-Caveat Lector- an excerpt from: The Right People - A Portrait of the American Social Establishment Stephen Birmingham©1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1968 Little, Brown and Company BostonoToronto LCCN 68-11525 360pps. out-of-print --[5]-- 5. "We're Coming Out Tonight" HISTORY'S first debutantes were, presumably, young women of marriageable age who were presented at European Courts during the seventeenth century for the approval of Court ladies, Court gentlemen, and, sometimes, the Monarch. But there is strong evidence that the practice of introducing eligible virgins to members of the tribe began considerably before that, and that the debutante ritual dates from the Old Stone Age, if not before. The ritual has always carried strong sexual overtones a rite of passage between the ages of puberty and of marriage and, even in primitive cultures, has been carried out with trappings intended to demonstrate the debutante's social position and wealth. Among certain tribes in New Guinea, fathers announce the marriageability of their daughters by throwing large quantities of coconuts into the sea the richer the man, the more coconuts he throws. In Africa, there are tribes which ritually prepare their young women for their debuts by placing them in "fattening houses" where, for beauty's sake, their bodies are anointed with butter for weeks on end while the girls are stuffed with food. Again, it is the richest men who produce the fattest daughters. In most of these primitive ceremonies the girls wear approximations, or adaptations, of the wedding costume, just as American debutantes anthropologically just a step away from their sisters in the savanna today appear in their almost identical, though "one-of-a-kind" long white gowns, wearing bits of veiling, carrying bouquets, and stand in receiving lines like make-believe brides. Otherwise, today's debutantes retain few of the tribal Practices of the Stone Age, but they have developed some equally interesting ones of their own. The father of a modern debutante does not toss coconuts into New York Harbor or San Francisco Bay, but he tosses considerable amounts of money in other directions. There are, of course, many degrees of debutante parties, just as there are degrees of debutantes. Take, for instance, one of the largest and best-known debutante functions in New York, the Debutante Cotillion and Christmas Ball. Customarily given at the Waldorf-Astoria, where the grand ballroom is decorated in clouds of pink and silver fluff, pink tablecloths and twinkly lights, the Cotillion annually presents a hundred or more debutantes to "society." Around the dance floor, the tables are largely filled with members of New York business firms who have agreed to sponsor bits and pieces of the Cotillion and, from tiers of boxes above, parents and friends of the debutantes, plus patrons and patronesses of the Cotillion and members of the Cotillion Committee, survey the proceedings below. In the bar outside, whitetied young men press relentlessly toward a small band of perspiring bartenders, and it is clear that in the face of such a jostling, thirsty throng, the hotel has abandoned any pretense of seeking proof-of-age from the young drinkers. In the anteroom outside the ballroom, games of chance offer rewards ranging from color television sets to ladies' gloves to Waring Blenders to free photographs "By Famous Fashion Photographer, Irving Penn." Domestic champagne circulates in this area for two dollars the glass and, through an opening in the crowd, one may see a shiny new automobile being raffled off at one dollar the chance. If the New York Cotillion seems to have a faint odor of commercialism, to say nothing of Las Vegas, this perhaps can be forgiven, since the whole affair is for the benefit of the New York Infirmary, and all the merchandise offered as prizes in the lottery games has been donated. Just how much money the Cotillion makes for the Infirmary is not recorded as a rule, but, according to Mrs. Eugene W. Ong, a former Cotillion chairman, "The Infirmary could not keep its doors open without the Ball." Within the ballroom the lights dim as the debutantes are presented from the center of the stage. The orchestra plays a tinkly version of "The Teddy Bears' Picnic" over and over again as, one by one, the girls step forward, grip their escorts' hands for wobbly support, and sink into a deep curtsy. A master of ceremonies intones each girl's name over the loudspeaker. Once presented, the young women and their escorts perform a series of Cotillion figures, after which, in somewhat thin and reedy voices, the girls sing "The Coming-Out Waltz" the lyric of which was written by Mrs. Eugene W. Ong's daughter when she was a debutante: We're coming out tonight, We're having a fling! Debs dressed in yards of white, Waltzing we sing -'cause Beaux flock around tonight, Flowers are part of the scheme! Tomorrow may be just another day, But tonight we are part of a dream! Which sums things up pretty well, at least during the early part of the evening. Later on, it is possible for the mood of the evening to change. A young man in tails reels drunkenly down a staircase and, all at once, a small crowd gathers around a sobbing girl. It seems the young man, in passing, stepped on the hem of her huge white gown, and a large section of the underskirt has ripped out at the waist; as the girl's mother and friends surround and try to comfort the girl, the elaborate dress is daintily upraised revealing the puffs of petticoats, in layers, like the components of a parfait. "Look what some slob did to Marcia!" the girl's mother cries repeatedly to anyone who will listen, and others join the group and begin debating what to do. The cost of the dress is mentioned, and there is talk of legal action and insurance. Others suggest that the problem be taken into the ladies' room where, perhaps, the matron can supply needle and thread. Through it all, the debutante herself keeps crying, "Oh, Mother! Mother! Leave