Shelby's Social Diary
Witches, corpses, skeletons and more prowled Hotel ZaZa during ArthritisFoundation Bone Bash
Housekeepers at Hotel ZaZa were probably pulling their hair out on Thursday night at the sight of the ballroom and the various pre-function rooms covered in spider webs and crawling with creepy characters from the netherworld. Days before Halloween, guests stepped out in enthusiastic costuming for the Arthritis Foundation's first annual "Bone Bash."
Of the 220 partygoers that slithered into the haunted surroundings, probably 90 percent channeled inner demons, angels and the walking dead. Add a sprinkling of Little Red Riding Hoods, a sheik or two and a bundle of glamorous witches and you get the picture. This was one rocking dress-up party.
Leading the costumed entourage were chairs Mary D'Andrea, Debra Ford and Valerie Dieterich — a dressy skeleton, a Hollywood witch and a Middle Eastern princess, respectively. The evening's honoree Truett Latimer and his wife, Harriet, played it straight in cocktail attire, a fitting approach for the retired director of the Houston Museum of Natural Science and his wife.
In case, you haven't secured your costuming yet for tonight's parties or bashes actually on Halloween, we surveyed this crowd to learn where they got their disguises. The answers were random — Frankel's, Buffalo Exchange, Pier 1, Halloween Express, Southern Imports and even Sears. That latter store was the resource for Sharin Gaille, who dressed in a retro white slip and house slippers (a la Elizabeth Taylor in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof), while her fiance, Larry Norman, dressed in PJ's, slippers, bathrobe and wig (a la Paul Newman in the same movie).
Sitting for dinner and dancing to the sounds of Doppleganger were Tracy Dieterich, Gina and Dr. Devinder Bhatia, Perry Ann and John Reed, Lanie Gordon and David Mincberg, Susan Bischoff and Jim Barlow, Pattie Dayle and John Tye, Laurie and Steve Croxson and foundation executive director Richard Jennings.