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  1. Venues & Destinations
  2. United States
  3. Chicago

Chicago

July 8, 2012
Billy Melnyk
Billy Melnyk
Experiential/digital marketing manager, Bacardi, Miami, 39
Claim to fame: Melnyk introduced the award-winning event series Bacardi Like It Live, a collaboration with Facebook where all event elements were selected by consumers’ “likes' on the social-media site. “Consumers were surprised to see artists like Kid Cudi and Cee Lo Green playing in a venue that also held areas where they could play basketball with N.B.A. legends.”
Launchpad: “In my 20s, my business partner and I produced a series of traveling music events called ‘Sweet’ that moved to unique venues across Canada. Prior to email and social media, it was all about word-of-mouth—and producing unique events really drew our attendance higher than we imagined.”
Major life goal:
“I want to own an art gallery with friends and execute public art projects.”
On Twitter: @billymelnyk
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Alexandra Shapiro
Alexandra Shapiro
Senior vice president of brand marketing and digital, USA Network, New York
Claim to fame: Shapiro joined USA Network in 2001 and develops highly visible and somewhat unconventional public campaigns that are closely aligned with the brand’s “Characters Welcome” tagline. She has helped the network stand out—and top the cable ratings for more than five years—through efforts like the Characters Approved awards and last year’s upfront that used talent instead of executives to introduce programming.
Big innovation: As part of its ongoing initiative called the Character Project, USA partnered with directors Ridley and Tony Scott to commission eight shorts. Then, Shapiro and her team developed 18-seat screening venues inside old shipping containers. “The intimate way of watching the films created a dialogue that might never have happened if someone had seen it privately in their home or in a movie theater.”
Quick tip:
“Never underestimate the power, the halo effect that the right partner can have on your brand—it’s priceless.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Alison Bossert
Alison Bossert
Senior vice president, special events, Sony Pictures Worldwide Marketing & Distribution, Culver City, California, 44
Big innovation: Recognizing the need for premieres to stand out amid the crowded event landscape. Bossert’s team creates “camera candy—that set design that makes your red carpet so unique, the press eats it up.” Past work has included a recreated subway station, including a real New York City subway car for The Taking of Pelham 123, and crystal-clad acrobats hanging from chandeliers above the carpet at Michael Jackson's This Is It premiere.
Claim to fame: The premiere for The Da Vinci Code. "We built a 10-story pyramid in Cannes harbor."
Career highlight: The 2011 premiere for Moneyball, which brought an A-list crowd to Oakland and recreated a baseball field in a parking lot.
Quick tip: "Before booking a venue, check the restrooms. Their cleanliness, or lack thereof, is a good indication of how the kitchen is kept."
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Gina Crowley
Gina Crowley
Director of special events and rentals, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, 44
Big innovation: “Putting unexpected spaces in the museum to use.” At past events, Crowley has transformed the freight elevator into a moving bar, served dinner on the theater stage, and hosted a cocktail reception on the loading dock.
Career highlight:
For the museum’s 40th anniversary in 2007, planners tented the entire front plaza and street in front of the museum and hired Patti Smith as the entertainment.
Work philosophy:
“Working at a contemporary museum comes with a prerequisite to produce cutting-edge and innovative events. I keep up with what art museums around the world do for their fund-raising galas and what trends are happening in the art world so that I can avoid repeating event elements.”
Childhood dream job: Famous soccer player.
On Twitter: @mcachicago
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Frank McClelland
Frank McClelland
Farmer, chef, and C.E.O., New France L.L.C., Boston, 54
Claim to fame: For his highly esteemed restaurants and catering company—L’Espalier, Sel de la Terre, and Au Soleil Catering—McClelland prepares “sophisticated and modern New England-French cuisine, with an emphasis on artisanal [and local] ingredients.”
Style signature: “Farm-to-table, working with local ingredients from my own farm.”
Big innovation:
McClelland serves dinners at his Apple Street Farm in Essex, Massachusetts, letting guests “enjoy culinary delights right where they are grown.” For private dinner parties held on the farm, dishes have included charred heirloom tomato soup with crabmeat and grilled oysters, and Texas rib eye with leek-potato-and-eggplant pie.
Memorable gig:
While working at Harvest, a contemporary American restaurant in Harvard Square, a young McClelland got to know industry icon Julia  Child.
Favorite restaurant:
Georges Blanc in Burgundy, France.
On Twitter: @ausoleilcater, @lespalier, @seldelaterre
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Fergus Rooney
Fergus Rooney
C.E.O., AgencyEA, Chicago, 44
Launchpad: Managing corporate hospitality for Wimbledon and the British Open Golf Championship in London. In 1999, Rooney and partner Gabrielle Martinez teamed to open production house Event Architects. In 2011, the company changed its name to AgencyEA, and rebranded itself as a full-service experiential marketing agency.
Claim to fame: In late 2010 and early 2011, he worked simultaneously on Oprah’s Ultimate Australian Adventure, the holiday decor at the White House, and the Boeing 747-8 Intercontinental launch in Seattle.
Work philosophy: “Don’t be creative just for the sake of being creative. Be creative for a strategic purpose.”
Hidden talents: “I make a great chicken pesto. Also, ping-pong.”
On Twitter: @frooney
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Chad Hudson
Chad Hudson
President and owner, Chad Hudson Events, West Hollywood, California, 34
Big innovation: For the Twilight Saga premieres, the producer worked with Summit Entertainment to expand the fan participation from a throng of gawkers to a five-day, studio-sanctioned camp-out, worth millions in PR value. Hudson also finds ways to simultaneously save money and execute bigger projects by sharing costs between multiple events.
Career highlight: Booking major events at the 2012 Super Bowl in Indianapolis, including DirecTV’s Celebrity Beach Bowl and the party hosted by HD Net and Peyton Manning.
Work philosophy: “Give credit where credit is due. Treat your clients like gold and your staff like platinum.”
Mentor: Warner Brothers’ vice president of publicity and special events, Courtney Saylor Rogge. Hudson worked in her department for eight years before starting his firm in 2008.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Carla Ruben
Carla Ruben
President and owner, Creative Edge Parties, New York, 49
Launchpad: Ruben started her catering company at 27, working out of a small New York apartment. She did everything herself, from cooking the food and driving the van to bartending, bussing tables, serving the meal, and packing up at the end of the night. More than 20 years later, Creative Edge is one of the city’s most respected caterers, trusted by organizations like Target, the Museum of Modern Art, and Bravo to dream up creative menus that Ruben describes as “clean and intelligent, not tortured or pretentious.”
Big innovation: Last year the company launched the Creative Edge Culinary Council, a global exchange program that brings guest chefs to cook in New York, while sending its own chefs to other cities to learn new techniques. “We believe innovation does not come from just one chef, but from a collaboration of ideas, skill, and inspiration.”
Career highlight:
“Catering a 1,800-person lunch and then flipping the room in 90 minutes for a 2,300-person seated dinner.”
Up next:
“Tablecloths are a thing of the past. Buffet tables are the backdrop to our food—we consider them an extension of our design. So it’s not just a matter of interesting vessels to present the food in, but what type of material or furniture you’re putting it on.”
On Twitter: @CarlaRuben
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Alison Slight, Candice Chan
Alison Slight, Candice Chan
Managing director, 32; creative director, 30; Candice & Alison Luxury Events, Toronto
Launchpad: After they met as students at Ryerson University’s School of Fashion, Chan became the marketing director of a fashion label in Toronto, while Slight went to Dubai with event planning firm Platinum. The two reconnected and founded their own business in September 2009.
Event philosophy:
With backgrounds in fashion, Chan and Slight have an eye for trends, making them a perfect fit for events like the Harry Rosen party during the Toronto International Film Festival.
Best place to get inspired:
“The boutique windows of Toronto’s Yorkville neighborhood. Our event design philosophy draws parallels with the fashion industry, so it’s important to be aware of current colors, styles, and trends,” says Slight.
Career highlight:
“Handling riders and specific requirements for Kanye West at a five-day wedding in Phuket, Thailand,” says Chan.
Style signature: “Edgy meets sophisticated,” says Chan.
On Twitter: @CANDICE_ALISON
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Bronson van Wyck
Bronson van Wyck
President, Van Wyck & Van Wyck, New York, 36
Launchpad: In a career trajectory that van Wyck modestly describes as “an extended process of elimination in which I learned I had no other marketable skills,” the Yale grad worked as a protocol aide for U.S. ambassador to France Pamela Harriman and as a film set designer in Los Angeles, before founding a planning and design company with his mother, Mary Lynn, in 1999. Van Wyck has been tapped to create events for high-profile private, corporate, and nonprofit entities, including Mercedes-Benz, billionaire George Soros, and Friends of the High Line.
Claim to fame:
Van Wyck’s look is consistently polished and always contains subtle cues to the brand. When the Whitney Museum of American Art chose a decommissioned bus depot as the site of its biggest fund-raiser in 2011, the designer managed to turn the raw site into a comfortable, elegant venue.
Design philosophy:
“We don’t sign our name in the guest book, we sign our client’s name.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Benji Tschudin
Benji Tschudin
Partner and lighting designer, Atmosphere Inc., Washington, 45
Launchpad: Tschudin relied on his background in theater when he opened his lighting firm 18 years ago with two partners. Today the company works on roughly 600 events a year—about 60 percent corporate (clients include Target and Microsoft) and 40 percent nonprofit (Charity Works and Horatio Alger Association).
Work philosophy: “Our niche is that we have immersed ourselves in the venues in this town. We work closely with the Smithsonian properties to guide them in the right direction during building and renovations.”
Big innovation: “We were the first to bring LED to town, and it really helped facilitate the phasing out of static lighting.”
Career highlight: “Lighting the National Cathedral.” To celebrate the completion of renovations, the  cathedral held a never-done-before gala in the main sanctuary. “In addition to lighting all the columns, we also painted the ceiling with custom-colored stained glass gobos and back-lit all the stained glass windows.”
