A fabulous night out
OUR LAGUNA
Contrary to speculation, Montage top brass claim they did not chum
the waters off the resort to lure dolphins and gray whales to the
resort’s opening night festivities.
That’s not to say they wouldn’t have, if they had thought of it.
They seem to have thought of everything else to make the gala opening
spectacular. The California bungalow-inspired architecture of the
resort might be low-keyed compared to the St. Regis or the Ritz down
the road, but the reception Feb. 21 and the service were opulent.
“This is the most over-the-top event I have ever attended -- and I
have attended a lot,” Arts Commissioner Pat Kollenda said. “It is the
absolutely the most gorgeous, elegant reception. And the staff is
beautifully trained.”
Without the help of a bartender named Wayne in the Studio
restaurant, this column might not have been written. Imagine a
reporter dumb enough to forget to put pens in her evening bag? Wayne
graciously volunteered the use of his pen -- which he didn’t see
again for almost five hours.
There was plenty to write about.
Four hundred to 500 people attended the invitation-only event.
They were treated to tours of the hotel, including the kitchen at the
Studio, one of the resort’s four dining facilities.
Restaurant supervisor John Vance proudly showed off the marble
counters, copper pots and imported French stove.
“It took six months to get the stove,” he said.
Executive chef John Pflueger grew up in Laguna Beach, said Bill
Blackburn, who went to school with Pflueger’s father. Former Mayor
Kathleen Blackburn was quite taken with the intimate private dinning
room adjacent to the kitchen.
“This is where I want to have my birthday party,” she said.
Terry Smith and former Councilman Wayne Peterson sampled the food
before touring the kitchen. Planning Commissioner Anne Johnson,
seated with husband, Marv, school board member K Turner and her
partner, Bivens Hunt, at a window table, had “a divine” chocolate
mousse for her starter.
“We are to the manner born,” Johnson said.
Others began the evening with oysters. Outdoor grills lured many
of the guests to the swimming pool area, where slabs of meat 4 inches
thick and big enough to a feed a family of four for a couple of days
were being seared.
“What’s that?” Mayor Toni Iseman asked.
“Appetizers,” the griller replied. Well, maybe after the 24-ounce
New York strip steaks were sliced.
Did we mention the chocolate fountain?
Gallons of Beluga caviar were served in the hotel lobby. Becky
Jones said she considers caviar a spice. However, there are those of
us who consider it an entree, and we did our best to see that none
went to waste.
Champagne, still wines and mixed drinks were abundant.
Early arrivals at the reception included Frank Ricchiazzi and
Borden Moller, and Charlie and Ann Quilter.
“We were the last residents [in a mobile home] at Treasure
Island,” Patriots Day Committee President Quilter said. “It was the
best two years of our lives.”
Ann Quilter ran the information center during the referendum
campaign for voter approval of the project, and the Quilters moved
onto the property after they lost their Laguna Canyon home in a
landslide.
“It was very healing place for us after our catastrophe,” Quilter
said. “I would invited all the people who had concerns about the
project to simply take a walk on the bluff top and see the magic.”
Greg Vail, who chaired the joint Planning Commission. Design
Review Board meetings which hammered out solutions to the myriad
disparate opinions for the project, was speechless when he and his
wife, Lynn, first arrived at the reception.
“Don’t expect any good quotes from me,” said Vail, an ardent
supporter of the project. “I am in a happy daze.”
Design Review Board member Eve Plum described the hotel as
“comfortable elegance.”
Nicholas Kinsman, son of Michael and Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman,
would have been right at home.
This story was told by Nicholas’ father at the reception: When
Nicholas and the Kinsman’s older son, Josh, were returning home from
a trip to the Midwest, the 8-year old persuaded his father to stay at
a hotel in Elko, Nev., on which there was a sign advertising an
indoor pool.
“Do you really have an indoor pool?” Nicholas asked the desk
clerk.
