Dinner under the stars ...

Dessert and dancing in the Milstein Hall of Ocean Life

Tuesday night, the American Museum of Natural History held its annual Winter Dance. The Winter Dance Celebrates Gold is was the theme, inspired by the museum’s current spectacular and special exhibition which is on view until August 19th.

The Winter Dance is one of the museum’s most popular junior events. Black tie, more than 700 young and sophisticated New Yorkers attended at least part of the festivities.  It began with cocktails and dinner for 200. Followed by dessert and dancing and more guests in the Milstein Hall of Ocean Life.

Amanda Hearst, Tinsley Mortimer, Zani Gugelmann, Claire Bernard, Jacqueline Sackler, and and Ivanka Trump

Ben Stiller was Honorary Chairman. Chairs were Claire Bernard, Zani Gugelmann, Amanda Hearst, Tinsley Mortimer, Jacqueline Sackler and Ivanka Trump. In attendance: Lily Atherton, Fabian Basabe and Martina Borgomanero Basabe, Fabiola Beracasa, BJ and Jon Blum, Olivia Chantecaille, Nina Garcia Conrod, Jennifer Creel, Lauren Davis, Gustav Demarchelier, Cecilia de Sola, Shoshanna Gruss, Gillian Hearst-Shaw, Jamie Johnson, Dhani Jones, Genevieve Jones, Dayssi Olarte de Kanavos, Ali Kaye, Alex Kramer, Harrison LeFrak, Eva Lorenzotti, Meredith Melling Burke, Moby, Annelise Peterson, Emilia Fanjul Pfeifler, Laura Poretzky, Theodore Roosevelt V, Lord and Lady James Russell, Eugenia Silva, Lucy Sykes and Euan Rellie, Eric Villency, Alex von Furstenberg, Luke Weil, Jacquetta Wheeler, Ali Wise, Eleanor Ylvisaker, Evan Yurman, and more.


Dayssi Olarte de Kanavos

Dana-Wallach-Jones and Jill Kargman

Kimberly and Eric Villency

Felipa Hamilton

Olivia Palermo and Olivia Chantecaille

Zani Gugelmann, Nicola Braytenbach, and Fabiola Beracasa

Tinsley Mortimer and Amanda Hearst

Derek Blasberg and Margherita Missoni

Kathryn and Gentry Beach

Zach Pomerantz and friend

Jacquetta Wheeler, Fabiola Beracasa, and Margherita Missoni

Donald Trump Jr. and Vanessa Trump

Arden Wohl and friend

BJ Blum

Cynthia Rowley

Moby

Rachel Roy

Carlos Miele and Alex Kramer

Zani Gugelmann and Eleanor Ylvisaker

Kathryn Beach and Ivanka Trump

Bam Stahl and friend

Dinner in the Grand Gallery

Late 1960s: Edie Sedgwick was all over the pages of WWD in those days. And Andy Warhol’s magazine Interview. Wild child, bleached blonde hair, frenzied-face, she was to these naifs who knew only that it was a party scene for the coolest, the hot one. She was a desperate debutante on a mission: rebellion.

One of the kids in clubland (which was something new on the scene too).

Sienna Miller as Edie

Up until then discos were for the chic and fashionable. Discotheques, they were called. The Stork Club had finally gone out of business. El Morocco too. On came Arthur, L’Interdit, Shepheards, Ondine, Regines, Il Mio, L’Oursin (in Southampton), Mitty’s General Store (in Bridgehampton) where the younger set went. There was Steve Paul’s Scene farther west (in the West 40s), and Il Jardin where it got down just a little. New Yorkers first saw boys dancing together (they were known as bisexual). Of course, they weren’t, but the general public didn’t know. People went to look. They had no idea. It was the kids who went and drank all night. Pills – few knew much if anything about these things, quaint as that sounds. Andy Warhol was far-out. An artist. Gritty. Downtown when downtown was gritty, when they were first calling the desolate area south of Houston Street, SoHo.

Edie Sedgwick, it turns out, knew about all this.  The rest of us only knew what we could see in a photograph: Edie looked like a lost lamb, to those who sympathized. A pipped-up, hipped-up, fly-by-night floozie to those who didn’t. From a very good New England family; Brahmins they.  This was part of the package that resonated with the public – the family background. WASPs making their last stand.  The public in general who followed the Warhold Factory kids had really no idea of what they were up to except what they occasionally read. Drugs were talked about and used but not in a way that made them mainstream and living room conversation. Few knew they were watching a disaster in the making, an accident waiting to happen.

All that seems naïve in retrospect, even incredible all these years later. It was so obvious. Edie Sedgwick turned out to be a forerunner of a whole generation out of which sprang the world of mass rehab, out of which sprung a sophisticated, labyrhinthian world drug and alcohol use. Which is now so mainstream that much of it is now familiar even to pre-teeners, even with experience.

And so the film Factory Girl, a testimony of that age has a special appeal for New Yorkers, especially the 21st century historical  peers of that crowd.  Where it seems to have all started on a mass basis. Edie is emblematic and historical in conception and intent to many of us who remember those days and that young woman in the Warhol entourage.