Up next: “We are gearing up for the Democratic National Convention and the inauguration.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Benjamin Newbold
Benjamin Newbold
Special events creative director, Winston Flowers, Boston, 44
Claim to fame: Conceptualizing and executing floral design for happenings ranging from in-home dinner parties to corporate affairs and galas, Newbold is personally involved in more than 50 events a year and creatively directs his team on about 200 more.
Memorable gig:
Collaborating with Bryan Rafanelli on events at the White House for President Obama and heads of state.
Launchpad:
Newbold grew up on a farm in Illinois. “I gained appreciation for plants and flowers in all forms and stages of bloom.”
Style signature:
“I prefer to keep things pure and not over-manipulated.” For a recent luncheon, Newbold dressed a raw warehouse with paint, mirrors, citrus medallions, and grass walls on Lucite panels.
Up next:
“Building a destination design team is our next big step.” Winston Flowers will also open a store in Greenwich, Connecticut, this spring.
Work philosophy:
“Get in there and get your hands dirty.”
On Twitter: @winstonflowers
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Annie Senatore
Annie Senatore
C.E.O., A Vista Events, Beltsville, Maryland, 46
Launchpad: “I used to design my own invitations for the fashion PR office I ran in London, and when I came to the U.S., a friend introduced me to a stack of people in the events industry and showed them my artwork portfolio.” Before long, Senatore was designing events, setting up her own business after eight years working at production company Hargrove in Maryland. Staffed with 12 employees, A Vista works on about 300 events a year.
Claim to fame: Last year, she produced the Trust for the National Mall’s benefit luncheon and its Ball on the Mall, events just two days apart and both located on the grounds of the historic park. Inspired by Japan and the Mall’s cherry blossom trees, the daytime event had a live tea ceremony, while the nighttime affair included white origami cranes and paper parasols suspended from the ceiling. Senatore is also known for the annual Oscar viewing party hosted by Starwood Hotels, for which she has created Best Picture-inspired environments and a fashion show.
Up next: “Launching the new revised company and a product coming out in spring.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Todd Fiscus
Todd Fiscus
Owner and chief creative officer, Todd Events, Dallas, 44
Claim to fame: Fiscus’s boutique event design firm produces more than 600 events annually, including weddings for big names like Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, as well as for clients like the Dallas Museum of Art, Audi, and Lexus. In 2011, Fiscus and his team were on the Super Bowl Host Committee and produced 52 events related to the big game, including the North Texas Super Bowl Host Committee Kickoff.
Big innovation: Todd Events is one of the few vertically integrated event companies in the U.S., doing flowers, design, delivery, and installation, as well as designing all of its own furnishings under its Suite 206 rental line. Sister companies include the Switch Lighting Group, which handles event lighting and design, an event venue and restaurant, both in the Dallas area, the PR firm Rest & Revolution, and Avant Garden, a boutique floral and gift store and event space.
Up next: Fiscus is working on a book on the topic of events held inside tents, and he’s developing a product line of tabletop items for event designers.
Major life goal: “To be a part of something that impacts my industry in a big way, [but also to] leave time in my life to smell the roses—not just arrange them.”
On Twitter: @toddlovesorange
Photo: Stephen Karlisch
David Cohn and Stuart Ruderfer
David Cohn and Stuart Ruderfer
Co-founders and C.E.O.s, Civic Entertainment Group, New York
Claim to fame: Cohn and Ruderfer’s experiential marketing agency, which they established after launching New York City’s marketing and special events division under Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, is behind some of the biggest publicity stunts and events for brands like CNN, Kiehl’s, and Southwest Airlines. In addition to projects like an education summit hosted by NBC News and a full-service restaurant and studio hub for CNN during South by Southwest and the 2008 Republican and Democratic National Conventions, Civic Entertainment Group is responsible for a number of HBO promotions. In 2010, that meant flying 250 Pacific War veterans to Washington to attend a wreath-laying ceremony at the World War II memorial as part of the premiere for The Pacific. In September, the company put a  Prohibition-era train back in service to herald the upcoming debut of Boardwalk Empire’s second season.
Big innovation: In looking to create strategic public-private collaborations, Cohn and Ruderfer have found that brands and civic entities can be surprisingly valuable partners. HBO and the U.S. Postal Service collaborated to promote letter-writing and the miniseries John Adams; the campaign allowed consumers to send free postcards and marked post-office receipts and cancellation stamps with the URL of a dedicated Web site.
Typical day: “Busy, busy, busy,” says Ruderfer.
Quick tip: “Be unusually resourceful and uncommonly tenacious,” says Cohn.
Photo: Jenny Naima
Paula LeDuc
Paula LeDuc
Founder, Paula LeDuc Fine Catering, Emeryville, California
Claim to fame: LeDuc is Northern California’s go-to source for creative catering with an eco-conscious approach. In addition to being the exclusive caterer for events at San Francisco’s local-food mecca the Ferry Building, her company catered the kickoff party celebrating Chez Panisse’s 40th anniversary in Berkeley last August.
Launchpad: As a founder and living-skills instructor at the Hatlen Center for the Blind, LeDuc studied with Ken Wolfe, the head of the culinary arts program at a neighboring college, to enhance her culinary training skills for students. “My passion was triggered. In 1980, a friend asked me to cater her daughter’s christening, and the rest is history.”
Work philosophy: “We love the art of surprise, so we layer our events with unexpected details that reveal themselves as the event unfolds. We’re not inspired by repetition—we’re inspired by creating the next new idea, refining it until it’s perfect, and then moving on.”
Favorite restaurant: Alinea in Chicago.
Style signature: “Sophisticated yet inviting, organic, and innovative.”
Career highlight: Catering several private events in Oprah Winfrey’s home. “She was on my ‘bucket list’ forever.”
Childhood dream job: “To be an architect or an inventor.”
Photo: Peter Lippman
Midori Connolly
Midori Connolly
C.E.O. & chief AVGirl, Pulse Staging & Events, San Diego, 35
Claim to fame: Connolly produced the industry’s first set of guidelines for sustainable audiovisual staging and co-chaired the audiovisual committee for the new APEX/ASTM Environmentally Sustainable Meeting Standards. She is recognized as a leader on the topic of “green A.V.,” traveling the world speaking and hosting hands-on tech labs.
Style signature: “I like to bring a little femme into the A.V./tech world. I call it ‘gic,’ a combination of geek and chic.” Connolly is now developing a line of AVGirl products—audiovisual accessories such as power strips and cord locks in a variety of bright colors.
Quick tip: Recycle batteries used at events. “They contribute about 88 percent of the total mercury and 50 percent of the cadmium in the municipal solid-waste stream.”
Major life goal: To compete as a professional athlete. “Sport as of yet undeclared.”
On Twitter: @AVGirlMidori
Photo: Alon David
Mary Dolaher
Mary Dolaher
C.E.O., IDG World Expo, Framingham, Massachusetts
To-do list: Dolaher oversees exhibition management company IDG’s annual expo events, including MacWorld, MacIT, Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3), Anime Expo, and Enterprise Mobile Next.
2011 highlight: E3 in June at the Los Angeles Convention Center occupied a million square feet and drew a whopping 45,000 attendees—“and that’s the show where we have growth limitations and we close off attendance, because we don’t want it to get too large,” says Dolaher.
Big innovation:
Bringing an insider event to the masses. Last year, Dolaher helped roll out E3 Insider, a Web portal that offers glimpses of the trade show floor to electronic entertainment fans unable to attend the show, which is open to industry pros only. With news anchors, game demos, and a so-called “heat-seeking” map that illustrated the most attended areas of the show floor, the portal was “like bringing Entertainment Tonight to the E3 Expo.”
Up next:
Dolaher will aim to revive the MacWorld Expo, which has seen decreasing attendance in recent years, by branding it as MacWorld/iWorld. “We’re having tremendous success in making [the show] the place to be if you’re an Apple enthusiast.”
On Twitter: @E3Expo
Photo: Dario Preger Photography
Lindsay Arell
Lindsay Arell
President, Arell Logic, Denver, 33
Launchpad: Arell started with the Colorado Convention Center in 2007, becoming one of the first sustainable program managers for a convention center. In 2009, she created her own firm that provides consulting on sustainability issues to SMG, a company that manages more than 220 venues worldwide, including the Colorado Convention Center, where she is still based.
Career highlight: Helping to develop sustainable practices for the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, including a bike-sharing program that led to the launch of Denver B-Cycle, one of the nation’s first city-wide bike-sharing programs. Arell was instrumental in getting two B-Cycle stations at the convention center.
Big innovation: In 2011, Arell developed SMG Green Impact, a comprehensive resource for the company’s facility managers to implement sustainable initiatives. The resource includes standards, best practices, and implementation guidelines, such as how to communicate with event attendees by placing signage at collection bins. Now she is consulting with SMG properties like Chicago’s McCormick Place and the Palm Springs Convention Center to apply the program.
Event philosophy: “It’s time to erase the line between a ‘regular’ event and a ‘green’ event by making all events sustainable.”
Photo: Andrew Arell, Rapture Collaborative Media
Lenny Talarico
Lenny Talarico
Director of events, MGM Resorts Events, Las Vegas, 48
Claim to fame: Talarico oversees the team that produces and designs both internal and revenue-generating events, and works with property sales teams to drive corporate business throughout the brand’s resorts.
Success story:
Oversaw double-digit increases in the company’s event business—in revenue and event volume (about 1,000 in 2011)—during the recession years, which struck Vegas with particular intensity.
Launchpad: His work as a singer and dancer led him to Las Vegas, where he eventually began his event career.
Career highlight: Developing and planning the grand opening of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas at CityCenter in 2009.
Style signature: “Stylish, entertaining, and organized with clearly defined objectives.”