me alone!" her voice childlike and despairing. Not all debutante parties should be judged by this one, however. For all the needed dollars it brings to the New York Infirmary, the Debutante Cotillion and Christmas Ball is not one of the more fashionable balls in the United States. In New York, the Grosvenor Ball, given at Thanksgiving time to benefit the Grosvenor Neighborhood House, is far more exclusive; it not only presents far fewer girls, but it costs considerably more than the Cotillion. (To put a girl on the Cotillion's list costs only about one hundred and fifty dollars; the Grosvenor costs over one thousand dollars per debutante but, since it benefits a charity, much of this sum is deductible.) The junior League Ball and & Junior Assemblies are also considered more important, socially, than the Cotillion, and the Assemblies are more important than the Ball. At all of these, one can feel surer of being presented to Real Society. As a New York social secretary explains, "I can almost always arrange for a girl to be presented at the Cotillion, and, sometimes, the Junior League Ball using pull, that is. But the Assemblies and the Grosvenor she simply must manage for herself." A truly important debutante, of course, will be presented at all of these balls the Cotillion thrown in, as if for good measure plus a number of others, plus at a ball of her very own. "A girl who has a little dinner party in the Sert Room, and who has been presented at the Cotillion afterward and nothing else hasn't had much of a debut," another social secretary says. No, for not enough money has been spent. Another way to gauge the importance, or realness, of a girl's debut is to consider at which point during her eighteenth year she makes her first, and therefore official, emergence. The Christmas-to-New Year's holiday season is perhaps the gayest and the busiest with, in most large cities, several hotel-based parties scheduled each evening but, within that period, there are subtle gradations of status. A girl whose debut is placed toward the New Year's end of the week has less to look forward to, and is therefore less favored. There are, however, three other distinct "little" seasons, and each of these has its own connotations. The June, beginning-of-summer coming-out season is probably the least fashionable; one associates June with impoverished, shabbygenteel families, with teas, and with unstylish Boston (where June is as fashionable as any other season). Then there is the Thanksgiving holiday season which, for its very brevity, was for many years considered the most fashionable coming-out season of all. But recently the most wanted season, in terms of everything that matters to a debutante and her parents, has been the somewhat longer fall "little season" between Labor Day and the start of school. In New York, this comes to a sort of climax with the Tuxedo Autumn Ball in Tuxedo Park. In other cities it is the scene of large and lavish private parties given at country houses and under tents. Looked at cynically, the fall season gives a girl a fine and early start on a long social season that will continue through Thanksgiving, move into full speed at Christmas, carry on through spring and wind her up, exhausted, in June. There are other ways for a girl to come out than at a ball. In theory, she can come out at a luncheon, a tea, or at a dinner dance. But nowadays coming-out luncheons have virtually disappeared. Teas continue to be popular in a few cities notably in the South but each year sees fewer of them. (A debutante tea, of course, is not the one-lump-or-two variety; it is a "great tea" with champagne, an orchestra, dancing, and "the same guest list you'd invite to a ball around a thousand.") As one debutante says, "Teas are too exhausting. They last only two hours, but a girl has to be on her feet the whole time, receiving." It leaves a girl too tuckered to enjoy any parties that evening. Dinner dances are also disappearing as coming-out media, and the reason for the waning importance of all these leaving it a question of a ball or nothing is that the raison d'etre for the debut itself has changed gradually in the last fifty years. Formerly, a girl's debut was to introduce her to friends of her parents, and single men, if present at all, were as a rule older than she. Today, the reason is boys. Luncheons and teas are disappearing because, as one social secretary explains, "Boys don't like to go to parties in the daytime." Adults today are pushed into the background and, by their own admission, enjoy going to coming-out parties even their own daughters' far less than their parents did a generation ago. "I remember what a lovely time we all had in those days," a Boston grandmother reminisces. "When each of us in our set brought a daughter out, it was a chance for us all to get together. Now? I don't understand what they do at these Parties any more. If a granddaughter of a particularly dear friend has a party, I go, put in an appearance, but I leave as soon as possible." Older people leaving a party as soon as possible can have consequences, at a large private ball, more severe than a ripped-out underskirt. It can result in a rented mansion being vandalized on Long Island or in any number of less publicized incidents. During the early morning hours at a recent Connecticut party, for instance, it was for some reason decided by the time the guests had gathered at the swimming pool to break all the glassware. For several hours afterward, guests danced and swam with bare and bleeding feet. And so it has become a rule of thumb that to bring out a daughter properly she must have a ball of her own. (There was a time when small groups of girls would band together and, to share the expenses, give a joint ball; in the affluent 1960's this has become according to one girl "the cheapie way" to come out.) That Society is now addicted to the private ball was nowhere more apparent than in San Francisco where the G. W. Douglas