EVENT REPORT   06.09.09 4:22 PM
Graffiti Galore
For its annual fund-raising ball, the Washington National Opera partnered with the German Embassy for a celebration of German music and culture, and to commemorate the fall of the Berlin Wall.
A 12-foot-tall, 34-foot-long replica of the Berlin Wall set the tone at Friday’s Washington National Opera Ball, which celebrated German culture and the 20th anniversary of the fall of Berlin’s former symbol of oppression. The Opera Ballone of our Top 100 Eventsis held at a different ambassador's residence each year (France last year, Peru in 2007) and celebrates the culture of their home country. The colorful, graffiti-covered wall fit in surprisingly well at the modern residence of this year's host, German ambassador Klaus Scharioth.

The 500-guest event featured streamlined decor, including sleek black couches, acrylic chairs, and graffiti-covered cubes for food displays. “We’re using fewer flowers and getting the biggest bang for our buck in different and unique ways,” said the opera company's special events director, Patti Humphrey, who worked with Sandi Hoffman of Sandi R. Hoffman Special Events to plan, design, and execute the ball. In a more cost-effective move, Humphrey opted to take advantage of the residence’s highlights, like a grand piano in a light-filled atrium and a terrace with a view of Washington’s skyline.
Outside, the residence’s reflecting pool became a Bellagio-style fountain, with five Dancing Waters performances of water and light throughout the night, each set to music by German composers such as Wagner. 

One side of the Berlin Wall replica served as a backdrop for the band The Source, which played Motown classics as guests danced in the Lucite and plexiglass-floored clear tentan Opera Ball staple that this year had air-conditioning for the first timeconstructed on the Ambassador’s terrace. As in years past, Opera supernumeraries dressed in elaborate costumes from operas like “The Magic Flute" and greeted guests as they arrived at 9:30 p.m., after dining at various embassies around the city. Also, an artist from German porcelain company Meissen demonstrated hand-painting techniques on dinner plates, and a marzipan artist painted tiny almond-paste carrots, mushrooms, and cherries.

Marzipan was just one of the sugar-high inducing treats, as caterers Design Cuisine transformed two entire rooms into cocoa lounges filled with German chocolates and truffles, and even a chocolate tree. Patty Cakes made unique centerpiece cakes that were decorated to resemble the ambassador’s residence, the Berlin Opera House, and the Berlin Wall. For something more savory, Design Cuisine created a 14-foot-long ice sculpture that held an array of German seafood, including smoked trout, eel, mackerel, and salmon with horseradish-bloody Mary foam.   

The German buffet continued downstairs in the dimly lit Berlin Bar, where German chanteuse Ute Lemper took the stage, vamping it up with a red feather boa and cabaret classics with a Washington twist. (She name-dropped Angela Merkel, Condoleezza Rice, Carla Bruni, Michelle Obama, Hilary Clinton, and Sarah Palin in one song.) After Lemper’s set concluded and the evening wound down around 1 a.m., guests left with a copy of Lemper’s CD, a Meissen mug, and one last German treat: a bag of gummy bears.

  —Adele Chapin
A replica of the Berlin Wall served as a focal point.

Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
Costumed actors greeted and mingled with the guests.
Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
Characters from operas posed for photos with guests.

Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
A 14-foot-long ice sculpture topped with two ice candelabra displayed a seafood buffet in the dining room.
Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
In place of flowers, silver streamers suspended from the ceiling added visual interest to the tent.

Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
Graffiti-covered cubes displayed traditional German desserts, such as strudel and rustic fruit tarts.
Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
Capital Decor & Events provided the Art Deco bars.
Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
DC Rentals provided the black and white lounge furniture.
Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
Around 11 p.m., the venue's lower level became the Berlin Bar, where guests ate savory snacks and listened to German singer Ute Lemper.

Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
German chanteuse Ute Lemper took the stage in the Berlin Bar on the embassy's lower level. 
Photo: Tony Brown/Imijination Photography for BizBash
   
Washington Opera Ball

Audio Entertainment Sound Production
Bar Decor Capital Decor and Events
Cakes Patty Cakes
Catering Design Cuisine Caterers
Lighting Frost Lighting--Washington DC
Pianist Glenn Pearson Productions
Production Sandi R. Hoffman LLC Special Events
Rentals Room Service - Washington
Rentals DC Rental
Tenting HDO Productions
Water Show Dancing Waters Entertainment


RELATED TOPICS Washington National Opera