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    Real contributions

    The Real Housewives of Houston: New book traces secrets, struggles & triumphs of first "astrowives"

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 23, 2013 | 1:10 pm

    When did Houston become Space City? Was it when the Johnson Space Center opened? Or can the genesis be traced back to when Houston welcomed the Mercury Seven astronauts and their families to town and called them our own?

     

    Those men were heroes to a nation, which also held up their wives as the ideal American women. These “Astrowives” were seen as devoted mothers and helpmates who approved of their husband’s dreams and efforts “a hundred percent,” as John Glenn described of his wife Ann during the first Mercury Seven press conference in 1959.

     

    Fifty years after coming to Houston, the real stories of those amazing women are being revealed with the launch of author Lily Koppel’s book The Astronaut Wives Club in the city where some of the wives lived their happiest days and others found great tragedy.

     

     

      With their husbands gone for long stretches of work and training, all these women raised their families, kept their homes, and dealt with the press with little support from the men and NASA itself.

     
     

    At an Astronaut Wives Club tea at Ouisie’s Table attended by astronaut wives Sue Bean, Barbara (Cernan) Butler, Harriet Eisele, Jeannie Bassett and Beth Williams, Koppel explained she became interested in these women’s lives while looking through photos in Norman Mailer’s MoonFire.

     

    Struck by a picture of Apollo 11 wives, Koppel began to wonder about the real stories behind the Life magazine pictures that at best only illuminated the surface of these women’s lives. Koppel set out to find those real stories and three years and many new friendships later, she’s ready to present these no-longer-untold stories to her readers.

     

     Joining the Club

     

     The Astronaut Wives Club begins with that Mercury Seven press conference in Washington in 1959 but immediately moves to the seven wives who, having lived many years as military wives and sometimes struggled to make ends meet, suddently had to instantly adapt to celebrityhood. The book follows the Mercury wives to Houston and introduces the Gemini and Apollo wives as they arrive into the story.

     

    With their husbands gone for long stretches of work and training, all these women raised their families, kept their homes, and dealt with the press with little support from the men and NASA itself.

     

    Perhaps even before the term “rock star” was coined, these women overnight became the wives of rocket stars. NASA demanded their marriages at least appear rock solid, even as some wives forced themselves to ignore their husbands’ infidelity with space groupies. Meanwhile, individually they prayed never to hear that dreaded knock on the door that would change their NASA status from wife to widow.

     

     The Astronaut Wives Club doesn’t skip the women’s personality clashes and rivalries, but readers will also begin to understand how the decade-long reach to the moon forged such life-long bonds between these women waiting back on Earth.

     

     An astronaut's thanks

     

    The day after the Astro Tea, the official Astronaut Wives book launch at the Sam Houston Hotel added Jane Conrad, Betty Grissom and Joan Glancy to the roster of wives coming out to celebrate the book. The event was hosted by Joanne King Herring, who became friends with some of wives during the 1960s and ushered several into Houston society.

     

     

      “If it weren’t for the wives who committed their lives to what we were doing, I don’t think we would have ever gotten to the moon.” 

     
     

    Among the crowd was Eugene Cernan, the last man to walk on the moon. After Koppel thanked and introduced all the wives present, Cernan took the mike to add his own thanks. Though he first joked he was disappointed there was no “former husbands club” for him to join, his voice cracked with emotion as he told the crowd: “If it weren’t for the wives who committed their lives to what we were doing, I don’t think we would have ever gotten to the moon.”

     

    Cernan’s words and his brief mention of his book made me think back to a conversation I had with Beth Williams at the Wives tea.

     

    The wife of Astronaut Clifton ‘C. C.’ Williams, Beth had been a professional water-skier and AquaMaid at Cypress Gardens before marrying. She even was an extra in a movie starring her hero Esther Williams. In just three years, she went from being the woman who married the first astronaut bachelor, to a pregnant, astronaut widow when the T-38 Williams was flying crashed due to mechanical failure.

     

    After Clifton’s death, Beth Williams stayed in Clear Lake to raise her children and eventually started her own company, TechTrans International, to provide Russian translation and language instruction to NASA for the U.S-Russian space program. She now has 200 employees and was awarded Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year in 2011.

     

    I asked Williams with so many of the astronauts writing books and memoirs why didn’t she or any of the wives?

