Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Ron Powers gave an emotional speech about his family’s struggles with mental illness at the Hope and Healing Center & Institute’s Chrysalis Award luncheon. … Career and Recovery Resources’ Barrier Breaker Award lunch, honoring Ed and Gwen Emmett and Philamena and Arthur Baird, raised more than $250K. … A lively Sunday brunch at the Four Seasons doubled as a fundraiser for the Great Age Movement, which promotes learning and socialization among seniors. Jazz performances and ballroom dancing dazzled the crowd of 200. … Designer David Peck and his wife chaired the Judy’s Mission Possible lunch at the Houstonian, raising funds for early-detection and ovarian cancer research at MD Anderson. … The Latin Women’s Initiative’s annual fashion show lunch was as festive as ever, featuring designs by Andrés Otálora — and tequila shots. … At River Oaks Country Club, the Mayor’s Literacy Breakfast honored the Houston Dynamo and Dash teams.
What year was your organization launched? 1938
What is your mission? March of Dimes was founded in 1938 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, to combat polio. The name “March of Dimes” was suggested by entertainer Eddie Cantor as a way to encourage people to donate even a small amount, like a dime, to help fight polio.
March of Dimes funded research that led to the development of the polio vaccine by Jonas Salk and Albert Sabin in the 1950s. The vaccine was a major factor in eliminating polio from the United States.
Today, March of Dimes focuses on improving the health of mothers and babies regardless of race, gender, wealth, or geography. Our mission is to lead the fight for the health of all moms and babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth, and infant mortality. Through advocacy, education, research, and support programs, March of Dimes works to ensure every baby gets the best possible start.
How have you impacted the community? March of Dimes works across the Greater Houston area to further our work to end preventable maternal health risks and deaths and ending preventable preterm birth and infant death. Each year, we bring comfort and care to more than 25,000 families and babies in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) through our NICU Family Support Program at three area hospitals. In 2023, March of Dimes invested $5.7 million in active research grants to end preventable maternal and infant death, to discover the causes of preterm birth and to achieve birth equity for all mothers, regardless of race or class. This winter, the organization will launch the first ever Mom & Baby Mobile Health Center in Texas in collaboration with Memorial Hermann Health System that will address access to care issues for women and babies in underserved areas right here in Harris County.
Tell us about your big event. Signature Chefs brings together culinary talent from across Houston for an unforgettable evening that raises critical funds to support the health of moms and babies. This year’s event is co-chaired by longtime friends of March of Dimes, Kristen J. Cannon and Mignon Gill, and will be held at The Revaire on Thursday, November 14th. Guests can expect tasting stations from renowned local chefs, signature cocktails, curated auction with exclusive items and experiences, and an opportunity to make a meaningful impact. We are thrilled to have some of Houston’s top chefs and restaurants represented including A Fare Extraordinaire, Eunice, Le Jardinier, MaKiin, Navy Blue and many more!
Join us this November for an evening of fine dining and philanthropy to advance March of Dimes mission. Visit our event website for more information and to purchase your table today!
www.signaturechefs.org/Houston
How many employees and volunteers work with your organization? In 2023, our local Houston market engaged more than 800 mission, corporate and individual volunteers. The Houston staff team is comprised of 12 dynamic individuals that focus on fundraising, mission impact and volunteer engagement.
Christine Johnson and Jody Merritt
A LOVELY AND truly heart-felt tradition continued, when Saks Fifth Avenue and its 5115 restaurant hosted the 14th annual Houston Sweethearts tea.
“Creators Anne Carl, Deborah Duncan, Sylvia Forsythe, Kim Moody, Warner Roberts and Alicia Smith welcomed over 100 guests,” said a rep for the event’s organizers, noting that the function is held each year around Valentine’s Day “simply to tell each other that they are loved and appreciated for all the time, energy, creativity and heart-felt love they give in service to the community.”
