Huge Crowd — Including Roller-Skating Divas — Brings Down the 'House' for Ronald McDonald

Daniel Ortiz and Jacob Power
Huge Crowd — Including Roller-Skating Divas — Brings Down the 'House' for Ronald McDonald

AJ and Siobhan Gracely

GALA SEASON IS now in its prime, and Houston socialites are as busy as they've been in years! More than 700 gathered at the Hilton Americas hotel to toast 40 years of the city's Ronald McDonald House at a gala chaired by Allison and Dan Connally.


Founded by Liz Kelley, the organization provides care and long-term support for families going through treatment in the Med Center. Her son, Sean Kelley, who suffered from childhood cancer, was her inspiration, and made an appearance at the big event. Longtime patrons, including Emily and Holcombe Crosswell, Peggy and Dick East, Flo McGee, Marilyn and Louis Mogas, and Diane and John Riley, were presented with an award thanking them for their decades of support.

The party had all the usual activities, including silent and live auctions — the latter of which gave away an impossibly cute Australian Labradoodle to the highest bidder.

Before the Dry Water Band took to the stage, Board President Larry Hanrahan had everyone raise a glass to the occasion — and then confetti canons shot into the air and roller-skating dancers appeared, gliding around the room to the tune of "Dancing Queen."

The evening raised a million dollars to further Ronald McDonald House's mission to provide families a home away from home during trying times.

Tara and William Nieves

Allen Crosswell and Amy Rozell

Ritu and Kunal Nadkarhi

Alvin Abraham and Beth Wolff

Cookie and Larry Hanrahan

Lesha and Tom Elsenbrook

Cristina Vetrano and Allison and Dan Connally

John and Diane Riley with the auction-prize pup

'Dancing Queen'

John and Bridget Brennan

Wells and April McGee

Peggy and Dick East

Parties
Author, Survivor and Game-Changing Doc Goldner Encourages You to Lean Into Your ‘Origin Story'
How did you get to where you are today? I was diagnosed with lupus at 16. I was already in stage 4 kidney failure by the time the doctors realized what was wrong. It took two years of high doses of medication including chemotherapy to save my kidneys and my life. I became fascinated with the human body, which led to my decision to become a physician.
Keep Reading Show less

Pappas Bros. Steakhouse

IT’S THAT TIME of year again: Wine Spectator, the world’s leading authority on wine, has unveiled the winners of the 2024 Restaurant Awards, which honor the world’s best restaurants for wine. This year’s awards program recognizes 3,777 dining destinations from all 50 states in the U.S. and more than 75 countries internationally. Houston, the fourth largest city in America, garnered 42 awards.

Keep Reading Show less

A next-gen artificial heart from BiVACOR has successfully been implanted in a patient at Texas Heart Institute. The patient survived more than a week, until a donor heart was found for a transplant.

THE PIONEERING CARDIOVASCULAR inventors and surgeons at The Texas Heart Institute (THI) in the Texas Medical Center have made another huge leap forward in the treatment of heart disease, officially announcing yesterday what they’re calling a “monumental advancement."

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places