     

    “It wasn’t my story to tell,” Williams explained, adding that she thought most of the wives probably felt the same. The women just didn’t think their individual stories could be told apart from the others.

     

    These days an astronaut's wife could very well be an astronaut herself, but now these first astronaut wives contribution to the race into space can no longer be ignored.

    Ann Brannen, left, and Gloria Gibson at The Astronaut Wives Club launch.

    Astronaut Wives Club launch event June 2013 Ann Brannen, Gloria Gibson
      
    Photo by Spike Johnson
    Ann Brannen, left, and Gloria Gibson at The Astronaut Wives Club launch.
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    news/society

    Silk and Sequins

    Cultural fashion takes center stage at Runway to Asia in Houston

    Joel Luks
    Jul 10, 2025 | 12:30 pm
    Asia Society Runway to Asia fashion show 2025
    Photo by Annie Mulligan
    Rekha Muddaraj, Shazia Sultan, Danny Nguyen, Zang Toi, Bonna Kol, Phoebe Tudor, and Leigh Smith.

    If fashion is a language, Runway to Asia spoke it fabulously fluently.

    The ballroom of The Post Oak Hotel shimmered with silk, sequins, and sartorial splendor as Asia Society Texas debuted its first-ever Runway to Asia style-studded affair — a glamorous gala-meets-catwalk moment where heritage was hand-stitched into haute couture.

    More than 300 guests filled the swanky venue for the event, greeted by models perched like living mannequins in Danny Nguyen’s Fall/Winter 2025 collection, each ensemble a fabric-forward love letter to cultural identity and avant-garde vision. This was a glamnifesto on what it means to wear your roots with pride and purpose.

    Leading the stylish charge were co-chairs Leigh Smith, Shazia Sultan, and Phoebe Tudor, who curated the afternoon like seasoned couturiers. Attendees noshed on a three-course lunch before the real feast began: a full-throttle catwalk presentation honoring two design dynamos — Danny Nguyen, Houston’s own silhouettist supreme, and international fashion luminary Zang Toi.

    Rekha Muddaraj, former KHOU 11 anchor turned emcee extraordinaire, welcomed the crowd with poise, passing the mic to Asia Society Texas president Bonna Kol, who framed the gathering as more than just fashion, but part of the nonprofit’s mission to celebrate cultural diversity through art.

    The applause crescendoed when Michael Buening, the organization’s director of performing arts and culture, announced the event had raised more than $300,000 to fund more than 20 annual programs.

    Pro tip: philanthropy always looks better in couture.

    Then came the honors. Nguyen was honored with the Texas Trendsetter Award, praised by Shazia Sultan for blending traditional elegance with avant-glam silhouettes. Meanwhile, Tudor crowned Toi with the Global Icon Award, charting his runway rise from Malaysia to Manhattan.

    Toi’s “Opulence of the Orient Express” collection brought the house down with 37 jaw-dropping looks: Ottoman-inspired caftans, midnight velvet suits, pearl-dusted evening gowns, and coat-dress hybrids that defied the laws of layering. Each ensemble whispered luxury and screamed craftsmanship.

    The raffle added a thrill of retail roulette with prizes including a luxe Hill Country escape, personal styling sessions with the honorees, and golden tickets to Zang Toi’s Fall 2026 New York show.

    Soaking in the scene were Sushila Agrawal, Nancy Allen, Fady Armanious, Kristy Bradshaw, Divya Brown, Tripp Carter, Theresa Chang, Anne Chao, Molly Crownover, Kari Dagley, Chloe Dao, Debbie Festari, Kathy and Marty Goossen, Brigitte Kalai, Mandy Kao, Sippi Khurana, Karen Kwok, Teri Lee, Kelley Lubanko, Christy Lynn, Petra Martinez, Sneha Merchant, Duyen Nguyen, Cabrina Owsley, Akemi Saitoh, Miya Shay, Sue and Randy Sim, Shawn Stephens, Y. Ping Sun, Ileana Trevino, Janae Tsai, Stephanie Tsuru, Heidi Turney, and Asha Virani.

    Asia Society Runway to Asia fashion show 2025
      

    Photo by Annie Mulligan

    Rekha Muddaraj, Shazia Sultan, Danny Nguyen, Zang Toi, Bonna Kol, Phoebe Tudor, and Leigh Smith.

    fundraisersasia society texas centerfashion show
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