Carvers did the uncommon thing in buying their own ball-sized tent, instead of renting one, along with the glasses and the folding chairs, from a caterer. The Carvers point out that their tent is an investment. They have four daughters. Their tent also makes them popular with their neighbors. (The James Floods borrowed it for the 1966 debut of their daughter Elizabeth.) And the Carvers like to point out that theirs is, after all, only a small tent just sixty feet in diameter. Larger San Francisco parties like that of the William Wallace Meins for their daughter must still turn elsewhere for tents. To canopy more than a thousand guests, the Meins had to import one from Los Angeles. San Francisco parties have gotten so large that Millie Robbins, a local Society columnist, has commented, "They'll soon have to bring the girls out in the Cow Palace which might be rather appropriate!" As the number and scale of private balls have climbed steadily since the Second World War, so have the possibilities for decorating, outfitting, and staffing them. When the Henry Fords spent a reported $50,000 on a party for their daughter, the affair made news and raised eyebrows here and there. But many American families, with names less well-known to those outside Society, today spend that much and more to bring out their daughters in what they consider the proper style. It has become unfashionable to have merely one dance orchestra on hand; to make their parties sure of success, many parents hire as many as three one for dancing, one for jazz, one for folk-rock and place each in a separate part of the garden so that young guests can traipse from one style of music to another. It is also unthinkable to hire one of the big Society bands Meyer Davis's, Lester Lanin's, or Peter Duchin's without its leader. Meyer Davis, though he has some ninety different orchestras, had, as of 1966, bookings to appear with his band up into the year 1985 which Davis, a man in his seventies, wryly suggests that the lawyers handling his estate will have to fill. Davis will not personally appear with his band for an evening for a penny under five thousand dollars. The good old days of unbridled spending on parties and such frivolity are not dead and gone. They are here. Obviously, a debutante ball on the grandest possible scale is an enterprise to be undertaken neither lightly nor by the inexperienced and, in recent years, professional party-planners have found themselves in a lucrative business. These social secretaries, as they designate themselves, are for the most part women. Almost all are members of wellconnected (or almost well-connected) families who, for various reasons (for the sheer thrill of it all, they say), use their social connections to help them make a living. They are nearly always gracious and charming and yet, at the same time, they are shrewd businesswomen who know how to come to quick terms with the most recalcitrant Teamster or member of the electricians' union should the occasion demand. The undisputed dean of all social secretaries was the late, great Juliana Cutting of New York, and New York's three most prominent social secretaries Mrs. William H. Tew, Mrs. Katherine Palmer, and Mrs. Chester Burden admit that they carry on in her illustrious tradition and clutch Mrs. Cutting's image, figuratively, next to their hearts. (Mrs. Tew, probably the grandest of the three, has actually allowed the myth to grow up around her that she decides who goes into the Social Register and who does not; this is untrue.) A New York parent going to one of these three ladies will first be asked to select a date for the ball and it is wise to do this as early as possible literally when the child is a toddler. All three ladies have brought out their second generation of debutantes, and have dates selected for a third. A date, once picked, is immediately registered with the other social secretaries. The three are scrupulously honest; if Mrs. Tew has selected a date for a debut, Mrs. Palmer would never dream of giving it to a client of hers, nor would Mrs. Burden. They are competitors, but in ladylike cahoots. Not all social secretaries are as trustworthy; pirating of dates occurs, particularly in smaller cities, and it is a practice that plagues innocent San Francisco. When it happens, there is only one practical course for a hostess to take make sure that her party is at least twice as lavish as her rival's. A San Francisco mother, hearing that her claim on a date had been jumped, rushed to the house of the usurper and, being told by the butler that the lady of the house was indisposed, seized a precious Chinese vase in her whitegloved hands, flung it to the marble floor where it shattered into bits, and cried, "Tell the bitch I know her for what she is!" and departed. Social secretaries insist that the more completely they are allowed to plan and run a coming-out, the better it will be. One social secretary recalls a party where the hostess insisted on making her own arrangements for the orchestra. On the night of the party, did the orchestra show up? Of course it didn't, so there you are. Given carte blanche, a social secretary will arrange for all the catering, the liquor (champagne is recommended because, as one social secretary says, "It gives them a pleasant little bun on"), the music, tent, flowers, decorations, invitations, photographs, notices in the newspapers right up to the cleanup crew the day after. "As a result of television," Mrs. Tew says, "everybody wants celebrities at their parties." Celebrities who, for a fee, have appeared and entertained at coming-out parties range from Victor Borge and Ethel Merman (of whom parents approve) to Elvis Presley and the Rolling Stones (of whom the parents approve less). A social secretary selects a motif for each party and, looking back, will recall, "I did her in pink geraniums, and married her a year later in wisteria," or, "The family colors are purple and white, so we did her in lilacs and white