The Crowd
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B.W. Cook
More than 500 guests boarded the yacht Don Juan (not all at once,
thankfully) in the Newport Harbor to share a sunset cocktail, the music
of Reunion, formerly the Lettermen, and plenty of memories Thursday
evening.
Actually, the evening began with an open house reception on the Don
Juan, followed by a party at the Balboa Pavilion for the entire crowd.
The Balboa Performing Arts Foundation -- represented by its support wing
known as the Divas, the organization set to restore the old Balboa
Theater -- produced an end-of-summer party to bring back some of the
glory days of the past on the peninsula.
Today’s Lettermen, Jim Pike, Bob Engermann and Ric de Azevedo created
plenty of nostalgia with their performance of songs such as “Hurt So
Bad,” “I Only Have Eyes For You” and “Shangri-La.” Engermann and Pike, as
original members of the trio recording under the Capitol Record label,
received five Grammy nominations and produced 11 gold records, 46 hit
albums, 20 hit singles, with a worldwide sales volume of more than $100
million.
De Azevedo is a also a member of the King Family, one of the popular
groups on television and stage during the 1960s. Despite the emergence
and development of rock, both the King Family and the Lettermen represent
the world of the romantic ballad. There was plenty of swooning at the
Pavilion to prove that the romantic ballad is alive and well. Even
better, more than $25,000 was raised to keep both the music, drama, and
performance art alive in Newport when the Balboa Theater is rebuilt and
reborn.
Orange County Sheriff Mike Corona will be the guest of honor at the
seventh annual La Dolce Vita to benefit the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
Antonio Cagnollo, owner of Antonello at South Coast Plaza Village, will
host the Sept. 26 dinner.
“Sheriff Corona has established himself as one of law enforcement’s
most powerful leaders in the state of California,” Cagnollo said. “His
hard work and dedication to children everywhere makes him an even
stronger leader.”
The evening, one of the more festive late-summer social events in the
county, is held on the Antonello patio under a canopy of lighted trees.
Featuring live music for dancing, an incredible dinner prepared and
served under the direction of Chef Franco Barone, and both live and
silent auctions benefiting Cystic Fibrosis, La Dolce Vita is a slice of
the good life on the Orange Coast.
Organizers have secured a trip to Paris and celebrity items provided
by Hollywood actor Lou Diamond Phillips, a supporter of the Cystic
Fibrosis cause, the most fatal genetic disorder striking children in the
United States. Call (714) 938-1393 to help find the cure. Tickets are
$135.
The incomparable duo Margaret Burke and Marilyn Hudson, producer of
the popular Round Table West book club, are busy preparing their fall
schedule in Newport Beach.
The first luncheon of the season premieres Sept. 23 at The Balboa Bay
Club. Authors set to address the crowd include the best selling Richard
Paul Evans (“The Christmas Box”) with his latest book “The Dance” from
Simon and Schuster.
Also at the podium will be actress and writer Diana Douglas Darrid,
the first wife of Kirk Douglas and the mother of Michael and Joel
Douglas. She has written a book titled “In The Wings” as a very personal
memoir of her life, “so that my grandchildren can enjoy their
grandmother’s heritage,” Darrid said.
Janet Fitch, author of the acclaimed “White Oleander,” the story of a
young girl’s journey through a line of foster homes and families
following the imprisonment of her adored mother for the murder of her
lover, is also on the impressive roster.
To join the Round Table West luncheon forum, call (323) 256-7977 to
reserve your spot.
* B.W. COOK’S column appears every Thursday and Saturday.
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