Our fundraising committee met this week.
(We’ve finally got a name – The MJs. We discovered that for middle names, there
are 3 Jane’s, 2 Mary’s and a Joy!) We tossed around the old Christmas in July
theme, which took me back to such an event a few years back.
It was a benefit for the special school and
held at a reception centre in a far-away suburb more famous for its crime and low
socio-economic status than its fancy function centres - in fact, its fancy anything. At $55 a head and
drinks at bar prices, it wasn’t hard to rustle up 30 friends and head out –
although one was most concerned about the dark car park behind a shabby shopping mall
and the safety of their Jaguar!
The young bouncer, sporting the local hair
cut of the moment - cropped close to his skull for the most part but delighting with a set of long and wispy
rats’ tails down the back - took
his job very seriously, not allowing any of my middle-aged friends to enter without
a ticket. I’ve never felt so dangerous!!
Once inside the venue, the fun continued:
carpet that could be mistake for Velco as I had to tear my shoes from the spills
of a hundred of prior events with every step, crumbling concrete stairs
disguised with said sticky carpet, a mirrored wall with water romantically flowing
down it, but so close to what would normally be the bridal table (on this
occasion, the silent auction table), that every time I lent forward to look at
something, my arse got wet – and I strongly suspect the brides of this area
have arses much larger than mine.
I was reassured when I got to the bar to
see that champagne was $12. Okay, it wouldn’t be French, but for 12 bucks you
could expect a glass of something decent. I placed my order and paid my money.
The barman slammed down a bottle - egads! Surprised, I looked at the label – it boasted
the name of the venue. Without
sounding like a total snob, I had no idea you could get anything other than
soda water that was that cheap with bubbles.
First course was soup; one orangy, one
browny-green. “What is the soup, please?” enquired one of my guests. “I dunno,”
said the waiter, with a tone that clearly implied why the hell should he and
what a stupid question to ask, of all people, the waiter. Main was hot ham or
turkey and dessert bought Christmas pud. All a little mysterious but tasty and
plentiful and for $55 for 3 courses, excellent value.
And of course, in spite of all our
trepidations and initial misgivings, it was a fabulous night. A great band got
everyone up on the dance floor, the auctions raised cash for the school and we
all had stories to dine out on for weeks to come.
Oh, and the Jag managed to survive too!
4 comments:
LOL. Everything she says is true - MWW is not exaggerating at all. We were there.....and survived to tell the tale.
"What is the soup?" is interesting. After a function at the Briagolong Mechanics Institute [ a wedding I think] many years ago it transpired that the caterers [ locals - bless their hearts] had failed to order the tomato soup and so we were served watered down tomato sauce!!!!!!
Perhaps everyone was so into the alcohol that thye didn't even comment but moved onto next course [ probably a cold collation!] A fun time was had by all, the marriage survived the test of time and I can still tell the story.
Tomato sauce and water!! OMG. There's a solution I've not previously thought of. But perhaps at a Mechanic Institute you should be grateful they didn't improvise with some kind of engine fluid! MWWxx
Don't ever be afraid to ask for help in your fundraising efforts. Retirees are sometimes valuable for leg work!!!! Jx
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