,” Campbell told exhibitor John Tolle. “We
really had a good time.
Board members Kathleen Blackburn, Bob Dietrich and Dianne Reardon
did not attend the gala.
Henry and his wife, Annette, dined with board member Carolyn
Reynolds, a festival exhibitor
Tivoli Terrance was dolled up for the dinner with black
tablecloths and napkins. Chairs were draped in black with white
organdy sashes. Centerpieces of white Casablanca lilies and other
white posies carried out the theme.
“I have never seen it look so elegant,” City Councilwoman
Elizabeth Pearson said.
Pearson and fiance Ernie Schneider sat with Mayor Cheryl Kinsman
and her son, Nicholas, Catrina and City Councilman Steve Dicterow,
Planning Commissioner Bob Chapman and Community Clinic board member
Faye Kirk.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman and Steve Miller and Faye and Councilman
Wayne Baglin also attended
“It really rare that all five of us attend the same event,”
Dicterow said.
Celebrity guests included Cloris Leachman, winner of an Academy
Award-winner and eight Emmys; and Robin Weigert, Emmy nominee for
best supporting actress in a drama series, who plays Calamity Jane on
the HBO’s “Deadwood;” Alan Thicke, who starred in “Growing Pains;”
and Victor Williams, featured as Deacon Palmer on CBS’s “The King of
Queens.”
Also: Orange County’s Susan Egan, who played Belle in the original
Broadway production of “Beauty and the Beast;” Bernie Koppel, “The
Love Boat’s” Dr. Adam Bricker; and Jason Ritter, son of the late John
Ritter and one of the stars with Montegna on “Joan of Arcadia.”
Laguna’s own star, Eve Plumb, who played Jan Brady in the original
cast of the “Brady Bunch,” sat with fellow Design Review Board
members Steve Kawaratani and Ilse Lenschow, zoning administrator
Liane Schuller and assistant Jeanine Benton.
Also on the celebrity guest list: Laguna Beach resident and
Newport Beach salon owner James Morrison who recently organized a
documentary film to encourage young people to make wise -- or least
not life-threatening choices. He was shocked by the death of a
teenager in an alcohol related traffic accident.
The documentary is narrated by some of the very top names in the
hair salon and products industry, talking about their decisions that
led to success.
“If kids make good choices, they can become Paul Mitchell,”
Morrison said.
Or mayor of their hometown. Or a successful artist.
This year’s festival showcased the works of more than 140 artists
in a variety of media. Artists are juried into the show. They
celebrate the privilege by donating proceeds from the sale of a
pre-season selection of their art, contributing auction pieces for
the Needy Artists Fund and the gala silent auction.
For those who could not attend the gala, visit
https://www.wireimage.com.
* 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 (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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