This year’s Sweethearts honorees include Lesha Elsenbrook, Tena Faust, Marilu Garza, Tama Lundquist, Elizabeth Stein and Heidi Turney. Other VIP guests included Sidney Faust, Phoebe Tudor, Hallie Vanderhider, Bobby Dees, Brigitte Kalai, Beth Wolff, Cheryl Byington, Leisa Holland-Nelson Bowman, Ellie Francisco, Kim Padgett, Sherri Zucker, Brittany Zucker, Kirk Kveton and Anna Dean.
The annual tea raises awareness for the Mission of Yahweh, a shelter for homeless women and children.
Tena Faust
Brigitte Kalai, Anne Carl and Alicia Smith
Sandra Porter, Marilu Garza, Leila Perrin and Charity Yarborough Cox
Heidi Rockecharlie and Alice Mao Brams
Deborah Duncan and Beth Wolff
ON JAN. 3, 2025, I observed a big personal anniversary. As of that day, it’d been 20 years since I first moved to Houston — from the Big Apple media circus, by way of my home state of Louisiana — and began working as an editor in the lifestyle-magazine biz here. It’s been two full decades, which is hard to believe! I like to joke that I’m far too young and good-looking to have done anything for two decades. But here we are.
The Houston area, increasingly diverse and cosmopolitan, has changed so much in that time. For starters, its population has grown from 5.2 million to nearly 6.9 million. It blows my mind that I landed smack in the middle of what I’ve long called “the most fascinating city in America,” just as it evolved from a sprawling, un-zoned and largely misunderstood hodgepodge of urban and suburban influences into a widely revered cultural and commercial mecca, soon to overtake Chicago as America’s third largest city.
Space City, with its renowned arts and culinary and pro-sports scenes, has become a world city, finally fully reflecting its long-held status as the capital of the global energy business, and home of the world’s biggest and finest medical center. I’ve had a front-row seat to all of it.
Now, reflecting on all those great years, it’s time to flip the script a bit. My business partners and I have decided to suspend the publication of Houston CityBook magazine after nearly nine wonderful years in print. As we assess what’s next for the CityBook brand, our digital platforms continue to operate.
I couldn’t be prouder of what we’ve built. For so long, many magazines came and went in Houston. Most of them operated for a year or so and faded away. CityBook, on the other hand, survived in print for the better part of a decade. To my knowledge, we’re the only independently published, large-circulation title to have accomplished anything like that since the 1980s or ’90s.
We’ve been a must-read in many quarters, with engaging, beautiful content — including the only full-on fashion spreads regularly produced in Houston with top-notch photographers and Houston-based models, many of whom have gone on to big careers in New York and beyond after gracing our pages. And we’ve presented unique long-form content, such as our “Day in the Life of the Arts” photo-documentary projects, exhaustively reported annual best-restaurants features, the reliably racy and instantly infamous annual “Sexy Issue,” the prestigious “Leaders & Legends” portrait collections, and, more recently, the “Cool 100” features counting down the hippest Houstonians with vivid portraits and surprising characters.
They were labors of love, loved reciprocally by 120,000 readers, and celebrated with bring-the-content-to-life parties and smart marketing events that became some of the hottest tickets going.
It hasn’t always been easy. As a startup, we had to overcome an energy-biz downturn and then Hurricane Harvey. Just about the time we found our feet, Covid hit. And all along, we’ve faced valiant competition from other fine magazines, including one I happened to have helped launch years ago.
No whining though! It’s all been a thrill. And an honor. And I’ll forever be grateful that, of all places, this amazing city is where my childhood dream to launch my own magazine one day — yeah, I know it’s weird — came true. Bigger and better than ever, Houston still holds that same kind of promise for all of us who call it home.
To what shall we aspire next? I can’t wait to see.
Jeff Gremillion is the editor-in-chief of Houston CityBook magazine and HoustonCityBook.com, and the CEO of CityBook Media, LLC. He can be reached at jeff@houstoncitybook.com.