crocus." But perhaps the most important ingredient that a social secretary supplies is her list. In New York, such a list may contain twenty-five hundred names two thousand boys and five hundred girls. The boys' list is, of course, more important, and each secretary jealously guards and maintains her names. One social secretary keeps her list in her safe-deposit box at her bank, and will not even let her own secretary see it; the quality of her list is a social secretary's most precious asset, and social-climbing parents with ambitions for their sons must, in order to get anywhere at all, get their sons' names placed somehow on a social secretary's list. Actually, it is not all that hard, and the composition of the list is not much of a mystery. The names come from prep school and college catalogues, from the Social Register, from the pupils at private dancing classes, and from those who attend "Junior" or sub-debutante dances and, in New York, particularly the Groton-St. Mark's Dance. This dance, given each year by the two schools, serves as a major clearing house for stags. The behavior of a sixteen- or seventeen-year-old boy at the Groton-St. Mark's Dance can determine his social career for years to come, and will decide whether or not his name will appear on a list the following season. At the dance, which is usually given at the Hotel Pierre, soft punch and sweet biscuit are the only refreshments served. Social secretaries post emissaries in the Hotel Pierre bar to take down names of boys who go there for sturdier libations. There is one other reason why a boy's name may not appear on a social secretary's list. In New York and in other large cities, few Jewish boys are listed or, more exactly, boys with Jewish-sounding names, since social secretaries have no access to facts about a boy's religion. It is at the debutante stage that what is known as "The Great Division" begins to take place, and Jewish and Gentile Society are parted like the Red Sea. In Jewish Society there is, of course, a similar list of boys' names, similarly carefully maintained, by Jewish social secretaries for Jewish debutantes; in New York, its backbone is provided by the pupils of the Viola Wolff Dancing Classes, the Jewish equivalent of Mrs. William de Rham's. But it is rare for a boy's name to appear on both a Jewish and a Gentile list; when this happens, it is assumed to be through an inadvertence. Normally, a boy's name stays on a list for four years from age seventeen to twenty-one. But the social secretary must be ever on the lookout for things that could disqualify him as a suitable stag. If he should become engaged for example, his name must be removed, or if be should commit some social misdemeanor such as failing to dance with his hostess, drinking too much, failing to reply properly to an invitation, or attending a party to which he had not been invited. Flunking out of prep school or college is not considered a social crime, nor, apparently, is expulsion from school for stealing. A young man of good family, dismissed from his school for theft in a case that even made its way to newspaper headlines, remained on the list and turned up at all the best parties the following season. Drinking of hard liquor has long been a commonplace of debutante parties; if it isn't provided at the bar and it usually is it turns up anyway. When a group of Darien, Connecticut, parents was arrested for serving liquor to teenagers at a debutante party after which a girl was killed in an auto accident the parents understandably felt that they had been unfairly singled out. Other parents have been serving liquor to underaged boys and girls at other parties for years. The only rule governing liquor is the vague one that states that a young person should be able to "handle" it. Alongside each boy's name on the list are his parents' names, his address, his school and his class and in most cases a meaningful blank space for "Remarks." One debutante, looking over the list for her party, wrote "Spits when he talks" under "Remarks." That boy's name came off the list. So carefully do social secretaries tend their lists that many debutantes, and their parents, allow the secretaries a free rein with the party invitations. As one social secretary says, "If a boy's name is on my list, he's guaranteed to behave." While they all agree that there should be more boys than girls at a coming-out party, each social secretary has her own favorite proportion. Some prefer three boys to every girl; others say four to one is better, "the proportions of a good Martini." More than four to one is considered undesirable. "The boys gang together then, and shoot craps and talk about the Army," says one lady. Gate-crashing is a perennial cause for concern. Most ballrooms, private and public, have additional, little-known entrances, through kitchens and pantries where a boy can enter the party with the lobster Newburg, and the secrets of these are passed on from crasher-father to crasher-son, along with the studs and cufflinks. Social secretaries post members of their staffs called "dragons" by the young men at strategic spots to keep out the uninvited, and most dragons make it a point to know not only the names but also the faces of the men on their list. But the crashing problem, like the servant problem, is secretly a non-problem. As one social secretary confesses, "If a party doesn't have a few crashers, nobody thinks it's a success." For their thoughtful services to which one social secretary adds, as a fillip of her own, a hot bath drawn for the mother of the debutante filled with special salts in which Mother is instructed to loll for an hour before the party social secretaries either charge a flat fee of ten or fifteen per cent of the party's cost, or receive discounts from the caterer, the florist, the photographer, the orchestra, and the wine merchant. The ladies seldom quote the prices of their clients' parties, but most admit that they would be uninterested in