A Tale of Two Parties

A couple of bashes go head-to-head in bringing out the town’s socialistas. The surprise? This town’s actually big enough for both.

Nelson Mui

'Twas the night before May Day, and all the town's social creatures were stirring.  

On one side of town, established social fixture Danielle Steel was busy hosting a benefactors' party at her Pac Heights home in anticipation of the next night's biannual Star Ball, the fund-raiser established in memory of her son Nick Traina, who committed suicide after battling severe manic depression. To kick off the event and maintain her social primacy, the romance novelist tapped her network of connections for all the celebrity wattage she could muster. Jetting into town a night early were Al and Tipper Gore (though Al skipped the main party), Jackie Collins, Vogue editor-at-large André Leon Talley, and the socially controversial Princess Michael of Kent (disparaged as Rent-a-Kent in England). They circulated throughout the house where Steel, outfitted in the social armor of a Prada dress and a stunning multimillion dollar yellow diamond ring, entertained with her fabulously over-the-top French style (foie gras before dinner and cheese platters served in her grand ballroom after). 

Meanwhile, up in Napa and at the Matrix, Tatiana Sorokko, a jet-setting Russian fashion muse, was busy entertaining another small, exclusive group of out-of-towners while orchestrating her big event: the 50th-birthday party of gallerist husband Serge at the Legion of Honor. Those flying in for the birthday bash included former foreign minister Andrey Kozyrev and British actor Michael York (in town for the Star Ball), Parisian couturier Ralph Rucci, Harper's Bazaar editrix Glenda Bailey, and New York fixture Georgette Mosbacher.

Two months earlier, Women's Wear Daily reported that Steel had asked Sorokko to move the date of her party, which overlapped with the Star Ball. She didn't. So by May 1, the date of both bashes, the town was abuzz with how the parties would shake out. Topics of the week: Which party are you going to? If both, which cocktail hour are you attending? Was Sorokko, as went some of the overwrought talk, planning her own social downfall, locally anyway?

Well, as with most of the melodramas and psychodramas among the Pac Heights set, the reality turned out to be more prosaic. Both women pulled off highly successful affairs. Clearly, there was more than enough food, fun, and boldfaced names to go around.

At the Star Ball, bawdy Mariah Carey, although reportedly advised to choose a chaster outfit, still managed to spill out of her dress during her performance. Barry Bonds, in the audience, threw his hands up in the air to help her back into her bodice. But it was an assistant with double-stick tape who saved the day. Only a few minutes later, however, the diva did a quick change into a saucier short Versace dress. Between the
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