Up next: Helping to rebrand Las Vegas for corporate clients again.
Best place to get inspired: Movies and live theater.
Major life goal: “I really believe giving back is the greatest gift, so I focus on doing what I can each day to ensure I leave people, places, and projects in a better condition than how I encountered them.”
On Twitter: @lennytalarico
Photo: View Finders Las Vegas
Hugo Thibault
Hugo Thibault
Communications director, L’Oréal Paris Canada, Montreal, 34
Launchpad: Thibault joined L’Oréal just one year ago and has already made a splash at L’Oréal-sponsored events like the Toronto International Film Festival and LG Fashion Week. His activations and pop-ups fuel L’Oréal’s social media presence. “As the biggest Facebook fan page in Canada, we need to create new content every week.”
Big innovation:
At TIFF this year, Thibault had a L’Oréal beauty correspondent reporting live from the red carpets. L’Oréal’s Facebook fans posted beauty questions for A-list celebrities and could watch the interviews online.
Career highlight:
“The 2011 win at the Boomerang Interactive Awards for our Facebook content strategy at Toronto’s Fashion Week.”
Style signature:
“Interactive and surprising. I want people that come to my events to have a story to tell their friends.”
Up next:
“Integrating virtual reality in one of our activations. It would be nice for our customer to interact with our spokespersons like Jennifer Lopez or Gwen Stefani.”
On Twitter: @hugo_thibault, @LOrealParisCAN
Photo: Julien Faugere
Hillary Harris
Hillary Harris
Executive director of special events, Warner Brothers Studios, Burbank, California
Big innovation: Bringing the resources of a major TV studio to bear on both studio and non-studio events on the lot. Harris makes use of 70 different craft departments for her events, while working around—and with—sets in a way that benefits both the live events and TV productions.
Launchpad: “In the ’80s, I started a catering firm called Cuisine/Cuisine. Little by little, I began to do more production and design work for clients, so I started Mixed Grille Productions. Warner Brothers was one of my clients, as they didn’t yet have a special events department. In 1993 they officially opened [that] division and brought me on board.”
Claim to fame: The 2000 Democratic National Convention, which included several huge events in one day: a governors’ breakfast, a 1,500-person rally, and a Bill Clinton reception on the West Wing set. Plus: a milestone birthday party for Ellen DeGeneres, the  Environmental Media Awards, and the 1,300-guest launch of the CW Network, showcasing 90 stars from 19 television shows.
Style signature: “Large-scale sophisticated fun that is on trend with Hollywood and pop culture.” Hidden talent: “I am a walking Rolodex for off-the-beaten-path food discoveries from San Diego to Santa Barbara, and even a few in other states and countries.”
Best place to get inspired: “In the screening room.”
On Twitter: @WBspecialevents
Photo: Courtesy of Hillary Harris
Gregory Boroff
Gregory Boroff
Vice president and director of development, Amfar, New York, 43
Launchpad: Following 10 years of planning and executing events in the for-profit sector, Boroff made the transition to nonprofit fund-raising in 1995, starting as an assistant and working his way up the ranks of City Harvest and the Food Bank for New York City. In 2009, he joined Amfar, “landing my dream job.”
Claim to fame: He oversees a portfolio of 11 international events that raise more than $20 million a year for AIDS research. That includes the Cinema Against AIDS benefit in Cannes, France—which brought in more than $10 million in 2011, making it the most successful fund-raiser in Amfar’s history—and the newly launched Inspiration gala series that extends the organization’s global footprint, with events taking place last year in Paris, Los Angeles, Sao Paolo, and New York.
Up next:
“Expanding Amfar events into new international markets like India, Morocco, and Argentina.”
Quick tip: “Imagine you’re a guest at your own event.”
Photo: Kevin Tachman
Dana Beatty
Dana Beatty
Director of floral and horticulture, the Venetian and the Palazzo, Las Vegas, 48
Launchpad: Beatty was hired by her hometown florist in Merritt Island, Florida, after the company saw pictures of the design concept she created for her own wedding almost three decades ago.
Big innovation: In addition to overseeing the daily operations of the exterior and interior landscape and gardens, the flower and decor arrangements for the entire resort, and events and weddings, she is responsible for creating million-dollar displays in the Palazzo’s Waterfall, Atrium & Gardens several times a year. In 2011, she worked with a team to create “Winter in Venice,” a holiday experience that included dozens of 10- to 20-foot snowflakes, 2,000 overhead lights across the exterior, and a 65-foot LED tree on top of a fountain in front of the Venetian.
On Twitter: @palazzolavegas
Photo: Jacob Andrzejczak, IS Photography/ImagesOfVegas.com
Barton G. Weiss
Barton G. Weiss
C.E.O., Barton G., Miami
Launchpad: Previously, Weiss worked as a professional ice dancer and a set and costume designer in New York. Twenty years later, he’s the biggest event name in South Florida. His company offers event production and management, off-site catering, and destination management. He also owns three restaurants and a hotel, the Villa by Barton G., inside the Versace Mansion. “Barton G. started on a whim. I had retired to Miami, and someone asked me to do a gala.”
Claim to fame: For the past 16 years, Weiss has done the NFL Commissioners Super Bowl party; this year, he built a house at the Indiana State Fairgrounds for the event. He’s also known for his work with corporate, social, and nonprofit events.
2011 highlight: During a recent event at Art Basel Miami Beach, Weiss created an actual forest in an airplane hangar.
On Twitter: @barton_g
Photo: Courtesy of Barton G.
Bill Heffernan
Bill Heffernan
Creative director, Heffernan Morgan Ronsley, Chicago
Claim to fame: Heffernan’s elegant aesthetic has set the decorative tone at galas for iconic organizations such as the Art Institute of Chicago and the Chicago Botanic Gardens. The firm he started in 1979 has merged with two other local firms to form a design collective with different price points, specialties, and points of view. In 2011, Heffernan was the lead designer of Chicago’s most high-profile spring function: a 900-guest tribute to Mayor Richard Daley, for which he employed an Andy Warhol-inspired look.
Got his start in events: “Giving away free flowers on the street.”
Style signature: “Dramatic good taste, well edited.”
Work philosophy: “Make it great or why bother?”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Branden Chapman
Branden Chapman
Vice president of production and process management, the Recording Academy, Los Angeles, 38
Claim to fame: Overseeing all live music initiatives for the Recording Academy, including the annual Grammy Week events and productions. While many award shows have struggled to stay relevant, the 2011 Grammys earned considerable buzz and their best ratings since 2001.
Launch pad: Volunteering for various charitable events when he first started his career in L.A. Work philosophy: “Set out to accomplish only what you’d be proud to have your name on.”
Hidden talent: Chapman says it’s spotting the potential in relationships, which has allowed him to surround himself with the best team of employees, vendors, and partners.
What’s next:
“Expanding Grammy-branded entertainment internationally. We have exciting projects in development in China, the U.K., and other international territories.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Charles Khabouth
Charles Khabouth
Founder and C.E.O., INK Entertainment, Toronto, 49
Launch pad: Since opening nightspots Club Z and Stilife in the 1980s, Khabouth has transformed Toronto’s hospitality industry. He helped put the entertainment district on the map, and introduced the city to his own brand of nightlife, complete with doormen, artfully designed interiors, and venues that serve a multitude of purposes.
Claim to fame: While Khabouth’s myriad properties, including Tattoo Rock Parlour, Ultra, and This Is London, appeal to a hip, young clientele, he also has corporate events in mind with in-house planning capabilities and large venues like Koolhaus and the Guvernment Complex, which houses eight separate spaces under one roof.
Career highlight: “My proudest achievement is the launch of the Bisha Hotel and Residence brand. Everything I have worked toward has led to this project.”
Hidden talent: “I believe that I sometimes have a crystal ball, as I have a knack for being able to see ahead of the curve and foresee new trends in the event world.”
Twitter: @CharlesKhabouth
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Andrea Sullivan
Andrea Sullivan
Founder, LeaderStrength Systems and BrainStrength Systems, Philadelphia
Launch pad: A background in organizational psychology inspired Sullivan to apply scientific principles to corporate training and management and found LeaderStrength Systems in 2000. In 2007, she began teaching meeting planners her secrets, presenting under the BrainStrength moniker.
Big innovation: “Most sessions involve a lot of sitting and listening. The brain really can’t take in information like that.” Shorter presentations combined with collaborative problem solving increase retention, along with stimuli like the smell of peppermint, dark chocolate, physical activities, and puzzles.
Career highlights: Sullivan presented at the International Association of Conference Centers’ annual conference in March on how food choices impact learning and retention.
Twitter: @BrainStrength
Photo: Mason Hipp
Brian Aaron
Brian Aaron
President, Aaron’s Catering, Miami, 30
Claim to fame: Many chefs experiment with molecular gastronomy, but Aaron uses these techniques and other cutting-edge preparations throughout his entire catering operation.
Launch pad: Aaron, who had a sales and marketing background, teamed up with his father to launch a paella catering company. After the chef quit, Aaron enrolled at Le Cordon Bleu, then went on to launch his own firm.
Big innovation: Creating a “molecular experience” for the masses, such as serving citrus orbs (edible capsules of orange juice and ginger) to 8,000 people at the 2011 Food Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival.
Signature dishes: Truffle mac-and-cheese lollipops, and a “caviar” bar featuring a variety of juices frozen with liquid nitrogen.
What’s next: Aaron recently launched his own molecular gastronomy food truck and has a reality show in the works.
Twitter: @Aarons_Catering
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Pablo Oliveira
Pablo Oliveira
President, Nüage Designs, Miami and New York, 33
Claim to fame: Oliveira brings a fashion-forward approach to custom event furnishings, working with the latest fabrics and color trends. Nüage uses embroidered organzas, silks, and hand-pleated fabrics to create beautiful and original looks for tables and chair coverings and offers a customizable line of modern lounge furniture.