tackling anything with a budget under five thousand dollars. In New York it is now true that any girl can come out not the best way, perhaps, but at least get out if her family is willing to spend the money. It is not true in Philadelphia. By tradition, Philadelphia Society is restricted to members of "first Philadelphia families." Newcomers generally have a hard time of it. One Philadelphia "newcomer," whose family had been in Philadelphia only since 186o and who recently sought admission to Philadelphia's coveted Assemblies, an institution that began in 1748, was, after considerable effort and with the help of many friends, finally allowed to attend as an out-of-town guest. So stern are the Philadelphia Assemblies' rules against admitting divorced people that the John Ingersolls (and she a Cadwalader) were not permitted to attend the coming-out of their daughter, since Mrs. Ingersoll had once been divorced. Philadelphians take a superior view of their sister city to the north. "New York is pretty much come-and-go, isn't it?" asks a Philadelphia lady. Unlike New York, Philadelphia has a single official debutante list, printed up by J. E. Caldwell & Company, a jewelry and stationery store, the Tiffany's of Philadelphia. Caldwell's employs an official debutante screener named George W. Rehfuss. A mother registers her daughter with Mr. Rehfuss five or six years before her debut and, from that point on, Mr. Rehfuss sees that no debutante's dates overlap with another's and that, somehow, each of the city's hundred to two hundred debutantes gets her rightful share of the important college weekends and of the sixty-eight days of the four debutante seasons. Upstarts who hope to make debutantes of their daughters face their initial barrier in the person of Mr. Rehfuss, and those who treat Mr. Rehfuss as an ordinary clerk or suspect that he will respond to bribery are disappointed. "If someone came to me whose daughter shouldn't be a debutante, I would know it," says Mr. Rehfuss. Philadelphia's most powerful social secretary was the late Mrs. Edward J. MacMullan, a woman who lived to be, as the saying goes, a legend in her time. At her death in the summer of 1966, it was a shock to realize from the obituary notices that this striking woman with her flaming red hair, aquiline nose, boundless energy and Irish temper was seventy-eight years old. For over forty years she had been, as she herself liked to put it, "the ringmaster of the Philadelphia social circus." The secret of her ringmastery was her direct approach to problems. For years, Mrs. MacMullan was Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury's personal arbiter elegantiarum, and one of Mrs. Stotesbury's great difficulties in life was a particular diamond and emerald tiara. It was so heavy with stones that whenever she wore it, it gave her a stiff neck. Mrs. MacMullan said, "You deserve to suffer with that much jewelry on your head. Either attach a few helium balloons to it or wear it without complaining." The same tiara had a tendency to list to one side and fall over Mrs. Stotesbury's ear. And so Mrs. MacMullan stationed herself behind Mrs. Stotesbury at parties and, whenever the tiara began to slip, nudged it back into place again. Her own background was humble or so it is said; Mrs. MacMulIan herself always preferred to keep her background out of the conversation. But for two generations the foremost families of Philadelphia Society regarded "Mrs. Mac" with something close to awe, and something even closer to dread. "Oh, she's a devil!" they would murmur, rolling their eyes, and there were catalogued instances where young men dropped from Mrs. Mac's list for one reason or another felt themselves so permanently ruined in Philadelphia Society that they left to start life over in other cities. Mrs. MacMullan herself used to laugh loudly at such assertions, but it was clear she enjoyed their being made. "My rules are simple," she once said. "Manners. Good manners. Rudimentary good manners are all I ask. There's little enough elegance left in the world. Are a few good manners too much to ask for? Take shaking hands. If a young lady is introduced to me, I expect her to take my hand. Naturally I go to all the parties I plan and, as the young men and women enter the room, I expect them to come up to me, say, 'Good evening, Mrs. MacMullan , and take my hand. That's all. If they don't do that much, then they don't deserve to be in Society." In addition to reportedly knowing the whereabouts of several wellplaced family skeletons, Mrs. MacMullan's great success and power as a social secretary stemmed from the simple fact that she planned and ran very good parties. From her triumph at organizing the wedding of Ethel du Pont to Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., she went on to establish Philadelphia's Junior Bal Masque, the Piccadilly Dances, and the Headdress Balls all now fixtures of the city's social life. Her inventiveness when it came to adding gay and sparkly side-show features to coming-out parties was endless. At one ball, a replica of a roadside diner was built just off the ballroom of the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel; from it, short-order cooks served hot dogs, hamburgers, and soft drinks to guests who sat on stools. For the debut of Ella ("Tootie") Widener in 1946, a North Pole motif was selected. There was a real snowstorm, an aurora borealis overhead, and Miss Widener received from an igloo which was heated, of course. With surprise, guests learned that it was not a MacMullan party, but one designed by her competitor, Mrs. Wirt Thompson. "Trying to copy me, of course, sniffed Mrs. MacMullan. "Imagine! An igloo! I hear it dripped all over her dress." Mrs. MacMullan was well aware of the hazards of drippage from overhead. She often used wildlife in her decor releasing flocks of white doves or, in one instance, four hundred canaries. Beforehand, Mrs. MacMullan had thoughtfully fed the canaries a special seed