Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1951 — Page 35
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ll The Indianapolis Times SOCIETY EE IVER
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1951
‘Premiere’ At The Indianapolis Country Club
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FRANKIE SINGS—Dr. William Keller and (left to right) Mesdames E. Ralph Pursell, A. L. Perkins, J. O. Birr, E. |. Kabel, Ben Weaver and W. D. Vogel Jr.
THE “LOUISE” NUMBER—Mrs. Kenneth V. Christena and (left to right) Eugene Hibbs, Ben ~
Weaver, Mr. Christena and E. Ralph Pursell.
By JEAN TALBERT HE COUNTRY CLUB of Indianapolis will give a “premiere” two nights in a row this week. Bowing to public demand, the club will open its musical revue, “Hollywood Premiere,” on Friday instead of Saturday. The “run” will be Nov. 16 and 17, therefore, with dinner being served before Friday's performance and a buffet supper after the Saturday night show. , Club members who will star include Mrs. William M. Kendrick as Broadway Hillbilly Dorothy Shay; Mrs. William Schroeder, Baby Rose-Marie; J. O. Birr, Milton Berle; Dr. William Keller, Frank Sinatra, singing “The Girl That I Marry” with Mesdames E. Ralph Pursell, A. L. Perkins, Birr, E. I. Kabel, Ben Weaver, W. D. Vogel Jr. and Bob Perine. Mrs. Kenneth V. Christena, “Louise,” will be escorted by Messrs. Eugene Hibbs, Weaver, Christena, Pursell, Birr, Perine and W. J. McLane. Paul Whiteman’s Rhythm Boys are to be Mr. Hibbs, Don Fobes and Douglas Muir.
HELEN MORGAN—A la Mrs, Kevin D.
Brosnan, accompanied by Mrs. Louise Sparks.
DOROTHY SHAY—Mrs. William M. Kendrick gets laughs in the role.
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Mrs. Kevin Brosnan will impersonate Helen Morgan.
Fifteen Local Girls to Make Debut
IFTEEN local debutantes will make their formal entrance bow to Indianapolis Society Dec. 22. The debutantes Cotillion will be one of the highlights of the evening at the Dramatic Club's Christmas Ball that night in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. It is then the young women, along with four of their friends who formerly lived here, but have moved away, will be introduced formally into the town's fashionable whirl. In charge of the event is Mrs. Lyman S. Ayres, vice president of the Dramatic Club. On her committee are Mesdames Thomas Mahaffey, Robert Fortune and Blaine Miller Jr. Among the young ladies who will thrill to their finest hour that evening will be: Misses Jane Collett, Katharine Daniels, Sally Kackley, Jean Hargitt, Ethel Madden, Susan Huey, Peggy Stout, Barbara Wemmer, Katherine Woollen, Susan Atkins, Anne Mahaffey, J ane Nicholson, Susan Cadick, Carol Ziegler and Lucy Landers. Out-of-town socialites who will receive invitations are Miss Martha Shea, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Shea, Old Greenwich, Conn.
anmversary.
other booths.
Times Photos | By John R.Spicklemire r
The Tin Man Could Have Made a Killing
By KATY ATKINS bas T WAS too bad that the Christmas.bazaar at St. Paul's
Church did not come the day before, instead of the day after, now led bv one the Julian Bobbs' party in celebration of their tenth wedding couple with the
Miss Lydia Boyd, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip L. Boyd, Riverside, Cal. Miss Linda Denny, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Denny, Pasadena, Cal. Miss Allen Joss, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Joss, Washington, D. C. The cotillion is one of the oldest and most accepted social events in the world. : By tradition it started in France as a peasant affair, the routine being not unlike the quadrille. Ideal for the young ladies who are coming out, it features many changes of partners. Everyone gets to meet everyone. Once it was simply a ballroom dance for couples, but since it made its own debut about 1800 the cotillion become more complicated and is
others following
Guests were told to bring tin cups and Cu usuallys plates for which they shopped madly all over § X With the men town. It was the tenth anniversary of St. Ann's Guild, too, so one booth offered nothing but tinware. Shiny cups hung from the fram- | Nn ing silver and red arch and every variety of Sh well executed mold, plate, pan and gadget was set out in Fr gleaming array. Mary Gronendyke was a stirring strains of doing a brisk business as were the women of Katy Atking
dressed formally and the ladies in flowing gowns, the
+ dances done to the
the . cotillion - waltz are a sight to be-
Snow that day and that Wednesday and Thursday for hold. the Country Store bazaar, sponsored by the women of the Music for tus Second Presbyterian Church and that of St. Hilda's Guild at Christ Church, put people in the mood for Christmas shopping.
(Continued on Page 36—Column 7)
event will be furnished by Johnny Long's orchestra.
Art Design By J. Hugh O'Donnell
THE RHYTHM BOYS—Eugene Hibbs,
Don Fobes and Douglas Muir,
"ROSE-MARIE AND MILTON BERLE —Mrs. William Schroeder and J. O. Birr.
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