Big innovation: “The marriage between our lounge furniture, linens, and accents which allows for a cohesive use of a theme or color throughout an entire event.”
Style signature: Mix and match prints in bold hues like berry red, plum, and dusty rose. The company also has a way with neutrals, using patterns and textures to add interest to shades of black, white, and nude.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Karla Dascal
Karla Dascal
President, Karla Conceptual Event Experiences, Miami
Launch pad: Dascal got her start in the 1990s with Roses by Karla, a floral import and delivery business. As demand for her arrangements grew, she expanded her services into event design and created RBK Productions, which evolved into Karla Conceptual Event Experiences in 2005.
Big innovation: Dascal worked with architect Rene Gonzalez to create the Space, an event venue that doubles as her headquarters in the Wynwood arts district. The unique location, which has won design awards, combines an outdoor palm and bamboo grove with sleek interiors.
Design philosophy: “Simple, elegant, and cutting-edge.”
Style signature: Dascal is known for clean lines, sculptural florals, and architecturally minded details, such as Frank Gehry-inspired pendant chandeliers and boxed floral centerpieces at the opening gala for the New World Center.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Javier Velarde
Javier Velarde
President and executive producer, Triton Productions, Miami, 43
Claim to fame: Big-name brands including Vogue, Turner Broadcasting, and HBO turn to Velarde’s company for splashy product launches, upfront parties, and fashion and award shows, among other events. Velarde prides himself on creating detail-oriented, immersive environments and handling complicated event logistics.
Launch pad: A background in sports marketing led to a job at Coca-Cola, working on big events like World Cup Soccer and the Olympics. “I fell in love with event planning, logistics, and the behind-the-scenes role of producing something large.” After serving as director of marketing for Latin America at Discovery Channel, he formed his own firm.
Career highlight: Producing an F-16 jet flyover at the 2010 and 2011 Sony Ericsson Open, the first for a tennis tournament other than the U.S. Open.
Twitter: @tritonevents
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Ira Levy
Ira Levy
President, Levy Lighting, New York, 47
Claim to fame: Levy marries artistic lighting designs with seamless installation and cutting-edge technology to create innovative products like motion-triggered projections.
Launch pad: At Stonybrook University, Levy got involved with the student-run concert committee, producing shows for acts including U2 and Eddie Murphy.
Career highlight: “Developing iShadow, my line of interactive bars. It’s one thing to create something that lasts four hours, but this was something I researched, developed, and built.”
Role models: Preston Bailey, Colin Cowie, and Richard Branson.
Favorite restaurant: The Palm in East Hampton.
Major life goal: “Pursue an artistic side to my career, just done as art.”
Twitter: @LevyLighting
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Sale Stojanovic
Sale Stojanovic
Co-owner, 3B Productions, Miami, 40
Launch pad: Stojanovic’s first multimedia company, Creative Web Studio, handled film projects for various clients, who eventually hired him to work on their events. Since then, he has worked on high-concept gatherings for Maxim, MTV, and MAC Cosmetics, among others.
Claim to fame: Stojanovic (along with Alain Perez of EventStar) created Funkshion Fashion Week, Miami’s biannual alternative fashion showcase. Funkshion has attracted labels including Heatherette, Stella McCartney, and Yves Saint Laurent. “It is very interesting and challenging, as you have about 10 to 13 sponsors and about 20 designers you need to accommodate in one venue and still be true to their branding needs.”
Style signature: Custom-made decor. “That is the only way to make an event different and have that ‘wow’ factor.”
Photo: George Achi
David Stark
David Stark
President and creative director, David Stark Design and Production, New York, 42
Claim to fame: Clients such as Target, the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, and the New York City Opera request his colorful, larger-than-life installations, which combine an artistic sensibility with strong brand marketing. Stark has built a reputation for using recycled materials and items that can be repurposed. “I want things to become icons, to have a life beyond the short-term nature of events.”
Career highlight: Creating large sculptures made of $1 million of donated office supplies, clothing, and food for the 2008 Robin Hood Foundation benefit.
Design philosophy: “We are all about invention. I don’t want people saying, ‘There’s David Stark doing that thing again.’ We bow to clients who are collaborators and can embrace a little wackiness and risk-taking.”
Favorite place to get inspired: The hardware store.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Rehan Choudhry
Rehan Choudhry
Director of entertainment and special events, the Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, 31
Launch pad: Looking for a career change from I.T. consulting, Choudhry got his M.B.A. in marketing and was recruited out of grad school by Harrahs Entertainment. He became interested in festivals and city-wide events, eventually founding the Food Network Atlantic City Food & Wine Festival and a series of other high-profile events.
Career highlight: Producing the Cosmopolitan’s showy New Year’s Eve weekend launch, with its Jay-Z/Coldplay concert.
Big innovation: “Injecting a music-festival model into a resort has created a social and interactive guest experience that has had an overwhelming response in the city.”
Childhood dream job: “Rock star. Every day I get to work with my team to pull together these big events of rock-star proportions.”
Twitter: @rehanc
Photo: Jeff Green
Youngsong Martin
Youngsong Martin
Founder and chief designer, Wildflower Linen, Buena Park, California, 52
Claim to fame: A longtime fashion designer and textile specialist, Martin recognized an empty niche for higher-style, higher-quality table linens and chair covers.
Career highlight: “I try not to let pride get in the way of reality. But I do take pleasure in hearing acclaimed event planners acknowledge I’ve redefined ‘designer linens’ in the rental field.”
Style signature: “Fashion-forward luxury.”
Childhood dream job: Opera singer.
What’s next: “Selling trend-driven, Youngsong Martin-brand fabrics to interior designers, while also extending my company’s product line with eco-friendly, 100-percent-soy ‘Wildflower Candles.’”
Twitter: @WildflowerLinen
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Tara Back
Tara Back
President, Jack Morton Worldwide, New York, 42
Launch pad: Back has more than a decade’s experience at the industry giant, in leadership positions on two continents. In 2008, she was named executive vice president and managing director of New York and spearheaded a dramatic renewal of the office. As president, she is in charge of Jack Morton’s New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago operations.
Big innovation: “Restructuring Jack Morton around creative ideas.”
Career highlights: Producing the opening and closing ceremonies for the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne and the 2010 Samsung 3-D LED TV launch, the biggest product launch in Samsung history and the largest event held in Times Square, outside of New Year’s Eve.
Style signature: “Black, with a reveal or edge of some kind.”
Photo: Sasha Nialla
Keith Baptista
Keith Baptista
Senior vice president of production, managing director, KCD Digital, New York, 41
Claim to fame: Baptista has created innovative brand campaigns and events for some of the biggest names in fashion, Louis Vuitton, Chanel, and Hermès, to name a few.
Launch pad: Baptista started producing photo shoots at Interview magazine after college, which led to event production for different designers.
Big innovation: In December 2010, KCD launched a digital division run by Baptista and Rachna Shah. This arm of the company will focus on social media and all forms of online campaigns, positioning KCD as a one-stop shop for traditional and digital PR. Early projects include the online launch of Nicola Formichetti’s first collection for Mugler, which included a Web-only video and new track from Lady Gaga.
Photo: Dietmar Busse
Barbara Hershenhorn
Barbara Hershenhorn
President, Party Barbara Co., Toronto
Launch pad: Before she became “Party Barbara,” Hershenhorn was an interior designer. After meeting Wayne Clarkson (former director of the Toronto International Film Festival) in the mid-’80s, she began producing events for TIFF and has continued to produce events for the festival, as well as other high-profile clients including Casino Niagara, TIFF Bell Lightbox, the World Conference on AIDS, and Luminato.
Style signature: “Understated elegance, with a touch of the whimsical.”
Claim to fame: Producing and reinventing TIFF’s opening night gala for 25 years. Hershenhorn and her team have a knack for interpreting themes through striking decor, like 2009’s underwater-meets-Eden party for Creation, or turning the Liberty Grand into an ice rink for Score: A Hockey Musical.
Hidden talent: “I missed my calling as a detective.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Jeffry Roick
Jeffry Roick
Director, McNabb Roick Events, Toronto, 45
Claim to fame: When it comes to corporate events, Roick has all the bases covered. He creates elegant party decor for big-name clients such as Hugo Boss and Chanel through McNabb Roick, offers modern rentals through his companies Signature Party Rentals and Eventals, and is the managing partner of the Carlu, a landmark venue from the 1930s.
Launch pad: Roick developed his event planning skills consulting at Daniel et Daniel, before he was hired by Jim McNabb in 1987 to work in New York on a variety of international events. He went on to start his own firm Roick and Associates, and merged with McNabb in 1992.
Big innovation: The Carlu restoration. “Being in the event industry for many years, I knew what elements were missing, and the desire to have everything housed in one venue was very appealing.”
Twitter: @mcnabbroick
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Alain Perez
Alain Perez
President, EventStar Structures Corp., Miami, 39
Claim to fame: Perez’s company creates unique permanent and semi-permanent structures with its in-house team of designers, engineers, architects, and fabricators. Perez is also a co-founder of Funkshion Fashion Week.
Launch pad: “I began at Diamonette Party Rentals as a part-time job while in high school.”
Big innovation: EventStar constructed Audi’s Art of Progress Pavilion, a 45,000-square-foot temporary space for the premiere of Audi’s A8 model at Art Basel 2009. The award-winning pavilion contained an auditorium, art exhibition space, and an oceanfront outdoor lounge.
Proudest moment: “Building the first temporary field hospital for Project Medishare within 48 hours of the earthquake in Haiti.”
Twitter: @eventstar_
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Adrian Segar
Adrian Segar
President, Conferences That Work, Brattleboro, Vermont
Claim to fame: The author of Conferences That Work: Creating Events That People Love created “participant-driven” conferences, which replace long lectures with short attendee presentations on topics of the group’s choosing. He designed and facilitated EventCamp East Coast.