mixture calculated to induce a mild constipation. Not all her schemes were successful. Once, a herd of peacocks was to parade magnificently across the ballroom, plumes fanned regally but, seeing the guests, the peacocks panicked and caused quite a disturbance. "One of the things came lunging at me, flapping its wings," a girl who was a guest at the party recalls. "Goodness, if I hadn't had so much champagne I think I would have fainted!" Flamingoes, it turns out, have considerably more aplomb. Philadelphians will never forget the ball where huge white paper cylinders were suspended from the ceiling of the tent. Everyone wondered what they were for until midnight, when the cylinders flew open releasing thousands of white butterflies. The butterflies came cascading down all quite dead killed, apparently, by the firepreventative that had been sprayed around the tent. But, for all these mishaps, Mrs. MacMullan was a part of Philadelphia Society life. Who can possibly replace her is a subject of agitated speculation. Boston is often likened to Philadelphia, but the two cities actually have little in common. "In Boston," says one Philadelphian, "you simply do not get enough to eat." This is certainly part of it and, compared to those in Philadelphia, Boston's coming-out parties are austere. For years, Boston debutantes were presented under simple marquees in their families' gardens; but with the rising costs of these affairs costs which wouldn't mate a New Yorker or a Philadelphian blink more and more Boston girls are being presented at mass debuts, at the Debutante Cotillion held in June at the Sheraton Plaza Hotel, and the Debutante Assembly, held Thanksgiving Eve at the Statler. Before one of these parties not long ago, a debutante complained to a friend that the shoes she was planning to wear were too small and were uncomfortable; she doubted she could bear the pain of dancing in them all evening. "Why not wear sneakers?" her practical-minded friend offered. "Under your long dress they'll never be noticed." She wore sneakers; they were not noticed. At the same party, another un-style-conscious debutante wore long woolen underwear under her ball gown, "because it was cold." Boston, like Philadelphia, has a Society that is generally chilly to the upstart. "We don't snub them," a Boston lady says, "we side-step them." Another city renowned for its impenetrable social barriers against outsiders without connections and newcomers without portfolio is Charleston, South Carolina. Although it is not a "Social Register city," Charlestonians feel that it doesn't need to be. The city has a rich and glorious past. Between the Revolution and the Civil War, it was the capital of the Plantation System and the birthplace of all that is considered gracious and elegant in the Southern "way of life." In 1762, Charleston's St. Cecilia Society was formed. Originally an amateur musical group, it was similar to and only slightly younger than Philadelphia's Assemblies. For years, the St. Cecilia Society ruled Charleston's social life; no girl could be a debutante in Charleston unless she was a daughter of a St. Cecilia's member. Recent pressure, however, has broken down the system. Now about half of Charleston's debutantes are from non-St. Cecilia families. They can do everything except attend the St. Cecilia Ball. In Dallas and other Texas cities where one might expect oil money to have an exuberant influence on debutantes and their affairs, most debuts are subdued and Eastern rather than Western in flavor. Eastern social secretaries arc often imported to arrange parties, and this fact alone is enough to give a party great cachet. The same is true in the motion picture colony of Los Angeles, where Society like everything else about that billowing city-of-villages is confusing and hard to grasp. At one time there was a genuine Los Angeles Old Guard, composed largely of Spanish land-grant families, many of whom clung jealously to their ancient Spanish titles, and even spoke Spanish in their homes. These were eclipsed, however, by suburban upper-crust families centered around such towns as Pasadena and San Marino where, if one was part of the circle, it was possible to believe that nothing else was going on in Los Angeles at all. Such fixtures of Pasadena social life as the Los Angeles Country Club and the Las Madrinas Debutante Ball excluded, automatically, all movie people; the "Pasadena crowd" and the "Beverly Hills crowd" literally never met. Gradually the great dividing line has begun to blur, and one of the first movie people to integrate with the Pasadena set was none other than the late Walt Disney. His daughter Sharon made Los Angeles social history as the first movie-colony debutante in the Las Madrinas Ball. The occasion even had a touch of Hollywood comedy. Realizing that be and Sharon were the same height in their stocking feet, and that when he led her in the first dance she would tower over him in her high heels, Disney went to his studio's wardrobe department and bad his evening shoes fitted out with tall lifts. Sharon, meanwhile, had thought of the same possibility and so, on the evening of the ball, considerately wore flats. On the dance floor, a towering Disney lurched about with Sharon's head at waist level. Debutantes have undergone some interesting personality changes in the last few decades. In the 1920's, they prided themselves on being brittle, animated, and witty, and were admired for their boyish gaiety, their ability to swing from chandeliers and to drink and mix cocktails. But in the thirties the movies were promoting the word "glamour," and debutantes let their hair down to their shoulders, became willowy, languid, and torchy. At the same time, they discovered show business. A debutante named Cobina Wright, Jr., was singing at the Waldorf, and Sally Clark, a Roosevelt relative, was at the Plaza. Eve Symington, a Senator's daughter, was at a West Side bistro called La Place Pigalle. Paragraphs in Society columns