Smoking lamp lit for college grants night
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B.W. COOK
In an age of sweatshirts and flip flops, some 200 men turned out
Friday evening for Henry Schielein’s 10th annual smoker and lobster
clambake on the beach at the Balboa Bay Club and Resort wearing white
slacks and nautical blue blazers.
The procession of well-dressed gentlemen was a flashback to an
earlier time, when good manners and good grooming were expected in
society. Dress standards set the tone of the event, and people
behaved or at least attempted to behave in accordance with
established standards. It all sounds superficial, out of touch, even
shallow by today’s rules of behavior. Yet somehow dressing the part
still dictates how the part is played.
For Schielein, trained in the old school of European hospitality,
the dress code of his smoker was in fact an element of the overall
production that elevated the evening to charitable heights. By
setting a tone, a higher standard, Schielein and staff raised an
impressive $25,000 from the evening on the beach to benefit the Bay
Club’s 1221 Scholarship Fund.
Started 10 years ago, the fund awards annual grants to
Newport-Mesa graduating seniors bound for college. The students are
judged by a panel of local educators, business people and civic
leaders. More than $250,000 has been awarded to deserving youth from
diverse backgrounds and with goals as broad as the scope of human
endeavor.
Arriving at the Balboa Bay Club for pre-sunset cocktails, the
entourage of natty gents joined forces on the bayfront lawn sampling
Chef Josef Lagader’s fresh oysters and beef tartar, accompanied by
Champagne Pommery or shots of Gran Centario Tequila -- or perhaps a
Skyy Vodka Martini made to order, shaken not stirred, of course.
The pre-dinner conversation was personal. What do men discuss when
they gather without their women? They discuss their women. They talk
about their wives and their children, and then they talk about sports
and finances and jobs. Politics made the rounds of cocktail
conversation as well. This is, after all, a very contentious election
year. Opinions are strong. Expletives are used frequently as
discussions shift from candidate to policy and back to candidate. It
all made for one very lively 10th anniversary for Schielein and the
BBC smoker.
Orchestrated with care, round tables were arranged on the lawn
adjacent to lavishly displayed presentations of cigars and libations.
Even a famous cigar roller from the Dominican Republic, Louis Lopez,
arrived to show off his skill to leaf lovers in the crowd. Lopez was
invited by Schielein and friend Nestor Miranda of the Miami Cigar Co.
to impress the gathering.
And he did. The list of cigars offered to guests ran the entire
gamut, from Ashton Monarch to Bering Presidente, El Rico Habano, Hoyo
de Monterrey Excalibur Prensado, Bahia Gold and A. Fuente Hemingway
-- just a few of more than two dozen offerings.
Table seating was orchestrated as carefully as cigar placement.
Local civic leaders, including Tom Wilson (winner of the door prize,
a night in the BBC’s $3,500 presidential suite), joined special
guests, including Seamus McManus, Marty Rakowitz, Wally Hickel, Paul
Zest, Jim Pierog, Bert Cutino, Mark Robinson, Hans Maissen and
renowned artist Michael Bryan, generous donor of his art for the
auction, which helped bring in the sizable donations for the
scholarship fund.
Also in the crowd were debonair father and son teams Gene and
Richard Moriarty, Lynn and Ron Jackson and Bob, Jim and Dave Robins.
Publisher Chris Schulz was on hand, joining Rick Reiff, Scott Brown
and John Barganski. Mercedes mogul Kirk Dawson shared a story or two
with new BBC Gov. John Wortmann and international traveler Paul
Baldwin. Insurance exec Bob Waltos was in the crowd, as was attorney
Chris Thomas and soft drink king Ira (Dr. Pepper) Rosenstein of Lido
Isle.
Dinner began with the service of a tower of rock crab and
artichokes followed by chilled avocado soup. Seaweed steamed Maine
lobster, mesquite grilled filet mignon and garlic wine-steamed little
neck clams were served with a 2000 Treana Red wine from Central
Coast. Sharing a dessert of New York cheesecake covered with
strawberries Romanoff creme chantilly were guests Tykye and Dean
Camaras, Ron Gold, Walt Havekorst, Dave Schmitt, JC Converse, Dan
Marcheano, Mike Manclark, John Houten, Chris MacDonald and Mark
Alexander. The Hackers -- Wes, Dean and Doug -- were sampling cigars
as was politician and writer Peter Buffa of Costa Mesa.
Major auction donors included The Four Seasons, The Arches
Restaurant, Hotel Captain Cook, Campton Place Hotel, Remy Martin,
Ritz Carlton, Calistoga Ranch and Pelican Hill Golf Resort, to name
only a few.
In an age where men all in blue blazers, and gentlemen’s smokers,
are less than politically correct, Schielein’s 10th annual event was
a “blast of the past” celebrated in grand style on the California
Riviera. In the end, two very good things happened. First, lots of
money was raised to help deserving youth. Second, all the smoke blew
away over the bay.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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