Launch pad: Earning a Ph.D. in particle physics and teaching computer science meant attending dull conferences. Segar started producing the kinds of events he wanted to attend and asked others for input, launching the peer-driven concept.
A-ha moment: In the 1980s, the rapid rise of personal computers surprised the industry. “There were no experts; that’s what catalyzed it. The only way we could figure things out was to get together and talk about it.”
What’s next: Segar will produce Exhibit Camp in Washington in August, replicating the EventCamp format for trade show managers.
Twitter: @ASegar
Photo: New England Studio, Keene, NH
Barbara Lynch
Barbara Lynch
Chef and owner, Barbara Lynch Gruppo, Boston, 47
Launch pad: “My home economics teacher showed me the world of fine dining in high school, and I have known I wanted to be a chef ever since.”
Claim to fame: The brains and talent behind five restaurants, one cocktail bar, a catering company, and a demonstration kitchen/cookbook store, Lynch has taken the Boston culinary scene by storm, most recently with the unveiling of her upscale, critically hailed restaurant Menton. In 2003, the James Beard Foundation named her best chef in the Northeast.
Big idea: “Bringing three restaurants to one location in Fort Point.”
Role model: “Daniel Boulud.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Julie Shanklin
Julie Shanklin
President and C.E.O., Syzygy Event Productions, Washington, 52
Claim to fame: Shanklin’s boutique event design firm produces roughly 400 events annually with 25 full-time staffers. “We are not trying to compete with the giants in town; we want our style to be custom, not cookie cutter.”
Launch pad:
“Working in a flower shop in college, a local congressman’s wife saw my work at a party and asked if I could travel with her to the Democratic National Convention in 1992. I gladly accepted her invitation, and the next day I started my own company. I started with 10 events in New York for the convention.”
Work philosophy: Last year Shanklin donated more than $200,000 worth of business to charity events, either offering her services for free or at cost. Syzygy’s modern aesthetic could be seen at the Washington Ballet Jeté Society’s edgy Dance Party and the Humane Society’s sleek Fashion for Paws runway show.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Carleen Cappelletti
Carleen Cappelletti
President, Bounce-AEG, Los Angeles
Launch pad: Cappelletti started at the Television Academy and Emmy awards, where she moved into special events because “no one else wanted the job.” She went on to produce events like the Governors Ball, and later the MOCA gala.
Career highlight: “I was hired to design, develop, and produce an event in Russia. I ended up taking 500 jaded A-listers to Russia, kept them uniquely entertained over four days, and all without losing any of them, or my mind, in the process.”
Hidden talent: “Stamina. I just finished my 14th marathon.”
Mentor: “Merv Griffin, whose company I helped run for a number of years. For his career longevity, his sincere passion for his work, and his constantly fresh take on a broad range of projects.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Cara Kleinhaut
Cara Kleinhaut
Owner, Caravents Inc. Event Production & Design, Los Angeles and New York
Claim to Fame: Creative, bicoastal, full-service event production for clients like Elle and In Style.
Career highlight: Producing Target’s Party for Good, a 4,000-person event built over six days in an empty warehouse in Manhattan, where attendees packed more than 150,000 meals in three hours to benefit Food Bank for N.Y.C. and Feeding America.
Big innovation: “Our interactive photo montage wall, never seen before in an event. This is not your average photo booth hooked up to a projection wall. Our on-site graphic designers mix photos live, as a D.J. mixes music, and layer with special effects and graphics to create an evolving, morphing photo collage wall.”
Best place to get inspired: “Paris. Food, fashion, people, art, culture. Need I say more?”
Twitter: @Caravents
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Craig Waldman
Craig Waldman
Owner, 15/40 Productions Ltd., Hawthorne, California, 49
Launch pad: In the late 1980s, Waldman founded a company that produced events primarily for the hospitality industry. After developing strong relationships with major hotel chains, he entered the Las Vegas market, working with the casino tournament and special event departments to create high-roller experiences and events.
Big innovation: “The transformation of the mundane red carpet arrival into a creative piece of art. Eight years ago, we were asked to get into the arrival market by a client and I never would have expected it to turn into what it has become today. Now we produce over 80 arrivals a year.”
Favorite gadget: “I don’t know what I would do without my BlackBerry. It’s sick.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Lynn McGhee & Frank Clemente
Lynn McGhee & Frank Clemente
Chief creative officer and senior designer/producer, 50, and vice president of creative arts and senior designer/producer, 49, conceptBAIT, St. Petersburg, Florida
Launch pad: While working in fashion (McGhee) and interior design (Clemente), “We started to experience the frequent requests to pull together parties for our clients,” says Clemente (right). “We couldn’t find anything out there that met our high-quality creative standards, so we began doing things ourselves.”
Claim to fame: conceptBAIT not only designs award-winning florals and event decor, the firm creates everything in-house, including flooring, and furniture.
Big innovation: “Our latest is the new Sparkle drape, which is available in seven amazing colors and when illuminated seems like a giant, slippery wall of water,” says McGhee.
Twitter: @conceptBAIT
Photo: Limelight Photography/www.stepintothelimelight.com
Tricia Costello
Tricia Costello
President, Fresh Wata, Las Vegas, 35
Launch pad: “I started young, with my mother’s catering company, father’s restaurant, and my sister Kay Dalton, who was flying me around at a young age teaching me the ropes doing events for Fox, Paramount, and MTV.”
Claim to fame: Event production with a clever, techy twist, and an inventory of unique rental items.
Style signature: “The perfect package: a shot of stylish design, an entertaining slice of interactive branding and a splash of technology.”
Big innovation: “I loved the large video projection ceiling we rigged above the dance floor in Miami at the American Airlines Arena; the overall design at the Sprint EVO phone launch that combined a center floating hologram, 81 plasmas, and 3-D curtains; and the custom MapQuest 57 Chevy air hockey table and gas pump computer stations.”
Favorite gadget: “My Sprint BlackBerry connected to Dr. Dre beats.”
Major life goal: Designing a boutique hotel or a Madonna concert.
Next project: An iPad wall.
Twitter: @FreshWataTricia
Photo: Bryan Hainer
Philip Dufour
Philip Dufour
Principal, Dufour & Co. Productions, Arlington, Virginia, 49
Launch pad: “From the time I was in high school, I seemed to be the one who coordinated events. That interest in events, and politics, brought me to Washington through campaign work.”
Claim to fame: In addition to owning his own catering company, over the years Dufour has worked on the Hill, for a Cabinet secretary, and in protocol at the State Department, which ultimately led to his role as social secretary for Al and Tipper Gore during the Clinton administration. Now his company produces and manages events for clients like Huffington Post, BBC America, and MSNBC’s White House Correspondents’ Association dinner after-party.
Big innovation: “Making the re-opening of the Georgetown Safeway into one of the most talked-about events of 2010.”
Hidden talents: “I am a pretty good calligrapher and flower arranger. I have put together many a floral arrangement and hand-done many a place card in a last-minute crisis.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Marlo Fogelman
Marlo Fogelman
Principal, Marlo Marketing/Communications, Boston, 39
Launch pad: A former attorney with a masters degree in international relations, Fogelman left law for PR, and in 2004 opened her own full-service PR and marketing agency.
Claim to fame: Fogelman’s social media-savvy firm has created strategic, integrated PR and marketing campaigns for clients such as Starbucks Coffee, Kimpton Hotels, and the James Beard Foundation.
Proudest achievement: “Weathering the recent economic downturn while keeping our team [of 15] fully intact.”
Big innovation: “Recognizing the need and value of what would become mainstream social media when we launched our monthly newsletter, Marlo Monthly, in January of 2005. It was our way of connecting our clients directly with the end user in a fun-to-read, quirky voice. We then launched m.blog and m.social to continually position MM/C on top of trends, culture, events, and all things cutting-edge.”
Twitter: @marlomarketing
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Larry Abel & Raymond McCallister
Larry Abel & Raymond McCallister
Partners, Abel McCallister Designs L.L.C., Los Angeles and New York
Launch pad: Abel (right) was decor chairman of his high school prom, moving on to campus events in college and later starting the business. McCallister “freelanced for a roommate’s event company once and was hooked.”
Claim to fame: Producing experiential installations for big brands including L’Oréal, People, and Netflix.
Career highlight: Building an Oprah Winfrey Show set entirely out of Godiva chocolate with a seven-day lead time.
Style signature: “Creative interpretation of bringing a brand to life in a unique way that engages the consumer without feeling like a trade show, or feeling forced,” Abel says. “Simple but impactful statements,” McCallister says.
Childhood dream job: Abel: “This is it.” McCallister: “I always wanted to be a superhero. They always had cool cars, awesome costumes, and don’t forget the cape. And they always lived in the coolest environments.”
Twitters: @RMcCallister, @larryabel
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Tom Webster
Tom Webster
Partner and creative director, Mother New York, 48
Claim to fame: Webster and his partners have run cutting-edge projects for the award-winning creative agency’s experiential division. He has put big-name chefs in food trucks and orchestrated a public stunt in Times Square to promote video game Dance Central with 600 dancers, live performances by Lady Sovereign and Ne-Yo, and video on six LED screens. Mother also produced Virgin Mobile’s activations during Lady Gaga’s recent tours.
Style signature: “Deep, strategic thinking.”
Career highlight: Illuminating the entire southern exterior of the Standard Hotel with a rainbow of LED lights for Target’s “Kaleidoscopic Fashion Spectacular,” a public fashion show involving a performance by 66 dancers to an original score.
Hidden talent: “I’m pretty badass with a yo-yo.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Christopher Pegg
Christopher Pegg
Lighting department manager, Westbury National Show Systems, Toronto, 47
Claim to fame: Westbury offers the latest in lighting technology, as well as staging, video, and audiovisual production for some of Toronto’s biggest events, including LG Fashion Week, Nuit Blanche, and the Power Ball.