seemed less important than write-ups in Variety, photographs in the tabloids, and gossipy in nuendos by Walter Winchell. "Cafe Society" became a phrase. The Old Guard was more amused than shocked. It all seemed very new and strange and, therefore, exciting. Much of the show business aspect of coming out remains. In 1951, when Life published a full-page picture of Caroline Lee Bouvier, now Princess Stanislaus Radziwill, commenting that "Society editors and arbiters" considered her the leading debutante of the New York season, she was besieged with fan mail. In one letter, a certain Boris Kaplan of the talent department of Paramount Pictures wrote the future sister-in-law of President Kennedy to ask her whether she would be interested in discussing motion picture work. Writing to her at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York, Mr. Kaplan urged the rich and beautiful Miss Bouvier to call him at his New York office "collect." She has underscored this suggestion, in red, and has placed the letter in a scrapbook with other invitations collected during her debutante year. A daughter of real Society cannot be bought for the price of a twenty-cent call, as Miss Bouvier later proved by launching herself as an actress on her own terms. In every season there is a girl who might be called a superfluous debutante a girl who, long before her debutante year, has received all the acclaim and admiration any girl could dream of, and for whom the ritual of coming out seems to add little of importance. She has been "out" for a long time. Sometimes this Ultimate Girl is a creation of the press. From the thirties one thinks of Brenda Diana Duff Frazier who, fresh from the genteel Miss Hewitt's classes in New York, became advertised as "America's Number One Glamour Debutante, with her long "debutante bob, her dark eyes, her pale skin and thin red mouth "more beautiful that Joan Crawford's." She was the Girlwith-Everything, and clever reporters were skillful at inducing dumbgirl quotes from her so that, long before her debutante year was over, she was hated by the Depression-poor American public, and had to face such ordeals as being hissed when she entered a restaurant. Some thirty years and two collapsed marriages later, Brenda Frazier lives in near-retirement, far from the Society into which she came. Then there was Gloria Vanderbilt, now also several times married, whose comingout career was singular. Though labeled by the press the "Number One Debutante," she was never technically a debutante at all since she was never presented at a ball. Then, periodically, there are the girls with helpful mothers behind them, pushing them into social prominence, and one recalls the blond and beautiful Joanne Connelley, Debutante Queen of 1948 who, less than ten years after her press-agented debut, was dead of a heart ailment induced by an overdose of reducing pills, and was survived by her ambitious, more robust mother. Of the same vintage as Miss Connelley was a dark-haired girl with a heart-shaped face named Jacqueline, Lee Bouvier. Though her debut was not press-agented, she emerged a few years later as one of the most famous women in the world. Ten years later, a beautiful English girl named Henrietta Tiarks and her mother arrived on these shores. Henrietta Tiarks was already one of the most come-out girls in recent history. Her debutante career had begun in England when she was presented to the Queen and was heralded in the press as "the last of the debs." This was not strictly accurate. Royal presentation parties were being discontinued that year as being "out of keeping with the times," but debutantes have continued to proliferate in England nonetheless. Henrietta's presentation was followed by a series of luncheons, teas, cocktail parties, dinners, and " one or two balls every night." In between there were weekends at Oxford, May Week at Cambridge, polo matches at Windsor Great Park, the Henley Regatta, the Eton-Harrow cricket match, Ascot, and the Derby. She gave a ball of her own, in London, and it took up the entire ground floor of Claridge's Hotel; the party lasted until five, after which there was a trip to London Airport for breakfast. Next came the "little season" in Scotland where, to make it official north of the border, Henrietta came out all over again, and attended "twenty-five or thirty balls." Then on to Paris, to come out there, and next to Madrid for the same reason. "Paris parties are fabulous," Henrietta said afterward. "They're all given in such beautiful houses. Madrid is wonderful, too, but fewer balls are given there." Arriving in New York, she was enrolled in Briarcliff College, in a horsey part of suburban Westchester, and her mother installed herself in a Manhattan apartment and busied herself keeping Henrietta's social calendar and pasting Henrietta's press clippings into big scrapbooks, "So her grandchildren may see what a wonderful year she is having." Briarcliff often called "Debutante U." could be little more than a place to go and rest between parties because, of course, Henrietta Tiarks was presented to New York Society at two balls and then plunged into the generally hectic Eastern social schedule. For good measure, she also made debuts in Boston, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C., and went to balls in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Chicago. How many balls, all told, did Henrietta Tiarks attend? She lost count somewhere along the way. "It was hundreds and hundreds. Looking back on it, it was all quite wonderful," she said when it was over. "But I'm glad it's only once in a lifetime. When the clock struck midnight, January first, I said, 'Hooray! I'm an ex-debutante!'" Her mother, meanwhile, had stuffed five scrapbooks full of photographs and clippings and cried, "I've still got drawers and drawersful more!" Such an elaborate comingout season undoubtedly bad its desired long-term result. The Tiarkses, though very rich (Henrietta's banker father