Hatcher glams up Pageant of the Masters
The Festival of Arts pulled a real coup when TV star Teri Hatcher
hosted the 7th annual Pageant of the Masters gala fundraiser
Saturday.
Hatcher is having a celebrity’s dream year. She won a Golden Globe
Award and an Emmy nomination for her role in the ABC hit series
“Desperate Housewives,” and she has been on the covers of such
magazines as Vanity Fair and Time.
Saturday was not Hatcher’s debut at the pageant. Recently, she and
daughter Emerson Rose joined the cast for one performance.
Hatcher first attended the pageant last year with her daughter as
the guests of her parents. Hatcher said she couldn’t visualize what
the show would be like.
“I kept thinking, okay, people dress up as the painting, but I
couldn’t really picture it -- no pun intended,” Hatcher said.
Hatcher’s daughter was so taken with the show, she decided she
wanted to be a cast member, promising that she wouldn’t move a muscle
-- cast members must remain as stiff as statues for about 90 minutes.
The media was all over Hatcher’s guest shot. And they came back
again Saturday to record her animated role as host.
“She was a doll to work with,” said marketing and public relations
director Sharbie Higuchi. Younger looking than she appears as
housewife Susan Mayer, Hatcher was joined by 400 pageant supporters
at the pre-show dinner at Tivoli Terrace.
“The gala is the festival’s only fundraiser,” said festival
membership and events director Susan Davis. “It gets about the same
attendance as the artists’ opening night [the gateway to the season].
It takes more effort, but it’s a great party.”
The gala was sold out.
“We are hot -- and the weather is too,” Davis said.
Hatcher was not the only celebrity at the gala. The guest list
included Mark Moses (Paul Young) and Steven Culp (Rex Van De Camp)
from the “Housewives” cast and Kathy Joosten, who has also has
appeared on the show; Dennis Hopper, a cult star from his performance
in the 1969 classic, “Easy Rider,” who developed into an actor of
stature; Oscar and eight-time Emmy winner Cloris Leachman and Bryan
Cranston from “Malcolm in the Middle” and Brian Krause, who plays Leo
on “Charmed;” “Days of Our Lives” stars Peter Reckell and Lauren
Koslow, named by Soap Opera Weekly as “One of the 50 Most Beautiful
People on Television;” Ronn Moss, who plays Ridge Forrester on “The
Bold and the Beautiful;” Emmy-nominated Gail O’Grady; Charles
Shaughnessy, who starred on “The Nanny;” Richard Steinmetz, currently
seen in “Passions;” Victor Williams from the “The King of Queens;”
and Pam Dawber, who starred in the delightful “Mork and Mindy.”
“You haven’t changed,” gasped festival exhibitor Lu Campbell, who
was assigned to the same table with Dawber and her longtime friend
(their kids met in preschool) Kim Vamos and Campbell’s husband, John,
a member of the separate Festival of Arts Foundation Board of
Directors.
Besides being charming and talented, Dawber has significant ties
to Laguna. She is married to TV and motion picture star Mark Harmon.
His sister was married to Ricky Nelson and lived here with him in the
Lagunita neighborhood where Ozzie and Harriet Nelson had their home
and raised Ricky and his older brother, David.
“A Passion for Art” is the theme chosen for the 2006 show by
director Dee Dee Challis Davy.
“It’s going to be a very romantic show,” Challis Davy said. “I’ve
got 90 or so researchers looking at French and Italian art. There
will probably be some Van Gogh in the show -- he was certainly
passionate about art.”
Researchers are among the volunteers who make the pageant happen
and deserve the thanks voiced by festival President Anita Mangels in
pre-dinner remarks.
Mangels also thanked sponsors Montage Resort & Spa, Mercedes Benz
of Southern California, UBS, Kost 103 FM, Kendall-Jackson, The
Ritz-Carlton-Laguna Niguel, and Adelphia -- and the festival artists
who donated works to the silent auction.
Scriptwriter Dan Duling and Challis Davy were honored for their
work with the pageant and presented with crystal tabletop sculptures
designed especially for them by festival artist Jude Taylor Darlin.
Mangels also presented them with pens donated by Mont Blanc, a
sponsor of numerous off-site festival events.
The gala grossed an estimated $290,000 for the Festival of Arts
Building Fund.
John Campbell said the foundation, which distributes scholarships
and funds to arts organizations, artists and students, would like a
piece of the action.
“We’d like all of it, but certainly a portion,” Campbell said.
The mission of the festival is to promote local arts and artists,
he said, and that is what the foundation does.
Guests at the gala included Katrina and Councilman Steven
Dicterow, Jim and arts commissioner Pat Kollenda, city arts manager
Sian Poeschl, gallery owner Diane DeBilzan, Faye and planning
commissioner Bob Chapman, Kathy and festival music director and
conductor Richard Henn, Becky and Joie Jones, Mary Young and Ernie
and Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider and Tom Davy, 17, who escorted his mother, Challis Davy.
Yesterday was the last day of the festival’s 2005 season.
Ballots for new board members will be mailed Sept. 27. Votes are
due back by 4:30 p.m. Nov. 4. The candidates are festival volunteer
John Hoover, festival artist Linda Potichke and Realtors Gayle Waite
and Wayne Baglin, a former city councilman. Three of them will join
Mangels, Bob Henry, Carolyn Reynolds, Fredric Sattler, Ann Webster
and David Young on the board.
Veteran board members Dianne Reardon, Kathleen Blackburn and Bob
Dietrich, whose terms are up, declined to run again.
The annual members-only meeting will be held Nov. 9, when the new
board members will be announced.
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