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EVENT REPORT   05.01.08 1:56 PM PRINT | SEND TO A FRIEND |
Marry Making
To amp up the excitement at the Made of Honor premiere, Columbia Pictures staged a real-life wedding as part of the festivities.
On Monday night, Michelle Golightly and Shaun Bollinger of Carlyle, Pennsylvania, got married in the presence of 30 of their closest friends and family. The ceremony had all the makings of an intimate affair—unless you count the phalanx of paparazzi on hand, spectators watching the proceedings on a JumboTron across the street, and the fact that Entertainment Tonight's Mary Hart, legally ordained for the occasion, officiated. And that Patrick Dempsey was there to promote his latest film, Made of Honor.

As winners of a contest sponsored by The Knot and Sony Pictures (Columbia's parent company), the now newlyweds gamely provided the central publicity stunt for the premiere of Dempsey's new romantic comedy, in which the actor adopts the post of maid of honor in an effort to win back the woman he loves. (The public voted at the film's Web site to determine who would win the prize, which, in addition to nuptials prior to the screening, included a European vacation, a wedding dress, rings, a $10,000 check, and more.)
CONTINUED >

PHOTO GALLERY

White chiffon draped the tenting on 54th Street, where an actual wedding—officiated by Entertainment Tonight's Mary Hart—took place. - Photo: Line 8 Photography
White chiffon draped the tenting on 54th Street, where an actual wedding—officiated by Entertainment Tonight's Mary Hart—took place.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
15/40 Productions hired 50 men from Beautiful Bartenders to serve as groomsmen at the premiere. - Photo: Line 8 Photography
15/40 Productions hired 50 men from Beautiful Bartenders to serve as groomsmen at the premiere.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Ron Wendt designed floral arrangements for both the premiere and the after-party. - Photo: Brian Ach/Elevation Photos
Ron Wendt designed floral arrangements for both the premiere and the after-party.
Photo: Brian Ach/Elevation Photos
Friends of the bride and groom sat opposite the ceremony in bleachers. - Photo: Brian Ach/Elevation Photos
Friends of the bride and groom sat opposite the ceremony in bleachers.
Photo: Brian Ach/Elevation Photos
A 16-piece orchestra provided music for the premiere. - Photo: Line 8 Photography
A 16-piece orchestra provided music for the premiere.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Sylvia Weinstock created a custom-designed cake for the bride and groom. - Photo: Line 8 Photography
Sylvia Weinstock created a custom-designed cake for the bride and groom.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Guests circulated throughout three rooms of the Metropolitan Club. - Photo: Line 8 Photography
Guests circulated throughout three rooms of the Metropolitan Club.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Oysters and cocktail shrimp sat atop a large ice sculpture embedded with flowers. - Photo: Line 8 Photography
Oysters and cocktail shrimp sat atop a large ice sculpture embedded with flowers.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Patrick Demspey participated in reception traditions such as the cake cutting and welcoming the bride and groom. - Photo: Brian Ach/Elevation Photos
Patrick Demspey participated in reception traditions such as the cake cutting and welcoming the bride and groom.
Photo: Brian Ach/Elevation Photos
Flowers imported for the premiere and after-party included 600 peonies  from Hollland, 500 New Zealand hydrangea stems, and 1,000 long-stem  roses from South America. - Photo: Line 8 Photography
Flowers imported for the premiere and after-party included 600 peonies from Hollland, 500 New Zealand hydrangea stems, and 1,000 long-stem roses from South America.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
   
Made of Honor Premiere and After-Party

After-Party Design, Production Benarroch Productions
After-Party DJ DJ David Chang
After-Party Venue, Catering Metropolitan Club
Floral Design Ron Wendt Design
Groomsmen Beautiful Bartenders
Lighting Bentley Meeker Lighting & Staging
Premiere Design, Production
Premiere Venue Clearview's Ziegfeld Cinema
Rentals Party Rental Ltd.—Hamptons
Security Noble Inc. Entertainment Security
Tenting Alan Party and Tent Rentals
Wedding Cake Sylvia Weinstock Cakes

The task of creating the scene for the wedding and premiere at the Ziegfled Theater went to 15/40 Productions, which worked with Noble Security to close off most of 54th Street for the affair. "Being able to close two thirds of this street is a big deal," said 15/40 president Craig Waldman, who worked with Columbia Pictures senior president of special events Alison Bossert. "It's like a full L.A. Hollywood premiere in New York. The city doesn't really do that."

Tenting swathed in white chiffon, a pink carpet, 50 suit-sporting, bouquet-carrying male model types, and oversize arrangements of roses, cherry blossoms, and peonies all helped set the tone for both the scheduled marriage and the premiere of the nuptial-themed film. A 16-piece orchestra positioned on a tiered stage played traditional wedding music before and during the ceremony, and the couple's guests and assorted contest winners seated in nearby bleachers got rose petals and soap bubbles to throw and blow, respectively, at the conclusion of the ceremony.

Following the screening of the movie, the after-party-turned-reception, produced by Benarroch Productions, took place at the swank Metropolitan Club. A crowd of 700, including Sony staffers, press, V.I.P.s, and the guests of the bride and groom, received white-glove service and feasted on a raw bar, sushi and dim sum, pasta stations, and passed appetizers such as caviar and bruschetta. 

Towering centerpieces of crystal candleholders filled with fulsome arrangements of peonies, roses, and cherry blossoms topped tables in the already regal setting, and musicians played jazz standards and classical pieces in separate rooms early on in the party. (Later, DJ David Chang provided a set of Madonna, Rihanna, and the like.)

Charged with developing the wedding-reception-as-marketing-event was Benarroch Productions. "The hardest thing was integrating a real wedding with the traditional necessities into a party—pleasing the film studio, the actors, the press, and the family," said the firm's president and creative director, Chris Benarroch, the night of the event. (Efforts to do so included having Dempsey introduce the couple at the reception and being present at the cake cutting, as well as incorporating reception standbys such as a champagne toast and a first dance.)

The reception was indeed what many a New York bride could only hope for, should her budget allow. Golighty's father, at least traditionally on the hook for a hefty bill said, "It's pretty exciting, pretty mind-boggling. They're doing it again in August for friends and family in Carlyle."

  —Mimi O'Connor
RELATED TOPICS Columbia Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment

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