was, among other things, one of the developers of Jamaica's Round Hill), did not have a title in the family. Now they do. A few years after her coming-out year, Henrietta married the young Marquis of Tavistock, heir to the Duke of Bedford. But girls like these are the exception in a debutante season. Ultimate Girls are only rarely national or international celebrities. For the most part they are the pretty products of the Eastern boarding schools Foxcroft, Miss Porter's, Westover, Madeira, Dobbs Ferry, Ethel Walker, Chatham Hall. The Ultimate Girl is an artifact of American prep school life, as persistent as the rumor that there is saltpeter in the gravy. She is selected not by a Cholly Knickerbocker but, in an informal election, by perspiring boys who sit sprawled on beds and cracked leather chairs in banner-decked dormitory rooms- of such schools as Choate, Hotchkiss, Exeter, St. Paul's, St. Mark's, Lawrenceville, Groton, Taft and Hill, and in fraternity lounges of both the big and the little Ivy League. Selection is based on her ability to leave male heads dizzy with desire, grief, and frustration. Once picked, she is advertised by word of mouth. She is authoritatively reported to be both fast and frigid, in one breath a Magdalen and in the next a Medusa. Suddenly she receives dozens of invitations to every party there is and when she appears she radiates the "star quality" of a movie queen, with lesser debutantes, eager to share her light, hovering about her like handmaidens. But this Ultimate Girl is not necessarily doomed to a future of divorce, notoriety, alcohol, sleeping pills, and psychiatry , More often than not she simply finishes her debutante year, graduates from college, marries, moves to Scarsdale, has babies, joins the country club and the Junior League. The Diana Barrymores, the Brenda Fraziers, and the Joanne Connelleys of the debutante world have given a somewhat lurid connotation to the word. And so coming out has become a point of some controversy in Society. Should one let one's teenage daughter step into these highly charged and perfumed waters? What are the real values of the debutante ritual, if any? There are many opinions. One handsome young New York woman says, "Daddy asked me if I wanted a coming-out party, and I told him flatly no, I didn't. To me it's silly to spend all that money just so that I could have a fabulous party. What's a party? When it's all over, what have you got but a ball gown you'll never wear again? I told him that if he had that much money to spend, he could put it in a savings account for me. Then, when I get married, it will help me buy a house or furniture or educate my children." Then she added, thoughtfully, "To me a girl who wants to be a debutante is basically insecure." The late Mrs. MacMullan of Philadelphia would have agreed with this, more or less. But she saw in the system factors which, if a girl was "basically insecure," would cure her of all her emotional problems. "You may say I'm in a luxury business, that it's a lot of froth," she once said. "But, believe me, it's thrilling to see what her debutante year does for a girl! It can turn a shy, awkward child into a radiant, charming young woman. It teaches a girl poise and manners. Do you know there are girls nowadays who don't know how to perform an introduction properly? Much less pour tea! And think of the employment these parties give to caterers, florists, musicians, marquee men, photographers, and gown shops!" The mother of a debutante says, "Why shouldn't I give her a little gaiety? These are perilous times. She'll have to face the hard facts soon enough." And another says, "It's a gracious tradition that ought to be preserved." And yet, when the guests at Fernanda Wanamaker Leas's coming-out party helped dismantle the house where they were staying, dragging mattresses out onto the Southampton beach, some of the graciousness of the tradition seemed to disappear. "What do they drag out mattresses on the beach for?" asks one mother. "That's what worries me." A New York father says flatly, "I'm not going to give a party so a lot of drunks and hopheads can rape my daughter." In a somewhat more restrained tone, a Boston grandmother asks worriedly, "Is it true that all the debutantes nowadays go the whole hog?" In the Old Stone Age when a marriageable maiden was preened, fattened, buttered, and presented to the tribe, she was offered as a virgin yet how many of her modern sisters offer an equivalent degree of virtue is a debatable point. The debutantes of 1966 generally take the view that girls today are no more, and no less, virtuous than they were in their mothers' generation. Others disagree. Obviously, firm statistics are not available but when, not long ago, an American girl traveling in England announced that she guessed that "at least fifty per cent" of American debutantes were virgins, this was greeted with widespread skepticism. "This would certainly not be true here," a London Society columnist commented, adding that in England "only a tiny per cent" were pure. American parents prefer not to dwell overlong on such aspects of the rite, and instead try to see in it something worthwhile and reassuring. As one mother says, "I've heard all the talk about the Sexual Revolution, but I confess I haven't seen it. I mean, how can one see something like that going on if one isn't a peeping Tom? But I have seen the way college girls dress nowadays with their scraggly hair and sloppy shoes and dirty raincoats. At least if a girl's a debutante she has to look like a lady!" pps. 74-98 --[cont]-- Aloha, He'Ping, Om, Shalom, Salaam. Em Hotep, Peace Be, Omnia Bona Bonis, All My Relations. Adieu, Adios, Aloha. Amen. Roads End Kris DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic screeds are not allowed. Substancenot soapboxing! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright frauds is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. 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