Deco Dance

Society’s young and restless get dressed to kill at a gala of their own.

Nelson Mui

It began as a social experiment: Could San Francisco support an exclusive, New York-style black-tie charity event catering to a carefully vetted thirtysomething set? Would there be enough people, and if there were, would they show up and would it be cool?

Judging from the Legion of Honor's inaugural Midwinter Gala—tied to the opening of the Art Deco show at the museum—the answer is yes. Three hundred and forty guests, almost all under 45, good-looking, and drawn from the city's socially prominent or affluent (or both) families, showed up for the fete, which, according to ringleader Trevor Traina, was modeled partly after the Museum of the City of New York's gala.

"Many people don't realize how many interesting, attractive, and stylish people we have here in San Francisco, and I think we've shown that tonight," Traina told the Socialist.

Well, sometimes being discerning (cynics call it a euphemism for shallow) helps. While it wasn't exactly on the level of a New York gala—the ambition, a vanity fair of Oscar, Carolina, Dior, Valentino—most in attendance agreed it was a good start. Many guests made serious efforts to get decked out, if not in Deco as the invitation suggested, at least in swank attire, making the event among the most fashionable by local standards. There were the classicists: Vanessa Getty came in a high-voltage shimmering Dior gown and diamond Deco earrings, Victoria Traina in a Narciso Rodriguez gown with a white fur stole, and Tamara Winn in Oscar de la Renta, and San Francisco's own style director, Kathryn Retzer, wore a rust-colored Carolina Herrera gown with an undulating train. They were joined by the trendier types, such as Samantha Traina, in a Proenza Schouler gown, and Kimberly Bini, who wore Ungaro. And, of course, there were a few period people: Dorka Keehn in a yellow flapper dress with feathered headpiece, and Tatiana Sorokko in a 1927 Jean Patou couture dress. Friends from out of town such as Lisa Firestone, Kelley Johnson, and James Zemaitis of Sotheby's swooped in on the event. Zemaitis, who specializes in 20th-century design, was amused to discover one of his pieces, which he had donated to London's Victoria and Albert Museum, on display.

The event felt more like a private party—even a chic prom or reunion—than a big public blowout, simply because virtually everyone in the room seemed to be closely connected. To the party's credit, a few different cliques of the junior set were represented. The roster ranged from Andre de Baubigny, Carlo Mondavi, and Jennifer and Doug Biederbeck to Summer Walker and Vanessa Carlton.

There was an air of Fast Times at Trevor and Vanessa High as the two cochairs became the head boy and head girl at the party. The tables were placed concentrically around their two tables, and it was clear, as it is at a fashion show, that you
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