Fundraising shines brightly at Candlelight Concert
B.W. COOK
It was the most glamorous Candlelight Concert in recent memory. Not
because of the dazzling setting. Rather, the O.C. crowd looked like
royalty. The women were stunning, and the gentlemen were dignified.
The 2004 Candlelight Concert, raising upwards of $1.2 million for
the Orange County Performing Arts Center -- produced under the loving
chairmanship of Carol Wilken -- was indeed a collective statement
about what a group of dedicated citizens can accomplish.
The annual event is a testament to the power of individual and
corporate giving. The evening’s chairwoman, Wilken, the bright and
beautiful wife of Kent Wilken (both generous supporters of the
center), was exquisite in a deep-gray, satin ball gown bejeweled and
beaded, scooped at the neckline, fitted at the waist and flowing on
the floor as she moved through the crowd. Classic, elegant, tasteful,
sublime and just a bit old-fashioned and old world, Wilken set the
standard and the tone for an evening of friendship and fundraising at
holiday time in Costa Mesa.
Across the room, blond and gorgeous socialite Patti Edwards stood
with her dapper husband Jim Edwards, looking like British royalty.
The statuesque Edwards wore a body-fitting, lace-appliqued gown
accented by a simple fur boa tied at her breast with a satin ribbon.
Also on the very best-dressed list were Elizabeth and Henry
Segerstrom; Julianne Argyros, just in from Spain with husband George
Argyros; Sandi and Ron Simon; Ronnie Allumbaugh on the arm of her
man, Byron Allumbaugh; Suki and Randy McCardle; Sheila and Ygal
Sonenshine; and the very chic co-chairwoman of the evening, Joan
Riach and husband Tom Riach.
More standouts were Joyce and Tom Tucker, Joan and John Hotchkis,
Jennifer and Anton Segerstrom, Valaree and Robert Wahler, Marilyn and
Tom Sutton, Debbie Simon, Sally and Randy Crockett, Pat and Alan
Rypinski, Catherine and Jim Emmi, Janet and Carl Nolet Jr., Susan
Samueli, Susan and Tim Strader, Daranne and Paul Folino, Barbara and
Tom Peckenpaugh, Melinda and Fari Pakzad, and Whitney Mandel -- the
wife of center president Jerry Mandel.
The evening began with cocktails on the plaza level lobby of the
center. As the roughly 500 guests arrived at the cornerstone of Costa
Mesa culture, they left their cars to the red-jacket-clad valets and
witnessed the rising of a phoenix. The expansion of the Orange County
Performing Arts Center looms across the street, as steel framing
defines the new $200-million concert hall to come in 2006, just
around the corner. Indeed, the center’s donors have much to be proud
about. Following the leadership of arts patron Henry Segerstrom, the
vision of a concert hall becomes reality after a long campaign. In
the crowd of generous benefactors were Charles and Twyla Martin,
General William Lyon and Willa Dean, Zee Allred and Drago Gligic,
Carmela Du, Brian and Lori Hirth, Tom and Pam Bender, Sandy
Segerstrom and John Daniels, Tim and Jean Weiss, Roger and Gail
Kirwan, Clifford and Barbro Heinz, Elizabeth and Tom Tierney, Dotti
Stillwell and Greg Robertson.
As the cocktail reception featuring the generous underwriting
support of Ketel One Vodka came to a close, bells sounded requesting
concert guests to take their seats in the orchestra section of
Segerstrom Hall. An orchestra befitting Carnegie Hall was on stage, a
hint of the show to come. A classy introduction from Jerry Mandel,
wearing a black formal dinner suit and a white tie fashioned in a
Windsor knot, began the festivities, starring jazz singer Steve
Tyrell.
Opening his show with Christmas songs, backed by an incomparable
orchestra, Tyrell moved from holiday favorites to American standards,
and then closed with more holiday music and a tribute to the late Ray
Charles. Tyrell came on the scene several years ago as a performer
after a nearly 40-year career behind the scenes in the music
business. He is a man living his dream.
As the Tyrell concert concluded, in Candlelight Concert tradition,
the curtain was raised revealing the Segerstrom Stage, dressed for
dinner. Art Deco and his orchestra played as the crowd ascended from
their concert seats to a magical world created by designer Pat
Rypinski in concert with Hollywood art director Jim Mees and local
floral designer Andrew Gromek. It was an avant-garde vision of a
night on the town. Whimsical inverted umbrellas, illuminated in red
and white, hung from rafters dangling with stars. The floral
centerpieces were inspired, artistic, very original. Orchids
blossomed in hand-blown glass vessels perched on beaded branches
reaching for the moon. Exquisite linens with a handmade look provided
by the talented young Allyson Sonenshine graced the tables set with
square, amber glass dinner service and gold and black woven metal
flatware with an Asian influence. It could have been a night in
Saigon, Hong Kong, New York or Costa Mesa.
Spotted table-hopping were Janis Agopian, Terry Goldfarb-Lee, Pat
and Dick Allen, Ginger and Tony Allen, Orva Schramm, Nancy and Jim
Baldwin, R.J. and Gloria Brandes, Marsha and Darrel Anderson, Diana
Martin, Pat Poss, Kristi and Doug DeCinces, Lois Eisenberg, Don and
Dorothy Kennedy, Carole and Robert Follman, Sherry and Parker
Kennedy, Kimberly and Fletcher Jones Jr., Rebecca and Carl McLarand,
Paul and Lily Merage, Richard and Givlia Merage and Brad and Nicole
Morrice. A very fine five-course dinner was served by the Four
Seasons, Newport Beach, under the supervision of chef Michele Pieton
and hotel general manager Thomas Guertner. The food began with a
first course of Dungeness crab cocktail with avocado, followed by a
salad of arugula in pomegranate vinaigrette and an entree of roasted
veal tenderloin. It was only surpassed by the impeccable service. An
assortment of cheese comprised course four, ending with a fifth
course dessert of flourless, bittersweet chocolate almond cake. Wines
flowed, the crowd danced until early dawn, and another incredible
fundraiser for the center was entered into local history.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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