The Cinema Society and Calvin Klein hosted its screening here in New York for a clamoring crowd of movie stars, rockers, supermodels and the just plain fabulous. Flocking to see it. 

The film’s stars Sienna Miller, Guy Pearce and Jimmy Fallon were all on hand, along with director George Hickenlooper, for the supper at the Gramercy Park Hotel, following the SRO screening at the Tribeca Grand Hotel.

The two stars got raves from their peers for their  dazzling portrayals of the drug-drenched party girl and the art world’s budding icon. Cinema Society Founder Andrew Saffir welcomed a crowd that would have charmed Mr. Warhol himself: Sharon Stone, Josh Lucas, Rob Thomas, Moby, Steve Buscemi, Dean Winters, Griffin Dunne, Rufus Wainwright, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Marley Shelton, Carson Kressley, Beth Ostrosky, Francisco Costa, Italo Zucchelli, supermodels May Andersen, Gemma Ward & Julia Stegner, Jacquetta Wheeler and Alexi Lubomirski, Milla Jovovich, Frederique Van Der Wal, B-52’s Fred Schneider, Dominick Dunne, Sante D’Orazio, Cari Modine, Jennifer Creel, Renee Rockefeller, Rufus Albemarle, Marina Rust, Meredith Melling-Burke, William Norwich, Sally Singer, Plum Sykes, Alexis Bryan, Debbie Bancroft, Dayssi Olarte de Kanovas, Zani Gugelmann, Allison Sarofim, Euan Rellie, Daniel Benedict, Marjorie Gubelmann Raein, Vanessa von Bismarck, Ann Dexter-Jones, Helen and Tim Schifter, Carol McFadden, Carlos Mota, Amanda and Chris Brooks, Ferebee Bishop, Johannes Huebl, Peter Davis, Jackie Astier, Calvin Klein’s Malcolm Carfrae, and the film’s Meredith Ostrom and Armin Amiri.



Sienna Miller

Josh Lucas

Armin Amiri

Beth Ostrosky

Jimmy Fallon and Sienna Miller

Guy Pearce

Steve Buscemi and Jamie-Lynn Siegler

Italo Zucchelli

Gemma Ward

Rufus Wainwright

Andrew Saffir, Sharon Stone, and Sante D'Orazio

Andrew Saffir, Malcolm Carfrae, and Daniel Benedict

Amanda Brooks

Carson Kressley

Cari Modine

Ann Dexter-Jones and Francisco Costa

Debbie Bancroft and Patricia Duff

Allison Sarofim and Carlos Mota

Ferebee Bishop and Alexis Bryan

Fred Schneider

Julia Stegner

Jacquetta Wheeler and Alexi Lubomirski

Dominick Dunne

Dean Winters

Frederique van der Wal

Guy Pearce and Sienna Miller

Marjorie Gubelmann Raein

Moby

Lauryn Flynn and Marley Shelton

Meredith Ostrom and George Hickenlooper (Director)

Milla Jovovich

Marisol and Rob Thomas

Plum Sykes

Sessa von Richthofen and Richard Johnson

Steve Buscemi and Griffin Dunne

Jimmy Fallon

May Andersen

Tim Schifter and Helen Lee Schifter

Zani Gugelmann

The Lycee Francais de New York held its annual Gala and honored Michel David-Weill, former Chairman of Lazard Freres and Company LLC. Lindsay Owen-Jones, Chairman of L’Oreal presented M. David-Weill with the Charles de Ferry de Fontnouvelle Award for distinguished service to the French-American community, and to the development of French-American relationships and exchanges across America.

The 2007 Gala, The Night of the Dragon, celebrated the Lycee’s introduction of the Mandarin program. They raised more than $1.4 million, a $300,000 increase over the previous year’s gala. Simon de Pury from Phillips and de Pury ignited another exciting scholarship auction and exceeded all expectations, bringing $210,000 dedicated to the Lycee’s 2007-2008 scholarship fund.

Alexandra Pianka

Eric Ripert, Ezra Zilkha, and Daniel Boulud

Diane Fisher, Jennifer Conlon, and John Mailer

Dale and Marzia Precoda

Ambassador Jean-David Levitte

Colette and David Nahmad

Gigi Gray

Michel David-Weill

Eric Ripert and Daniel Boulud

Cesaltine Gregorio and Consul General Francois Delattre and friends

Alison Levasseur

Robert and Mathilde Agostinelli

Robert Couturier and Ulla Bartsich-Parker

Miriam Suarez, Frederique Chesnais, and Angela Serpa

Yves Theze, Elsa Berry, and Michel David-Weill

Heather and Nicolas Vandenberghe

Michel David-Weill wih Lindsay and Cristina Owen-Jones

Irina Dvorovenko and Maxim Beloserkovsky

Daniel Boulud, Perla Gray, and Simon de Pury

and Simon


Photographs by ©R. Micken & C. Chesek (AMNH); Patrick McMullan (Cinema Society)




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© 2006 David Patrick Columbia & Jeffrey Hirsch/NewYorkSocialDiary.com