Launch pad: “My start in event lighting came with an invitation to light a fashion show by friends from concert touring connections. I realized it was possible to create high drama even with straight white light.”
Big innovation: “Bringing digital lighting into focus at my company and in this city.”
Career highlight: For the opening-night gala for TIFF Bell Lightbox, Westbury and Party Barbara Co. created an extensive lighting installation and multiple video projections that illuminated the corner of King and John streets.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Michelle Mahoney
Michelle Mahoney
Director of worklife, Leo Burnett Chicago
Claim to fame: Managing seven to 10 events at a time throughout the year, Mahoney designs functions that always incorporate the creative agency’s vision of corporate social responsibility. Events have ranged from an internal candlelit cocktail reception to celebrate Earth Hour to a Thailand-themed brunch in the office building’s lobby, followed by a fund-raising ping-pong tournament upstairs.
Major life goal: “To meet the 10 billionaires who reside in Chicago. I’d love to learn their philanthropy philosophy and work with them to change some of America’s major problems. I have some tangible ideas that include amazing events.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Marina Birch
Marina Birch
Principal, Birch Design Studio, Chicago
Claim to fame: With a background in interior design, Birch applies her unique training to developing ornate, whimsical event looks for such organizations as the Chicago Botanic Garden. For a recent benefit, she employed a moonlit-garden theme replete with woodland nymphs who pranced around and encouraged guests to bid in the silent auction. Birch designed the intricate costumes.
Work philosophy: “Be present and involved in every step of each event. My father once told me, ‘The best fertilizer is the farmer’s shadow,’ and I live by that every day.”
Hidden talent: “Rock climbing.”
Twitter: @marinabirch
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Bryan Rafanelli
Bryan Rafanelli
Founder, president, C.E.O., Rafanelli Events, Boston
Launch pad: “This really prominent, smart, successful, and über-respected couple, Stephen and Roberta S. Weiner, took a chance on me.” Rafanelli launched his firm in 1996, producing just three events a year. Now the company has offices in four cities and produces roughly 100 events annually, which includes consulting on branding and fund-raising strategy as well as creating drop-dead decor.
Claim to fame: While he’s been hailed by media outlets both local and national (Town & Country, Modern Bride, and The Wall Street Journal among them), Rafanelli was propelled into the national spotlight in July when he produced Chelsea Clinton and Marc Mezvinsky’s wedding in Rhinebeck, New York. Rafanelli had produced several fund-raisers for the mother of the bride over the past decade.
Proudest achievement: “Providing more than 100 people with a nice place to work, and a good company to do business with.”
Major life goal: “To be in two places at once.”
Design philosophy: “Learn to dream big and know when to edit.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Arthur Backal
Arthur Backal
C.E.O., Backal Hospitality Group, New York, 49
Claim to fame: Owner of event management company State of the Art Enterprises and Backal Hospitality Group, industry veteran Backal has managed more than 20 venues, including the Plaza and the Waldorf-Astoria.
Big innovation: His latest venture, Apella, is a high-tech, high-style meeting space that dispels the idea of a bland, corporate conference center. Backal played an important role in developing many aspects of the venue, including its state-of-the-art technology, branding, amenities, and smaller details like staffing uniforms.
What’s next: Backal plans to keep the event planning and production side of his business going strong while opening more meeting and event spaces in and around New York.
Twitter: @ArthurBackal
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Lara McCulloch-Carter
Lara McCulloch-Carter
Chief brand storyteller, Ready2Spark, Toronto, 35
Big innovation: A former agency brand strategist who now runs her own consulting company, McCulloch-Carter is at the forefront of social media for the event industry. She founded EventProfs, a worldwide community of event professionals who post under the #eventprofs hashtag on Twitter. It created a new form of dialogue throughout the industry and spawned a series of face-to-face conferences created by members called EventCamp.
Claim to fame: Major companies including Unilever, Shell, and Cadbury-Adams have turned to her for brand strategy and other services. She also runs a popular blog about marketing and the event industry, and maintains a busy international speaking schedule.
Favorite apps: “Evernote, to clip interesting articles and images; Informant HD, the most extensive to-do app Ive found; and TripIt. to keep track of my travel schedule, hotel and flight confirmations, and plans.”
Twitter: @ready2spark
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Lee Kite
Lee Kite
Director of distinguished events, American Cancer Society, Illinois Division, Chicago
Claim to fame: Kite plans the American Cancer Society’s annual Discovery Ball, which has consistently exceeded its ambitious fund-raising goals by raking in more than $2 million for the past three years. Having employed IML devices at the 2009 gala, she was the first local planner to use electronic bidding. Kite also serves as a national event leader and trainer for the society, helping to inspire and shape colleagues across the country.
Her day in three words: “Start your engines.”
Best place to get inspired: “Just pay attention. Inspiration is everywhere.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
André Wells
André Wells
Owner, Events by André Wells, Washington, 38
Launch pad: Something of a man about town in Washington, Wells started as a buyer for the May company, became a meeting planner, and in 2004 launched his full-service event production firm.
Claim to fame: Wells has become one of the top planners in town, producing roughly 80 events annually in his signature lush style for the likes of BET, Capitol File, Dell, and members of Congress.
Proudest achievement: “I thrill myself in the delight of helping others. I have had many opportunities to help so many corporations, associations, and individuals achieve their targeted goals.”
Design philosophy: “I am very into details, aesthetics, and functionality. I think something should not only look good, but it has to work. It needs to provide a function.”
Hidden talent: “If the band doesn’t show up, I can sing.”
Twitter: @AndreWells
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
King Dahl
King Dahl
Executive director of event design, MGM Resorts Events, Las Vegas, 49
Launch pad: Dahl began as a prop designer and fabricator in 1982 with Cheryl Fish at It’s the Main Event in Southern California. In 1992, he began King Dahl Event Design at the Malibu Conference Center.
Claim to fame: Since taking the role of leading the design and sales teams at MGM Resorts Events in 2003, he designs and produces more than 700 events per year with his team of 50.
Style signature: “Large, dramatic productions.”
Design philosophy: “I believe in 100 percent collaboration with my team, whether in the studio or with my creative partners from all disciplines of event production. I speak to groups throughout the world on building a high-performing event team, and I live by the principles of empowerment and collaboration. I never design totally alone.”
Role models: Miles Davis and Pablo Picasso, for the way they kept reinventing themselves and their styles, “always looking forward, never back.”
Twitter: @kingdahl
Photo: Kelly McKeon
Maneesh Goyal
Maneesh Goyal
Founder and president, MKG, New York, 36
Claim to fame: Goyal’s experiential agency has stepped up its game over the past year with a new SoHo office and a wide range of events that incorporate social media and cutting-edge technology, such as the architecturally mapped video projections for Ralph Lauren, and Delta’s fan zone in Madison Square Park, which doubled the airline’s Facebook followers in one day.
Launch pad: “I finished grad school, moved to New York, and was working at a great nonprofit. But I had this sinking feeling that if I didn’t change something, I would have a job as opposed to a lifestyle for the rest of my life. I did some soul-searching to figure out what makes me tick and all the things that go into events--logistics, planning, creativity, drama, putting out fires--define me.”
What’s next: “Deepening our West Coast presence, including further penetration of the entertainment industry.”
Twitter: @thisismkg
Photo: Dave Lieberman
Paul Scott
Paul Scott
General manager, Walt Disney World Swan and Dolphin Hotel, Lake Buena Vista, Florida
Claim to fame: Formerly Starwood Hotels and Resorts’ North American vice president of food and beverage, Scott came to the Swan and Dolphin in 2009, raising the hotel’s meeting and convention events. For the 2010 International Pow Wow, a travel conference, he transformed one of the property’s courtyards into an Italian-themed theater, with surrounding guest-room balconies as stages for an intimate opera concert.
Big innovation: Wanting to get in on some of the action during Epcot’s International Food & Wine Festival, Scott launched the Food & Wine Classic in 2010, drawing crowds to the Swan and Dolphin for a weekend of live music, tastings, and seminars.
Work philosophy: “I believe in the balance between accountability and fun. If you have one, I find it is best to have the other.”
Photo: Courtesy of TJM Communications, Inc
Liz Neumark
Liz Neumark
C.E.O. and founder, Great Performances, New York, 52
Launch pad: Trying to make ends meet as a photographer, Neumark founded Great Performances in 1979 as a staffing service for private parties. It evolved into an award-winning, full-service catering company with a 60-acre organic farm and nonprofit that promotes childhood nutrition.
Style signature: 100 Mile Menus, which source ingredients near New York City.
Career highlight: “Making a farm before the green movement.”
Hidden talent: Boxing.
What’s next: Launching a food truck, releasing a cookbook, and expanding culinary education programs for New York City children.
Twitter: @GPfood
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Jennifer Blumin
Jennifer Blumin
President, Skylight Group, New York, 34
Claim to fame: Blumin has built a reputation for transforming underused spaces into premier event venues. Her projects include penthouse-turned-event space Sky Studios and Skylight West, a formerly abandoned parking garage.
Career highlight: Launching Skylight One Hanson in the former Williamsburg Savings Bank, a Brooklyn landmark. “It is an icon of the city’s past and it was an honor to blow the dust off and bring it back.”
Work philosophy: “Fly by the seat of my pants.”
What’s next: Blumin wants Skylight Group to become a one-stop industry resource for event planners, not only for its three properties, but for venue and vendor recommendations.
Twitter: @jenblumin, @skylightnyc
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Rick Davis
Rick Davis
President, Amaryllis, Washington, 44
Launch pad: “I got my degree in greenhouse management, moved to Washington, and the closest thing I could find to do was floral design.”
Claim to fame: Davis joined Amaryllis in its inaugural year in 1989, and took over the ownership in 2002. Today a full-service floral and event design firm, Amaryllis produces roughly 350 events annually for clients like Exxon Mobile.
Proudest achievement: “Being able to work in the White House.”
Hidden talent: “Raising Heritage breed animals on my farm.”
Big idea: At an ISES luncheon years ago, Davis opted to include live baby ducklings in a spring garden tablescape, a move that he still gets comments about today.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Tom Bussey
Tom Bussey
Founding partner, Production Glue, New York, 41
Launch pad: “I was too shy to dance as a kid in middle school, so I set up the speakers and one thing led to another.”
Claim to fame: Brands turn to Bussey and his team when they need to bring complicated ideas and designs to life, as well as for set design and execution, technical direction, and other services. Projects include the Virgin Galactic launch in the Mojave Desert, a holiday pop-up installation for Bank of America, and the opening party for the Hearst Tower.
Career highlight: “Time and again we hear, ‘We’re so happy Production Glue is part of this project,’ from production partners, venues, and crew. Client praise is important, but hearing that from other integral people involved makes me incredibly proud.”
Best place to get inspired: “It’s that very first brainstorm/pitch meeting, where limitations aren’t part of the conversation and conceptive creativity reigns. Navigating uncharted territory keeps me coming back for more.”
Childhood dream job: Astronaut. “I almost came full circle working on the Virgin Galactic SpaceShip Two launch.”
Twitter: @gluetom
Photo: Courtesy of production glue
Travis Threlkel
Travis Threlkel
Chief creative officer, co-founder, Obscura Digital, San Francisco, 38
Claim to fame: Obscura specializes in impactful and immersive branded environments created with the latest technologies, from architectural and video mapping, to interactive displays and 3-D cameras. Recent projects include projecting video onto the Guggenheim Museum and Sydney Opera House for YouTube, and creating a holographic touch screen for Heineken.
Launch pad: “I started doing projection installations as a teenager and got more and more obsessed with it. My first professional job was really an art installation for an award party, and that just kicked it off.”
Not-so-hidden talent: Threlkel is a former guitarist for neo-psychedelic band the Brian Jonestown Massacre.
Design philosophy: “I should be impressed by the project, or something’s wrong.”
Photo: Rien Van Rijthoven
Dennis Remer
Dennis Remer
Production designer and account representative, Frost, Chicago
Claim to fame: Combining intricate lighting schemes with audiovisual tropes ranging from videos to atmospheric projections, Remer has created immersive environments at big-name events such as Macy’s Glamorama.  Remer has an innate skill for quick, efficient work. For the Joffrey Ballet’s Couture and Cocktails benefit, Remer and his team had less than three hours to erect a fully built-out runway in the lobby of the Palmer House Hilton, and less than an hour to dismantle it.
Signature style: “Theatrical and transformative. Over the top, but never out of control.”
Hidden talent: “Don’t challenge me to a dance-off.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Isabel Chattas & Sandra Novas
Isabel Chattas & Sandra Novas
Co-founder and chief operating officer, and co-founder and chief creative officer, Siinc Agency, Miami
Launch pad: Former media buyer Novas (right) partnered with Chattas, who handled marketing for several companies including IMG, in 2008 to launch Siinc Agency, which offers event design, production, and management to big-name clients including Nokia, Audi, Discovery Networks, and Microsoft.
Big innovation: Siinc collaborated on the concept and design, and handled event management for Audi’s Art of Progress Pavilion during Art Basel 2009.
Style signature: Chattas: “Clean, easy, problem solving.” Novas: “Sophisticated, whimsical, chic.”
Career highlight: “Fighting for Grace Jones to perform at the Florida Room for a client event that blew the house down and had the best guest list in town in 2009 and since,” Chattas says.
Twitter: @ichattas
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
David Michael Rich
David Michael Rich
Senior vice president, strategy and planning/worldwide, George P. Johnson Experience Marketing, Boston
Launch pad: “I was a professional magician in theaters, night clubs, restaurants, trade shows, and on TV in my late teens and early 20s. It’s given me a way of thinking about how to engineer experiences to move audiences to action that’s been invaluable.”
Claim to fame: Rich began working for George P. Johnson, one of the country’s largest event marketing firms, in 1999, and Cisco, Motorola, and I.B.M. are among his clients. On the road 50- to 90-percent of the year, Rich is also a frequent speaker, whose engagements include being a moderator at the Forbes Insight C.M.O. program on Engagement Marketing, guest lecturing at Columbia Business School, and speaking at dozens of event and marketing-related conferences.
Proudest achievement: “Building the first and largest strategic marketing practice in the event industry, and through that helping our client I.B.M. win the first-ever EX Award for Best Business-to-Business Event Marketing program.”
Twitter: @richexpmarkting
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
David Rockwell
David Rockwell
Founder and C.E.O., Rockwell Group, New York, 52
Claim to fame: Rockwell’s award-winning architecture and design firm focuses on a diverse array of high-profile projects. Recent work includes Andaz Wall Street and the Cosmopolitan Hotel, staging for the 2010 Academy Awards, and the sets for the Broadway show Catch Me If You Can.
Launch pad: “It all began when I was quite young, when my brothers and I would create fantasy Halloween environments and magic shows in our backyard and garage.”
Design philosophy: “I always make sure my designs foster connections, push boundaries, explore new materials and techniques, and embrace both handcraft and state-of-the-art technology.
What’s next: Current and upcoming projects include the Nobu Hotel in Las Vegas, Untitled restaurant at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and W Hotels in Paris and Singapore.
Photo: Blandon Belushin
Robert Wennett
Robert Wennett
President, UIA Management, Miami, 50
Claim to fame: Wennett has made a career out of conceiving and developing urban environments, including New York’s meatpacking district and Dupont Circle in Washington. His latest project, 1111 Lincoln Road, is a parking garage/minimalist art piece designed by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron.
Big innovation: While the decidedly industrial space houses high-end retail shops and provides parking, the building’s dedicated top-floor event space has become one of the hottest spots to throw a party in Miami.
Style signature: “Quality design.”
What’s next: “Bringing South Beach to the next level.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Elizabeth Henderson
Elizabeth Henderson
Chief sustainability strategist, Meeting Change, Calgary
Launch pad: After a stint as director of corporate social responsibility for Meeting Professionals International, Henderson joined with a partner in 2010 to form Meeting Change, which helps companies implement sustainable practices in meetings and others parts of their business.
A-ha moment: After reading a book about virtual games, Henderson realized they were an exciting and green way to engage attendees. “I thought, ‘I bet we could apply this to a conference. They can get a little boring.’”
Big innovation: As chair of the Green Meetings Industry Council’s 2011 conference, Henderson created “Game On,” an app- and Web-based game for the 253 on-site and 60 remote participants, in which randomly chosen teams competed to solve meeting sustainability challenges.
What’s next: Henderson will chair the G.M.I.C.’s 2012 conference and build on the gaming tool, which garnered nearly 20,000 pageviews.
Twitter: @ehenderson
Photo: Magelle's Photography
Rita Gutekanst
Rita Gutekanst
Co-owner, Limelight--Food Illuminated, Chicago
Claim to fame: Working with business partner Marguerite Lytle, Gutekanst brings upscale, farm-fresh fare to high-profile events ranging from Lollapalooza to the Steppenwolf Gala.
Proudest achievement: “Catering Obama’s election night in Grant Park in 2008.”
Childhood dream job: “Country-singing superstar. But I can’t sing. And I’m not Southern.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Marc Hall
Marc Hall
Principal, Marc Hall Design, Boston, 53
Launch pad: In 1987, Hall began working as head designer for a floral boutique on Newbury Street, where he produced small parties. He says of the experience, “I was hooked.” Hall moved to the city’s premier florist, Winston Flowers, as creative director in 2003, and then launched his own event and garden design firm just last year.
Proudest achievement: “One of them was being part of the design team to produce the wedding of Chelsea Clinton and Marc Mezvinsky.”
Big idea: “To launch Marc Hall Design, a comprehensive design firm that conceptualizes every aesthetic either inside or outside, where people enjoy and celebrate life’s moments.”
Major life goal: “I just achieved it. I married the man I love.”
Photo: Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Michael Nedeau
Michael Nedeau
President/C.O.O., PBD Events, Braintree, Massachusetts, 38
Launch pad: “I started at Party by Design in 1995 when I was looking for a studio to create sculpture and paintings in.” Today the firm, now known as PBD Events, produces roughly 400 events annually for clients like Cisco Systems and TV show Style Boston.
Claim to fame: Last year, Nedeau produced high-profile events including The Fighter’s hometown premiere, as well as the multi-venue I.C.A. Gala.
Design philosophy: “Keep the design simple and let the lighting, texture, and shapes create valuable impact. Bring in pops of color through botanicals or objects d’art.”
What’s next: “We are expanding our custom offerings, and are building new design collections twice a year.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Dan Mathieu
Dan Mathieu
Co-owner, Max Ultimate Food, Boston, 52
Launch pad: After working on events in the ’80s in Los Angeles, Mathieu launched East Meets West Catering in Boston before selling it in the ’90s to go into restaurants. He returned to catering in 2001, launching Max Ultimate Food with partner Neal Balkowitsch. Today the firm caters roughly 400 events annually.
Claim to fame: “Max is known for innovation in food and presentation. We tend to be the catering company people come to when they are looking for an event that is not traditional and where you can expect the unexpected.”
Proudest achievement: “Creating Kids Can Cook, an after-school cooking program.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Jeff Hurt
Jeff Hurt
Director of education and engagement, Velvet Chainsaw Consulting, Dallas
Claim to fame: In addition to co-founding the EventCamp series of participant-driven industry gatherings, Hurt consults with organizations ranging from the National Trust for Historic Preservation to BlogWorld.
Launch pad: This former kindergarten teacher turned his observations about how the brain retains information and responds to environmental cues into a 20-year career in nonprofit and association planning, including forays into hybrid, peer-led, and unconference formats.
A-ha moment: At a 2007 conference for 500 C.E.O.s, Hurt let attendees talk to the speaker via text. “We saw a dynamic where, suddenly, the audience had a new toy. Little did I know at the time, that was our entry into using social media.”
Big innovation: For the Professional Convention Management Association’s annual meeting in January, Hurt created a small-group forum for 3,000 attendees, carving the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino’s Garden Arena into more intimate spaces.
Twitter: @JeffHurt
Photo: Courtesy of Jeff Hurt
David Solsberry
David Solsberry
Executive design director, Hargrove, Lanham, Maryland, 49
Claim to fame: Since landing at event management firm Hargrove in 1998, Solsbery has worked on dozens of high-profile events, including the 2008 presidential inauguration at the Capitol.
Launch pad: “At 24 I started working part-time for a theme party decorating company in San Jose, California. We did stage sets, theme decor, floral, weddings, bar mitzvahs. My specialty was scenic painting and prop design.”
Proudest achievement: “Designing several G20 summits. It was a great honor to be an adviser to the South Korean government during their preparations for the 2010 summit. Creating plenary rooms and sets, meeting spaces, dining rooms, briefing rooms, lounges, almost entire cities inside exhibition spaces for the world’s leaders and press is a great challenge and an amazing experience.”
What’s next: “We’re part of the team producing the memorial dedication and official events for the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Jayne Sandman
Jayne Sandman
Director, BrandLinkDC, Washington, 31
Launch pad: After graduating from American University, Sandman landed at Washington Life, scooping up the newly created marketing director position. Next stop was Capitol File, where she helmed and grew the magazine’s annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner’s after-party.
Work philosophy: “Because we’re a public relations, events, and marketing company, we’re constantly thinking of every event aspect and how it will positively affect the client, from the messaging we need to relay to each attendee to how it is going to play in the media landscape.”
What’s next: “The Week magazine’s 10th annual Opinion Awards. It’ll be hard to top last year’s combination of top-tier politicos: Rahm Emanuel, Joe Scarborough, and Tina Brown to namedrop just a few.” Also: Raising son Owen, born just weeks after her portrait sitting.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Suzanne Goin
Suzanne Goin
Chef and owner, Lucques Catering, Los Angeles, 44
Launch pad: Goin began as a restaurant chef and added catering when customers told her team they wanted to experience the same food at home and at events. Her group catered the Hammer Museum’s annual gala for 500 and the luxe SAG Awards dinner, which requires both camera- and tastebud-friendly fare.
Career highlight: “No matter how many chef jobs I’ve had or how many restaurants I have opened since then, when the doors opened at Lucques and I had my very own restaurant, it was definitely the most intense and monumental time in my work experience.”
Style signature: “Rustic, local, chic.”
Big innovation: “When we opened A.O.C. in 2002, it was revolutionary. We took the idea of a tapas bar and made it something that spoke to a modern American audience. It was a watershed moment in the Los Angeles culinary scene, and it hasn’t stopped since, with others emulating our model here and around the country.”
Role models: Alice Waters and Alain Passard.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Bobby Taylor
Bobby Taylor
Owner, Taylor Creative Inc., New York, 47
Claim to fame: Taylor created a niche in the crowded rental market with an inventory of high-end contemporary furniture custom-manufactured in the U.S. or imported from Europe.
Launch pad: Before he got into events, Taylor worked in marketing for fashion brands including Joseph Abboud, Calvin Klein, and GQ, as well as merchandising and events at Saks Fifth Avenue. Taylor also worked as a stylist for national advertising campaigns, catalogs, and retail brands.
Signature products: Moooi horse lamp, Pucci chair.
Career highlight: Attending the Milan furniture fair in 2002. “It introduced a world I’d never seen--the marriage of high art and commerce.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Samuel J. Smith
Samuel J. Smith
Managing director, Interactive Meeting Technology, Minneapolis
Claim to fame: Smith co-founded and ran EventCamp Twin Cities, created hybrid events for financial services and medical corporations, and produced the award-winning Boston Scientific Minnesota CVR Experience.
Launch pad: The Ford Motor Company and 3M veteran got into the meeting technology business five years ago in Europe, when he signed on with the company that developed Spotme, a device to help attendees locate colleagues at large events.
Big innovation: At EventCamp Twin Cities in August, 580 remote participants joined 75 on-site attendees for the daylong event. Smith used a remote moderator and a virtual M.C., Skype, and Twitter to give virtual attendees the feeling of being there.
Twitter: @samueljsmith
Photo: Courtesy of Samuel J Smith
Domenic Chiaromonte
Domenic Chiaromonte
Owner and chef, T2 Resto-Lounge and Events, Toronto, 38
Launch pad: After making a name for his “modern Canadian” cuisine at Match Restaurant and Tazza, Chiaromonte launched a catering arm, emphasizing cutting-edge culinary techniques and presentation.
Claim to fame: Artfully presented party food that goes beyond the typical mini burgers and spring rolls. For an event for HGTV, he shaped salmon into pairs of lips covered in beets and served them with sundried tomato and bacon butter in lipstick tubes.
What’s next: A cooking show, My Favorite Dish, for the Rogers Network.
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Eric Michael
Eric Michael
Owner and creative director, Occasions Caterers, Washington
Launch pad: A cater waiter in college, Michael founded Occasions with his twin brother, Mark, in 1986. Today, they cater roughly 2,500 events annually.
Claim to fame: Last year’s highlights ranged from the Opera Ball’s Fabergé egg-inspired cakes to Frito pies at MSNBC’s White House Correspondents Association dinner after-party. Michael also produces the massive Corcoran Gala.
Proudest achievement: “Presidential inauguration 2009. In addition to managing one of the official tribute dinners for 1,200, we catered dozens of events over a three-day period, [serving] more than 25,000 guests.”
Biggest idea: “My brother and I saw a need in technology and helped conceive and create CaterXpert, a software program for off-premise caterers that has become the standard for the industry.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Bill Homan
Bill Homan
Partner, Design Cuisine, Washington
Launch pad: After catering private events during graduate school, Homan launched Creative Edge Cuisine in 1980 with two partners, then changed the name to Design Cuisine in 1983.
Claim to fame: Catering some 3,000 events annually, Homan is the creative force behind Design Cuisine, where he’s worked with clients like Bloomberg (producing the company’s high-tech White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner after-parties in 2007 and 2008), AOL, Vogue, and the White House.
Work philosophy: “Never say ‘no’ and always come up with workable solutions to decode reality.”
Childhood dream job: “I have it.”
What’s next: “To create a better relationship with our planet. Nature is a source of inspiration for exciting images and ideas.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
Sean Cannon
Sean Cannon
C.E.O., Event Creative, Chicago
Claim to fame: Cannon and his team thrive on logistical challenges, having designed everything from a 40-foot indoor volcano to a 2,300-guest gala on a runway at O’Hare airport. Event Creative also manages the event space Venue One, which hosted its first event, a fund-raiser for the Museum of Contemporary Art that had an indoor playground and a rock concert, in 2010. In 2011, Event Creative steadily gained new business, and for the first time will design the Steppenwolf Gala and the Joffrey Ballet Gala.
Work philosophy: “Anything is possible.”
Childhood dream job: “Superhero.”
Photo: Dan Hallman for BizBash
The decor at Phoenix Lounge at the Wit Hotel includes black velvet lounge chairs, leather sofas, and blue resin tables.
The decor at Phoenix Lounge at the Wit Hotel includes black velvet lounge chairs, leather sofas, and blue resin tables.
Photo: Grant Kessler
At Benchmark, some 46 flat-screen TVs hook up to laptops and DVD players, and a six-panel video wall has the same capabilities.
At Benchmark, some 46 flat-screen TVs hook up to laptops and DVD players, and a six-panel video wall has the same capabilities.
Photo: Justin Leicht
Riverwalk at Kendall College's interior can hold dinners for 100.
Riverwalk at Kendall College's interior can hold dinners for 100.
Photo: Rick Aguilar/Rick Aguilar Studios
Cocktail lounge the Exchange can hold 99.
Cocktail lounge the Exchange can hold 99.
Let Lounge hosts group ping-pong tournaments. Specialty cocktails include a blackberry mojito and the 'Market Toddy,' which combines Jack Daniel's whiskey with apple cider and cinnamon.
Let Lounge hosts group ping-pong tournaments. Specialty cocktails include a blackberry mojito and the "Market Toddy," which combines Jack Daniel's whiskey with apple cider and cinnamon.
Photo: Courtesy of Let Lounge
Sable hosts private whiskey tastings for groups. Executive chef Heather Terhune's new American menu includes corned beef Reuben strudel, bison short rib sliders with root beer glaze, and a savory creamed-corn crème brûlée.
Sable hosts private whiskey tastings for groups. Executive chef Heather Terhune's new American menu includes corned beef Reuben strudel, bison short rib sliders with root beer glaze, and a savory creamed-corn crème brûlée.
Photo: BizBash
The bar at Mastro's offers specialty dry-ice martinis.
The bar at Mastro's offers specialty dry-ice martinis.
Photo: Courtesy of Mastro's
Red Bar Comedy Club can host private shows for 60. Hosts are welcome to bring in catering companies of their choice.
Red Bar Comedy Club can host private shows for 60. Hosts are welcome to bring in catering companies of their choice.
Photo: Courtesy of Red Bar Comedy Club
Focusing on small plates, Sawtooth's menu offers items such as crispy chicken wings with jalapeño-garlic sauce and catfish simmered in caramel.
Focusing on small plates, Sawtooth's menu offers items such as crispy chicken wings with jalapeño-garlic sauce and catfish simmered in caramel.
Photo: Tim Kometer/Retemok Design
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