In the patronizing manner some adults assume when talking to
children, the clerk answered, “Oh yes, little boy. I bet you have
never seen an indoor pool, little boy.”
“Well, not since the Ritz in Paris,” Nicholas said.
Oh.
“We wanted first class and we got so much better than that,”
Councilman Steven Dicterow said.
Cindy Prewitt and Joe Byrne of Laguna Live! checked out the site
as a possible venue for musical performances such as the Capistrano
Symphony concerts at a Dana Point hotel.
They had plenty of examples. Singer/pianist Lisa Lofthouse
performed in the lobby -- she’ll be there from 7 to 11 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays and until midnight Thursdays through Saturdays. Small
combos and individual musicians were positioned throughout the
grounds during the party. A fanfare of trumpets greeted each arrival.
Guests included Jack Cuneo, formerly of Merrill Lynch, a real
estate trust of which previously owned the property.
“This is a good use for the land, for visitors to California and
for the people of Laguna Beach,” Cuneo said. “It is sensitive. It’s
creative. It’s a beautiful property, done with a lot of class.”
Cuneo brought Athens Group into the project.
“This is a special night for me and my family,” said Athens Group
President Kim Richards, at a pool side ceremony. “It is the
culmination of seven years of toiling in the fields of politics,
design and development. Tonight I keep a promise to myself five years
ago.
“I stood out there on that point,” he said gesturing behind him,
“and promised that if this night ever came -- and it was a big if --
that I would thank all of the people who got us here.”
Richards acknowledged the leadership of the city, including Mayor
Iseman, Mayor Pro Tem Kinsman, council members Wayne Baglin, Dicterow
and Elizabeth Pearson, former council members Peterson, Blackburn and
Paul Freeman -- “Thanks, buddy,” Richards said. He also thanked City
Manager Ken Frank, Community Development Department Assistant
Director John Montgomery, members of the Planning Commission and
Design Review Board, the resort design team, Athens Group partners
and Montage operators.
“We got it done on time and on budget,” Richards said.
Fireworks concluded the official festivities.
“Everything has come together,” said Chris Loidolt, who worked
early on Athens Group and now is employed by Montage.
The resort plans include condominiums and private homes as well as
the hotel, with its a spa, exercise room and beauty salon; a
children’s activity center, called the Paint Box; a grand ballroom to
accommodate 300, a gallery ballroom for smaller groups and additional
meeting space; lawns, gardens and the public Treasure Island Park.
An extensive collection of Plein Air art is displayed throughout
the hotel and resort bungalows are named for pioneering Laguna
artists Cuprien, Mannheim, Payne and Wendt. Public art dots the
landscape.
“It will take a while until we see if the resort develops a
personality of its own,” Planning Commissioner Norm Grossman said.
“That’s key.”
Other guests were Linda and Bob Dietrich, Boys and Girls Club
Director Kim Maxwell, Festival of Arts Marketing Director Sharbie
Higuchi, Pageant of the Masters Director Diane Challis Davy, Carole
and Gary Alstot, Arts Commissioner Joan Corman Block, No Square
Theatre founding artistic director Bree Burgess Rosen, Chamber of
Commerce Executive Director Anne Morris and board President Ken
Delino, Steve Miller, and Martha Lydick and her son Chip, who took a
professional interest in the hotel -- he has a degree from the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas in hotel and restaurant management.
Also David and Diane Connell, former Lagunans Jack and Margy
Hefti, Brandy’s Friends founder Cheryl Post, Planning Commissioners
Bob Chapman and Kimberly Stuart, Ann McDonald, John Keith and his
wife, Lindsay Tognetti, architect Morris Skendarian, City Treasurer
Laura Parisi, Dora Wexell, former Arts Commissioner Susie Chauvel,
Design Review Board member Ilse Lenchow, Diana Greenwood and John
Mansour, who had a two-fold interest in the resort, as partner in
Athens Group and a Laguna Beach resident.
* 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.
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