BBBS Gala Goes Green — and the Wild After-Party Was Electric

BBBS Gala Goes Green — and the Wild After-Party Was Electric

Chairs Scott and Katie Arnoldy with guests in the disco photo booth

MORE THAN 250 philanthropic-minded Houstonians hit the Big Brothers Big Sisters gala on Saturday.


The event, themed An Evening for Potential, took place at BBBS's still-new headquarters, which were lit up in green for the gala. Classical music by young pianists from the One A'Chord Music School greeted guests, who spent much of the cocktail hour mingling and perusing the silent auction items. The vacays, sports swag, jewelry and dining experiences brought in more than $60,000 over the course of the evening.

The top floor was where dinner took place, offering beautiful views of the Houston skyline that was also lit up green in support of BBBS. Berg Hospitality catered a delicious three-course dinner starring filet mignon, and live music followed.

The official Electric After-Party got grooving back downstairs. An open bar and late-night bites courtesy of B.B. Lemon were waiting, along with DJ Dame Hype, fire performances and a jazz lounge. A disco-themed photo-booth room was installed to honor last year's virtual event, "Groovin' Together."

More than half a million was raised to further BBBS's mission.

Honorees Akbar and Rishma Mohamed

Fire dancers at the after-party

Parties

Courtney Zavala with The Courtney Mask

A BEAUTIFUL HOUSTON media personality and one of Houston’s top body care and aromatherapy companies have partnered “to make the everyday skincare routine simpler,” the company says.

Keep Reading Show less
Style

Ibraim Nascimento with community members at CAC (photo by Terry St. John)

HOP OFF THE Metro Rail at Wheeler and find your bearings between what used to be a Fiesta grocery store (now “climatetech incubator” Greentown Labs) and the brutalist-styled and somewhat uninviting ION Building (“Houston’s HQ for innovation!”). Then follow the traffic up San Jacinto, and suddenly you encounter Quilt Peace, a dramatic, colorful, powder-coated steel sculpture by artist, educator, and executive director and co-founder of the Community Artists’ Collective Michelle Barnes.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment