Heart and Stroke Ball
Bodine Bash
Let’s Rock the Houses
362 Grandview Street
1862 Old Towne Lane
24495 Highway 76
Memphis, TN 38111
Germantown, TN 38139
Somerville, TN 38068
$1,150,000
$639,900
$799,000 LD
SO
If you have been looking for a beautiful, gated east Memphis home to entertain and enjoy Southern evenings in, then this updated 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath home is for you. Relax on the huge screened in porch overlooking the private, well manicured backyard with a fountain, gunite pool with built-in hot tub and guest/pool house. Check out the YouTube video!
Bill Maury
Nancy Huddleston
901.870.3771
901.484.9494
maury@ collins-maury.com
huddleston@ collins-maury.com
Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialists ©
Beautiful and well-maintained home located in Enclave subdivision off of Wolf River Blvd. This home has an open floor plan on a low-maintenance corner lot. Features include new hardwood flooring in 2017, new carpet upstairs, & 2 new hot water heaters. Six-burner gas cooktop in kitchen, SS double ovens plus warming drawer. Butler's pantry w/ beverage center, 2 pantries, plus separate office. Laundry room conveniently off master closet has a window and sink. Huge walk-in attic plus bonus craft/storage room upstairs. Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist ©
Laura Clark 901.483.2117 Laura@LauraClarkRealtor.com
Incredible horse property on 28.5 acres just east of Somerville, TN. Southern living house plan built in ’05 with 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and 2 half baths. Separate den, dining room, office, library and 3 car garage. Library has hidden storm/safe room. Large laundry room and pantry. Morton 8 stall barn loaded with amenities, detached oversized 2 car garage, 2 separate out buildings for equipment and storage. 90% fenced. Whole house generator “for safety and security!” Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist ©
Bill Maury 901.870.3771 maury@ collins-maury.com
4511 Minden Road Memphis, TN 38117
$1,389,000
Cathy Banks 901.606.2374
Jeanne Billings 901.493.0100
Lisa Carter 901.493.2612
Meredith Coughlin 901.443.0953
Jason Gaia 901.338.6677
Sally Isom 901.219.8882
Milleigh Pearson 901.550.1517
Diane Stribling 901.412.7489
Sissy Vaughan 901.870.6227
Mary Williams 901.283.7795
5 bedroom, 6.1 bath Estate Home with Classic Southern Charm. Gunite pool and hot tub! So much new! 4 Carrier HVAC, 2 Tankless Hot water heaters! Marvin Windows! Fresh Paint, Concrete Cobblestone driveway and a Curb appeal that will keep bringing you home with a smile! Let me open the door for you! Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist ©
Patty Everitt 901.487.7709 peveritt@ collins-maury.com
Ruben Lopez 901.497.5352
Janey Outlan 901.487.3292
Collins-Maury.com 5865 Ridgeway Center Pkwy Ste. 105 Memphis, TN 38120 901.259.8550
3276 Goodman Rd. Southaven,MS 38672 662.548.2000
968 Civic Center Drive Ste. 103 Collierville, TN 38017 901.259.8500
CONTENTS May 2020
Features
Signature Memphis • 9
StreetSeen • 10
Tom Jones
Malvin Massey
Principal at Smart City Consulting and columnist for Inside Memphis Business Magazine
General Manager of WUMR, The University of Memphis radio station that broadcasts an all-jazz music format
RSVPhillippi • 25 Upstaged Watching my nephew's high school play reminded me of the joy of acting and the theatre from a time past.
Events
Scott and Amanda Vines
Memphis Moments • 16, 17, 20 &21
Tanya and Mark Hart
Heart and Stroke Ball • 12 The elegant evening benefited the Mid-South Chapter of the American Heart Association.
Katie and Teri Gulati
Let’s Rock the Houses • 18 FedEx Pilots’ Wives Association event serves families facing childhood illnesses.
Pierre and Gay Landaiche
Bodine Bash • 22 Derby-themed fundraiser celebrates organization’s positive impact on children and their families.
Cover Photo: Lindsey and John Harrell at the Bodine Bash. Photo by Don Perry Contents Photo by Roy Haithcock
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May 2020
RSVP Staff Volume XXVI • Number V
May 2020 Publisher Roy Haithcock
Chris Pugh
Account Executive Chris has been exercising his talent in the advertising world since 1999. He joined the RSVP team in 2009 and brought with him a love for laughter and creativity. Originally from New Albany, Mississippi, Chris has settled in Memphis and enjoys being active in the fashion community.
Editor Emily Adams Keplinger Copy Editor/Accounting Ruth Cassin Contributing Writers Bill Bannister Erin Ortasic Dennis Phillippi Gaye Swan Art Director Kim Coleman Photographers Don Perry Steve Roberts Account Executives Chris Pugh Carter Davis
Carter Davis
Account Executive
Carter is native Memphian and a veteran of the broadcast industry, and magazine publishing. He is also a freelance voiceover talent and can be heard on WKNO 91.1FM on Sundays. Carter is an avid animal lover and likes to work with aquariums as a hobby. He enjoys his East Memphis home with his wife and 2 dogs, and 6 cats.
RSVP Memphis is published monthly by Haithcock Communications, Inc. First class subscriptions are available for $55.00 per year. Send name and address with a check to:
Haithcock Communications, Inc. 2282 Central Avenue Memphis, TN 38104 For advertising information contact:
Roy Haithcock Phone: (901) 276-7787 publisher@rsvpmagazine.com Visit us online at:
www.rsvpmagazine.com For editorial information or to request coverage of an event, please contact RSVP Magazine one month prior to the event:
Call: 901-276-7787 editor@rsvpmagazine.com Follow us on:
Kim Coleman
RSVP Memphis Magazine
Art Director
Kim oversees all visual aspects of the magazine — advertising and editorial. Her career encompasses working with both print and digital media for magazines, newspapers and e-publications. Kim and her husband are raising their two children in the Cooper-Young area where their family enjoys the artistic atmosphere and entrepreneurial spirit of Midtown.
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Copyright 2020 Haithcock Communications, Inc.
JO LYN BEAVER
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DICKENS
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ASHLEY JIMMY REEDBONDS
N eed help getting w ir ed into M emphis ? J ob f or y our S pous e? T he r ight s c hools ? S pec ia l needs ? T he R eloc a tion ex per ts of M a r x & B ens dor f c a n help. We w r ote BARBARA the b ook on R eloc a tion to M eKELLY mphis . Ca ll DUFOURfor y our fr ee new comer s pERB a c k et .
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Signature Memphis
Tom Jones Principal at Smart City Consulting and columnist for Inside Memphis Business Magazine Hometown: Collierville Favorite Song: “Blind Willie McTell” by Bob Dylan Your Lucky Charm: Music Your Best Quality: Calmness A Nonliving Celebrity/Role Model You Would Invite to Dinner: Eleanor Roosevelt Your Favorite Memphis “Thang”: Walking the Riverfront Favorite Place
to
Travel: France
Best Memphis Hangout: Otherlands First Car You Owned: Pontiac Firebird Place You Go
to
Think: In front of a computer with my fingers on the keyboard
Favorite Southern Idiom: Even a blind hog finds an acorn once in awhile Best Advice You Ever Got: Only work on things you’re passionate about and with people you like.
Your Most Annoying Habit: Unable to walk by a computer without sitting down
The Highlight
of
Your Day: When our daughter Adrienne calls
Proudest Moment
of
Your Life: Days my daughters were born
Who Would Play You
in a
Movie: Tommy Lee Jones
Something You’ll Never Live Down: As a young reporter, I feel asleep in the middle of an interview of a state Supreme Court judge
May 2020
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Independent Jazz Producer
Malvin Massey
Story by Emily Adams Keplinger Photos by Steve Roberts
May
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StreetSeen
"We’ve built the station up to where it is one of the most respected stations in the nation — partially because it is from Memphis... "
F
or over 10 years, Malvin Massey has served as the General Manager of WUMR, a radio station owned by The University of Memphis that broadcasts an all-jazz music format. But his interest in music was initiated years earlier.
“I started with music when I was 14, a student at Corry Junior High School, off of Elvis Presley Boulevard in South Memphis,” recalled Massey. “At the time, the school was brand new, and our class was the first band class. Herbert Thomas was the band director.” Massey continued, “I started on alto saxophone. I found I could sight read well, so when I went to high school at Hamilton High and the band director, Thomas Doggett, said he needed tenor saxophone players, he switched me over. My last year of high school he put me on baritone sax.” After high school, Massey went on a four-year tour of duty with the US Air Force. When he moved back to Memphis, in 1974, it was the beginning of Massey’s return to music. He started attending Memphis State on the GI Bill as a music major. And he played in the jazz band under the
direction of Tommy Ferguson. “Mr. Ferguson put me on baritone sax,” recalled Massey. “At the same time, on weekends I was playing in a band at The Hawaiian Isle, a jazz club in South Memphis. There I played tenor sax. I became a member of the house band, the Eddie “Pug” Dandridge quartet. I played with him until 1975 when I married my first wife, vocalist Glenda Stepter. When she left the club, Pug brought Ruby Wilson to town to take her place. Ruby was only supposed to be here for three weeks…but that’s another story.” “I dropped out of my school program and started working until 1994 when I had a disastrous accident. I ran into a telephone pole in my brand new Chevy Lumina. The worst part of it all, I was still playing my horn and the crash burned up my saxophone because it was in the trunk of my car.”
The company he was working for offered Massey a severance to resign and he took the deal. Because of his love of jazz, Massey had been volunteering at WUMR since 1988. When Massey arrived at this career crossroads, Sunny Caudwell, of WCRV AM 640, offered him a job as a board operator. “I started running the programs and ads. After a while I became the overnight program manager,” said Massey. “Next I began recording all of the shows, editing and learning how to use audio software. I stayed there until I graduated from the U of Memphis in 2009. At that time, the General Manager position opened up at WUMR, I applied for it and got the job.” Massey served as WUMR’s General Manager from 2009 - 2020. Now he’s taking on a different role — he has retired and now volunteers at the station. “I’m also advising students and WUMR’s interim program director,” said Massey. “My retirement came about because the radio station had become too expensive for the College of Communication and Fine Arts to continue to support it. When the station was first founded, broadcast
students were a part of it, with their tuition going to pay operating expenses. However, in 2010 or so, the broadcast communication program was moved to the School of Journalism as broadcast journalism. Those students were not interested in broadcasting in terms of how to run a TV or radio station, so we had to start supporting ourselves with fundraisers. Unfortunately, we weren’t able to raise enough money to sustain the station financially. WUMR has been 1 of 8 stations in the country that has a 24/7 all-jazz format. We’ve built the station up to where it is one of the most respected stations in the nation — partially because it is from Memphis (so well known in the world of music) and partially because of the way we programmed it (playing all types of jazz — smooth, straight ahead, Latin, fusion, new age and classic).” Now the university has entered into a partnership with The Daily Memphian and Crosstown Concourse. The plans are for the station to move to The Concourse sometime this summer. The details are still in flux, but the talk is that they will add some news programming, keep a presence of jazz, and add other musical genres.
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Heart and Stroke Ball
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Heart and Stroke Ball American Heart Association Fundraiser
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Emily and Tom Love
Paulo and Priscilla Teixeira
n elegantly dressed crowd of generous Memphians attended the Heart and Stroke Ball to benefit the Mid-South Chapter of the American Heart Association. The evening began with a social hour and silent auction in the beautifully decorated Venetian and Forest Ballrooms at The Peabody. Attendees sipped cocktails and bid on over 65 items in categories including sports, travel, wine, art, and health and wellness. Guests were seated in the Grand Ballroom for a delicious three-course meal, beginning with a salad of chopped romaine, hearts of palm, fresh avocado, grilled corn, tomatoes and tortilla strips. The heart-healthy main course featured petite filet mignon in a balsamic sauce and seared halibut in Limoncello sauce, roasted artichokes, lemon-scented asparagus, carrots, potatoes au gratin, and heirloom tomato. The mouthwatering desserts were a choice of a chocolate trio or a Southern sweets trio. An entertaining and face-paced live auction followed dinner. Excited supporters bid on a five-course wine cellar dinner for 10 at Horseshoe Casino, a suite at the FedEx Forum for a Grizzlies or Tigers event, a fine art piece from Belle Roth in New York, a one-week See all the party photos at rsvpmagazine.com Password: RSVP
stay at Estate La Croix in the US Virgin Islands, a one-week stay in Colorado’s Mann-Hole West townhome, beautiful jewelry from Mednikow, and a pre-paid two-year lease on the bidder’s choice of one of six automobiles from Landers Auto Group. A highlight of the evening was a touching video documenting the stories of two very different survivors and their families. Both appeared after the showing to a standing ovation from the crowd. After the presentation, partygoers took to the dance floor to the lively sounds of Burning Las Vegas. Kent Ritchey, President of Landers Auto Group, was the 2020 event chair. “I am truly honored to be this year’s Heart and Stroke Ball Chair, but I did not do it alone,” Ritchey said. “I had the privilege of working alongside a dedicated group of volunteers on our Executive Leadership Team and my co-chair, Dr. Steven S. Gubin of Stern Cardiovascular Foundation. Tonight is about celebrating the gift of time—more time we can spend with our families and friends, thanks largely to the research, advocacy and resources of the American Heart Association. I’m proud to announce we surpassed our goal and raised nearly $770,000 for the Mid-South American Heart Association!”
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Nikki and Taylor Huffman
Story by Gaye Swan Photos by Don Perry
Deborah and Adrian Merrill
Lauren Hale and Josh Goff
Cynthia and Charles Thompson
Monica and Andre Wharton
Taylor and Max Wondries with Janice and Kent Ritchey
Margie and Michael Neal
Divorce is a bad choice, but it may be the best choice.
The more you know about divorce, the better decisions you will make about divorce.
More than thirty years ago, this philosophy led us to write our client guide to divorce. It was updated again this year and can be accessed on our website, aboutdivorce.com. Divorce is a tragedy. It is the end of a relationship that the parties intended to last a lifetime. That tragedy is compounded when a party comes to the process with inaccurate information. A small amount of time spent reading the relevant portions of the guide can save a lot of time, anger and money. Whole books are written on some of the topics we treat with a few paragraphs. Our hope is that neither you, nor anyone close to you, will need this information. The reality is that you probably know someone who needs this information so they can make a choice that is best for them. Larry Rice
Nick Rice
aboutdivorce.com Rice Divorce Team 901.526.6701 divorce@ricelaw.com
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Mike and Tammy Noonan
Jeff and Colleen Lacroix
Anne Wulff and Brian Bendersky
Bob and Dianne Laster
Leslie and John Daniel
Randy and Vicki Fisher with Ben and Dianne Traylor
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Mallory and David Ruben
Kim and Gary Beasley
Dr. Michael and Rebecca Ugwueke
Gloria and Harold Fagan
Benjamin and Ashley McCall with Leanne Cozad and Nick Svitak
May
Andrew and Tina Douglas
Shelly and Jimmy Haley
Nina and Dr. Guy Teach
Melinda And Forrest Artz
Ginger Hauser and Mehri Ahmadzadegan
David and Bonnie Thornton with Lydia and Randy Bors-Koefoed
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Winfred and Florence Jones
Mike and Sharon Goldstein
Sridhar and Poornima Sunkara
Luka and Alana Perkovic
Dr. Tom and Nyla Throckmorton with Dr. Linda Kennard and Dr. Joel Johnson
May 2020
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Memphis Moment
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ICCS Mardi Gras Laissez Les Bon Temps Rouler
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he Mardi Gras silent auction fundraiser of Immaculate Conception Cathedral School (ICCS) took place amid a festive atmosphere in Heffernan Hall at Christian Brothers High School. The school’s chef, Anthony Terrell, catered a buffet filled with favorite New Orleans foods including shrimp and grits, gumbo, red beans and rice, and mini muffulettas. King Cake and bread pudding topped off the meal. Memphis Second Line Jazz Band let the good times roll with their brand of music, and brought people to their feet to join in a Mardi Gras-style procession. Afterwards, the Risky Whiskey Boys band kept things lively as partygoers moved to the dance floor for the rest of the evening. Event sponsors included Midtown Eye Care, Vescovo’s Arlington Liquors, Coopertown Services, Sturla Canale, Christian Brothers High School, and anonymous friends of ICCS. Proceeds from the event will be used for the school’s general operating expenses. Story and Photos by Emily Adams Keplinger Scott Borgert and Susan Whalen
Jaret Thomas and Annie Armstrong
Sarah Bowers, Emily Breckenridge and Julie Escobar
Steve Shully and Linda Armstrong
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Gregg Coats and Chris Short
Cathy and Guy Armstrong
Delila Garcias, Samantha Oswald and Jasmin Longoria
Carla Dennis and Sue Anne Duffy
Dnyana and Theeran Chinnioh
Fr. Robert Marshall, Fr. Ruben Villalon and Deacon Bill Pettit
Lesley and John Hartney
Jason and Katherine Paxton
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Memphis Moment
Military Masquerade Ball Alpha Omega Veterans Services
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Jan and Pat Dickey
Kimberly and Trevor Riley
he Military Masquerade Ball was a lively fundraiser designed to raise money to help veterans and spread awareness about Alpha Omega Veterans Services (AOVS). Memphis Second Line Jazz Band got things started with a spirited second line procession through the house and around the grounds of Annesdale Mansion. In keeping with the Mardi Gras theme, guests were encouraged to wear masks with their party attire. Dickson’s Custom Catering served up traditional creole dishes of red beans and rice, chicken and sausage gumbo, jambalaya with smoked sausage, as well as pulled beef po-boys, bread pudding and Bananas Foster. Jeremy Shrader and his brass band “let the good times roll,” adding their musical flavor to the evening. Live action artist Marlee Allison showed off her amazing talent, completing a painting at the event that was subsequently donated to the organization’s live auction. Story and Photos by Emily Adams Keplinger
Dennis and Rachelle Hart
Steve and Theresa Bernhardt
General Jack and Sylvia Ramsaur
Kelly Ellington and Barbara Capocella
Silvana and Bob Piadade with Bill and Kathy Bradshaw
Taylor and Megan Earhart with Sara and Julian Mangrum
Betty Rome, Peggy Voeller and Peggy Larkin
Grayson Smith and Cordell Walker
Linda and Bill Robertson with Anne Truett
Marlee Allison and Vicki Azlin
May 2020
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Let’s Rock the Houses
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Let’s Rock the Houses
E Rocio and Nathan Havlik
Brent and Erin Dlugach
FedEx Pilots’ Wives Association
ach year, families and businesses from the Memphis area partner with FedEx Pilots’ Wives Association (FEPWA) in their decades-long mission of serving families facing childhood illnesses. Last year, the organization raised over $50,000 for Ronald McDonald House Memphis and FedExFamilyHouse. This year FEPWA held their fundraiser at the Carousel Pavilion of Children’s Museum of Memphis. The “Let’s Rock the Houses” event was the group’s most impactful fundraiser to date, raising approximately $86,000. Legacy Wealth Management was the event’s platinum sponsor. Proceeds benefit both the FedExFamilyHouse and the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis. Pink Flamingo Catering offered the crowd a tasty buffet with dishes like street tacos, shrimp & grits, smoked Gouda and pimento cheese dip, fried chicken sliders, raspberry chipotle meatballs, and a variety of salads. For entertainment, guests could try their hands at a wine pull, don zany props for a photo by Phancy Photo Booth or take a spin on the restored 1909 Grand Carousel. At Let’s Rock the Houses, over 250 guests competed with online bidders for auction items donated by hundreds of businesses from the Mid South and beyond. Items ranged from sky diving lessons to rounds of golf to scuba diving See all the party photos at rsvpmagazine.com Password: RSVP
lessons. Also up for bid were Redbirds box tickets, a Sun Studio tour for 4, Kendra Scott jewelry, salon and spa packages, sports memorabilia, original artwork, Malco movie passes, time in a FedEx Flight Simulator, and beautiful barware, as well as tickets and memberships supporting area attractions like Memphis Botanic Garden and performances at Germantown Community Theatre and Germantown Performing Arts Center. The live auction offered a variety of baked treats. Decadent desserts from Patty Cakes, Prima’s, La Baguette, Muddy’s, The Toffee, Pink Bakery and Smallcakes offered a very sweet way for bidders to show their support. “The FedEx Pilots’ Wives Association is a group comprised of FedEx Express Pilots’ Wives, just like the name says, and Female FedEx Express Pilots,” explained Amber Abney, the group’s president. “The organization’s mission is to serve each other through charity, community and personal growth. We are a social and charitable organization that supports the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis (RMH) at St. Jude’s and FedExFamilyHouse (FEFH) at LeBonheur Children’s Hospital. Though many of the organization’s members make the Memphis area their home, the overall membership includes 420 members, spanning the globe.”
Shelby Ramsey and Erin Mullis
Samantha and Jonathan Walker
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Michelle and Chris Clothier
Story by Emily Adams Keplinger Photos by Don Perry
Meryl and Bill Mosk
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Megan and Justin Dupuy
May 2020
Gaylann Hicks with Becky and Vernon Barton
Lauren and Eric Baker
May
Joan and Jeff Gunther
Linda Hudgins and Kevin Whearty
Malayne McGhee and Jill Crocker
Lauren and Josh Sanders
Heather and Stephen Short
Marcus Abney with Claudette and Gregory Mollere
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Erin and Colin Mullis
Arniecia Hines and Hailey Zuvers
Kenneth and Betsy McLean
Amber and Austin Orr
Megan Toms, Katie Diggs and Laura Tinsley
May 2020
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Memphis Moment
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May
Works of Heart Benefiting the Memphis Child Advocacy Center
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or many art lovers, the 28th annual Works of Heart was a perfect way to wrap up their Valentine’s Day festivities. The main gallery of the iconic Memphis College of Art was filled with over 100 heart-themed works by leading regional artists. All of the artwork was related to the heart: love, romance, parenting, or sometimes heartbreak. This year was bittersweet since the Memphis College of Art (MCA), the longtime venue for the Works of Heart event, is closing its doors later this spring. Virginia Stallworth, executive director of the Memphis Child Advocacy Center (CAC), said, “We are so grateful for MCA’s hospitality and their contributions over the years.” And there was no doubt that the public was there to show the CAC some love as the event raised $98,000. And in the final tally, an anonymous donor added $2,000 to the coffers so the organization could reach its goal of $100,000.
Eldra White with JO Patterson, Cheryl Patterson and Susan Stern
Story and Photos by Emily Adams Keplinger Laura Alexander-Dodds, Tracie Burke and Maureen O’Brien
Jeff and KC Warren
Alison Letsos and Amanda Hoeksema
David and Jeanne Simmons with Annette Askew
Jason Hill and Doug Wright
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Sharon Fewell and Rebecca Bush
Jana Travis, Lora Burke and Teresa Bullock
Bill and Laura Murphy
Steven Johnson and Gretchen Turley
Judi Gray and Shawn Hayden
Kris and Colby Crim with Beryl Wight
Jasmine Matthews and Gloria Dodds
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Whiskey, Wine, and Chocolates A Valentine’s Day Treat at Memphis Botanic Garden
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Kyle James and Hannah Vickers
Morgan Hughes and Jacob Brockman
uests to Memphis Botanic Garden’s annual Whiskey, Wine, and Chocolates were greeted with a signature cocktail from Old Dominick Distillery, aptly called Love Spell. The romantic theme was carried out in the soft red-tinted lighting and white and red roses on each table. And what Valentine’s Day would be complete without chocolates? Gourmet designer chocolates from premier chocolatier Phillip Ashley were paired with select whiskeys from Blue Note Bourbon, Old Glory Distilling, and Chattanooga Whiskey, along with refreshing beer from Diamond Bear Brewing and red wine from Chateau St. Jean. Partygoers enjoyed the sounds of Nick Black and the magic feats of magician Grayson Smith. Catered buffet stations offered a wonderful array of hors d’oeuvres including assorted dips, phyllo puffs, asparagus pillows, bacon-wrapped quail, beef tenderloin, shrimp and grits, and a tempting array of fruit, cheese, and sausage. Story and Photos by Gaye Swan
Taylor Herndon and Gina Harris
Sharon Snyder and Ruthann Pike
Meghan McKinney and Ankur Sharma
Aman and Avnisha Patel
Libby and Neil Hubbard with Cari and George Baird
Kandis and Mark Webb
Dr. Marlah Mardis with Ryan and Lucrecia Zuber
Becky and Brent Wilkins
Kelli Beard and Chris Tran
Doug Green and Rona Mogil with Margaret and Grayson Smith
May 2020
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Bodine Bash
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Bodine Bash
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Amber and Erik Gott
Pam Unger and Chautara Franklin
Run for the Roses
he 2020 Bodine Bash took place at the Memphis Grand Carousel Pavilion and Ballroom at the Children’s Museum of Memphis. The event was a fundraiser celebrating the organization’s positive impact on numerous children and their families since the school’s founding in 1972. With the theme of “Run for the Roses,” guests dressed in their “Derby best” with many women accentuating their outfits with broad-brimmed hats or fascinators. A large statue of a horse bedecked with a rose garland stood in the entry to the pavilion, as if waiting for guests to stop for a photo op. Many of the party-goers got into a race of their own as they selected their steeds and took a spin on the 1909 Dentzel Memphis Grand Carousel. Craft beer selections were provided by Memphis Filling Station (voted Best Brewery at the 2020 Pink Palace Science of Beer event), along with nonalcoholic sodas and bottled water. The signature cocktails were Kentucky Tea-Juleps (made with Four Roses Bourbon, mint simple syrup and a mixture of half sweet and half unsweetened tea), and Sprinting Spritzers (made from Ketel One Grapefruit and Rose Vodka, rose puree and grapefruit-flavored sparkling water). Both concoctions were right on the money! See all the party photos at rsvpmagazine.com Password: RSVP
Guests made their way through tables laden with one-of-a-kind auction items in categories like sporting event tickets, arts & photography, entertainment & travel, personal pampering items, purses, jewelry, tots & teens, home & garden and Memphis restaurant experiences. People used their mobile phones to place their bids on Bodine’s on-line auction site. Attendees enjoyed a dinner on the pavilion catered by A Moveable Feast & Hog Wild Catering Co. Continuing the evening’s theme, blue prize ribbons decorated each place setting and centerpieces featured red roses and silver horseshoes. Trumpeter Will Palladino played the official “Call to the Post” at the start of the live auction. And a Silent Disco closed out the evening. This year’s fundraiser, chaired by Jason and Joanna Landrum and Lewis and Emilie Unglesby, was sponsored by FedEx as the lead presenter. Auctioneer was 97.7 Guess FM radio personality Steve Conley. “For the third year in a row, ours was a sold out event,” said Gretchen Klobucar, Director of Institutional Advancement at Bodine. “Funds from this event will enable Bodine School to make enhancements to the excellent elementary school experience that it provides for students with dyslexia.”
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May
Sharon and Durant Fleming
Story by Emily Adams Keplinger Photos by Don Perry
Bob Wamack and Donna Marinelli
Caroline Landaiche and Christine Mahoney
Judge Ron and Sandra Lucchesi
Emily and Nancy Malloy
Judge Harry Wellford, Peggy Bodine, Lesley and Sherry Dacus with Shannon Taylor
Michelle Medlin and Julia Santos
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Emily and Lewis Unglesby
Liz and Lonnie Easterling
Allison and Matt Brinkmeyer
Byron and Estelle Winsett
Tanda Grisham-Williams and George Williams
Janna Hacker, JoAnna Landrum and Sai Karuhatty
Bodine Bash
Ben and Katie Cambell
Sheryl and James Moroschak
Libby and Nick Nabors
Sara and Terry Schmitt
David and Karen Kelly with Erin and Brian Borgmier
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Crossword
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RSVP Crossword Edited By Ruth Cassin
ACROSS 1 Jacket part 6 Women's magazine 10 Sham 14 Iranian's neighbor 15 Conceited 16 Pastel 17 Variety show
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18 Potato sprouts 19 Dry 20 Afloat 21 Unacknowledged 23 Kimono sash 24 Throw in the air 26 Listless, weak and pale 28 Strew (around) 31 Point 32 Court 33 Descended a cliff using ropes 36 Des Moines local 40 With "The," 1958 Sci-Fi film Starring Steve McQueen 42 Can metal 43 Bound (up) 44 Soft drink 45 Praying insect 48 Young boy 49 Pop! ____ the Weasel 51 Half men, half goats 53 Celestial radiation emitter 56 ____ Mater 57 Vase 58 Subject to limitations 61 Best magazine in Memphis 65 As previously cited 67 Dorothy's dog 68 Guide 69 Court suit 70 Eve's garden 71 Having wings
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72 Comprehended 73 Interbreeding population within a species 74 Greek sandwiches
DOWN 1 Italian money, once 2 Greek god of war 3 Surface of a road 4 To regard as equivalent 5 Fib 6 Smoothes 7 "You can't eat just one" brand 8 In ____ of 9 Draw into a tangle 10 Resort hotel 11 Certain Billiards shot 12 Where you were at a crime time 13 EMT, e.g. 21 Meat stamp 22 African antelope 25 Rowing device 27 Outlet 28 Compass point 29 Equestrian game 30 Crucifix 31 Penny 34 School support groups 35 Affix, as to a lapel 37 Greasy 38 Fray 39 Totals 41 Sacks 45 Deserved 46 Island
47 Surface to air missile 50 Lout 52 Sourly 53 Rapid 54 Inner city 55 Mediterranean plant in the parsley family 56 Repent 59 Protuberance 60 Detail 62 Cook quickly 63 Prohibit 64 Washington or Adams (abbr.) 66 Morning condensation 68 Droop
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few weeks ago my wife and I drove her 94-year-old mother to St. Louis to see our nephew, Sam Fink, perform By Dennis Phillippi superbly in a high school production of the musical “Cabaret.” If you are unfamiliar with “Cabaret,” it is set in Berlin in the 1930s as the Nazis were coming into power. The show is largely set in a nightclub that features an emcee of indeterminate gender, and includes references to anti-Semitism, homosexuality, abortion, mass hysteria, and, of course, the holocaust. So, you know, a typical high school production. The show was actually terrifically done. The cast was so skilled and talented we had to often remind ourselves that we were watching a bunch of teenagers. Our nephew played the villain, a Nazi, as you would imagine. This, by the way, took place at Charles Lindbergh High School. If you don’t recognize the irony of that I encourage you to spend a few seconds researching Lindbergh’s political leanings. This was a particular treat for me because I spent pretty much every waking moment from the age of 11 in the theater. I started acting in a production of “Peter Pan,” playing the father of the Darling children. From the first instant I walked onstage in rehearsal I sensed that something had change in my life. I was right. Any chance of a normal life disappeared. It’s possible that before that I dreamed of being an astronaut or a politician or a doctor, but as soon as I realized that there was a world where everyone would be looking at me, the idea that I would ever knuckle down and become a serious student went right out the window. Any time that I may have spent studying, say, math, was gobbled up by acting in production after production, in school, in community theater, and in professional theater. From an early age, people were actually willing to give me money to be the center of attention. I probably had a healthy ego before I started theater, but from that first moment of performing I developed what most people would consider a decidedly unhealthy ego. Theater really is a world of its own. Whatever clique you ran with in school, you didn’t have anywhere near the sheer volume of flamboyant, arrogant, witty, deranged, self-loathing, self-adoring lunatics found in any theater group. Athletes certainly get their share of attention, but they are competing to win games. Theater people subsist almost entirely on external validation. An athlete can lose a game and still hold their head up if they
This was a particular treat for me because I spent pretty much every waking moment from the age of 11 in the theater. I started acting in a production of “Peter Pan,” playing the father of the Darling children. From the first instant I walked onstage in rehearsal I sensed that something had change in my life. I was right. did their best. An actor doesn’t have that luxury. If a play fails, you are a failure. Performers are by nature an emotional bunch and the audiences’ approval becomes sustenance. Because the theater attracts the more outsized characters in society, it tends to be inclusive. That means, even over 40 years ago, theater was where you were likely to encounter people of all
RSVPhillippi
kinds of lifestyles and sexual orientation. In school some imbeciles took this to mean that every guy involved in theater must, by definition, be gay, and they were judgmental and even abusive out of sheer ignorance. Their behavior never bothered me and I can sum up why in one word, actresses. Because there is undeniably a higher percentage of openly gay men in theater than on a baseball team, that meant less competition for the stunning amount of beautiful girls that were charming, exciting, and wildly insecure. I had inadvertently stumbled onto hunting a baited field. If you’ve never spent time around actresses then you have missed out on one of the great roller coasters of life. Their emotions are always screwed to the sticking point. From joy to anger to despondence to lust, they are always running at a red line. Breaking up with a girl in high school always involved some drama, but breaking up with an actress almost invariably involved threats of suicide. Once exposed to that level of intensity, it was impossible to imagine going to college to become an actuary. There is, of course, a downside to growing up in the theater. For instance I am incapable of doing the most basic arithmetic. At a time when my brain was a big sponge that could have absorbed Algebra or another language or Chemistry, I was filling it with Shakespeare and Thurber and Simon. From the first moment I discovered a teacher would accept “I have to be in the theater for rehearsal” whether it was true or not, any chance of getting me to attend any class outside of theater was doomed. People are often surprised when I say that most actors are pretty dim-witted. They ask how that’s possible when we can memorize dialogue? See, that’s the point — all we did in school was memorize dialogue. No actor would exchange being able to recite the periodic table over getting applause. No one is ever going to stop you in the hall to say how great you were in Art History. I’m genuinely glad that my nephew discovered the joy of acting. I’m also genuinely glad that he didn’t discover it until he was a senior in high school. Had he, like me, wandered into acting at 11, chances are he wouldn’t be going to a good college in the fall to learn how to do something that involves a regular paycheck. Being bitten by the bug at this late stage, he is unlikely to veer off onto a life on stage. He can major in something sensible like Business or Accounting to do whatever those people do, and act on the side. At least that’s what we’re all hoping will happen. The last thing this family needs is another unemployable egomaniac. We already have me.
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alter H. Murphy and Hubert L. Dellinger Jr. were best friends through school, college and adult life. Their high school yearbook describes them as twins. They joined the same fraternities and clubs at University of Memphis and University of Tennessee Medical School, played in bands, enjoyed hunting and fishing and playing cards together. Later, they both became physicians. This picture, made in 1951 in Court Square, shows that even their taste in clothes were similar. PHOTO COURTESY OF HUBERT L. DELLINGER JR. If you have a past photo you would like to share with RSVP readers, please contact Emily Adams Keplinger at 276-7787 ext. 105 or e-mail the photo and caption to editor@rsvpmagazine. com All photos will be returned promptly.
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