Houston Symphony Opens Season with Stirring Performance and Glam Late-Night Dinner

Houston Symphony Opens Season with Stirring Performance and Glam Late-Night Dinner

Diana Fisher, Bernie Cantu and Jasmine Reese

ALWAYS ONE OF the most posh spectacles of the fall season, Opening Night at the Houston Symphony was an evening of taut cultural presentations and glamorous socializing.


The fabulous affair began with Champagne and hors d’oeuvres at a freshly renovated Jones Hall before a performance featuring Juraj Valčuha leading the large, stage-filling orchestra and Houston Symphony Chorus — including a special performance by soprano Erin Morley. The night shifted into a new gear after the show, as some 350 patrons were ferried on luxury busses to a regally decked-out Corinthian for a lavish dinner, per the custom.

“The décor, created by The Events Company, drew inspiration from Paris,” noted a Symphony rep. “Tables, dressed in French-inspired blue linens filled the room, and were topped with candelabras and varying high and low floral centerpieces in shades of pink and red with hints of blue and green. Additionally, an Eiffel Tower adorned with florals accompanied the red carpet.”

The rep described the menu. “Dinner began with a bib lettuce wedge salad with toasted walnuts, grilled pear, pickled celery, radishes, crumbled roquefort and moutard de meaux vinaigrette.” The entrée was grilled sea bass with saffron beurre blanc and fennel-olive vierge, spaghetti squash, jumbo asparagus and cute mini-muffins of potato and dill. Thanks to a long and enduring partnership with Lindy and John Rydman of Spec’s Wine, Spirits, & Finer Foods, wine selections for the meal were first-rate. For dessert: a chocolate terrine with crème anaglaise, almond tuile and melon sorbet.

Mariglyn and Stephen Glenn were chairs for the lovely night, in which performing arts champion Beth Madison was honored. ConocoPhillips was a major sponsor for the event for the 38th year. VIP guests included Margaret Alkek Williams, Bobbie Nau, Betty and Jesse Tutor, Suresh and Renu Khator, Hallie Vanderhider, Bobby Dees, Janet Gurwitch and Ron Franklin.

Hallie Vanderhider and Bobby Dees

Betty and Jesse Tutor

Asley and Peggy Smith and Betsy and Rick Weber

Beth Madison

Suresh and Renu Khator

Janet Gurtwitch and Ron Franklin

Margaret Alkek Williams and Bill Stubbs

Lea and Dee Hunt

Janet Clark, Ginger Clark

Wayne and Tammy Nguyen

Bill and Brittany Bullock

Tammie and Charles Johnson

Mariglyn and Stephen Glenn

Darlene Clark and Edwin Friedrichs

Joan and Bob Duff

People + Places
‘Embrace Changes,’ Says Valobra, Whose Namesake Jewelry Store Has Become a Houston Institution
How did you get to where you are today? I had little choice in the matter; I grew up being trained to become the fourth-generation jewelry designer behind my great grandfather, grandfather, and father. It was my duty to carry on the family business and continue the hard work and success they built from nothing, beginning in Torino, Italy in 1905. I was surrounded by jewelry and its craftmanship as a young child and was taught the business from a very young age.
Keep Reading Show less

Artwork by May, Magallon and Carter

THE SUNLIT, COZY, 700-square-foot second floor of Basket Books and Art is the site of Hot Bod, one of the strangest and most intriguing exhibits currently on view in Houston.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

Meta4 members (photo by Alinda Mac)

POETRY CONTINUES TO be one of Houston’s most celebrated cultural exports, especially when it is brought to life onstage, with considerable theatrical flair, by the city’s premier youth poetry team, Meta4 Houston.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment