A beautiful day in New York. No rain, no humidity, just summer warm.
Looking down (and west) at the terrace of David Copperfield's Penthouse apartment with Madison Avenue and 57th and 58th Streets below during the launch party for Fete Accompli! The Ultimate Guide to Creative Entertaining (Clarkson Potter), a new book “written and lived by” Lara Shriftman, Elizabeth Harrison, and Karen Robinovitz. Photo: JH.
The Night. Started out with a (called-for) seven o’clock screening that author Christopher Mason (The Art of the Steal – see NYSD The List) hosted at SoHo House, the private club in the Meatpacking District (Ninth Avenue and 13th Street) that everyone wants to at least visit and see even if they can’t belong. Busy place. Very cool.

The movie was Stephen Fry’s Bright Young Things based on the Evelyn Waugh novel Vile Bodies. The screening room is very cool, probably holds about sixty – charcoal grey leather seats with lots of leg space (after all, it is a private screening room), charcoal grey walls. The brilliant, witty and amusing and very nice director Mike Nichols was there. As were Kathy and Billy Rayner, Angus Willkie and Len Morgan. In front of us were a couple late 20th-century former members of the Bright Young Things category (still bright, of course), authors Candace Bushnell (Sex and the City) and Jay McInerney (Bright Lights Big City). The director, who the Manchester Guardian describes as “a man of many talents: actor, novelist, comedian, librettist, thinker and wit. As an actor he was lauded for a definitive portrait of his nineteenth century alter ego, Oscar Wilde, in Wilde (1997).” And now he is a director with this film which was made last year.

Before the screening Fry told us a bit about
the world that Waugh wrote about (the book was published in 1929). They were the generation known in this country as the Flappers, the Flaming Youth, the world of Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. They came of age during and right after World War I and it was the first time that a generation “rebelled.” They were wild, party-loving creatures new to gramophone records and the telephone — a self-consciously modern generation that could not keep still for a second. In England, they are known to the press, which followed their every move, as the Bright Young Things.

About a hundred minutes in length, highly energetic, never missing a beat, often very funny (witty) from the moment the lights went down, the Bright Young Things blasted across the screen — rich, careless, noisy, silly, nonsensical, drinking, coking like there’s no tomorrow. Which was the point Waugh was obviously suggesting.

Except, there was a tomorrow. And it’s here. And it’s still a No Tomorrow. There are still those Bright Young Things about, although they’re not called that anymore. But they’re still rich, careless, noisy, silly, nonsensical, drinking and coking and god knows what else. And there’s a War going on, although far from these shores and far from the consciousness of an awful lot of us including many within the immediate vicinity of the screening room at the SoHo House last night.

Which may be what Mr. Fry had in mind with this film, presented (masquerading?) as it is by its “Period” atmosphere (the early 1930s), which the British do so well, and its accompanying archival (and wonderful, original recordings) music to keep us in the mood and the mode.

Fete Accompli! The Ultimate Guide to Creative Entertaining
Christopher Mason had invited everyone to one of the club rooms right after for drinks and “nibbles.” I had to get uptown. Ninth Avenue was ajumble and aglow, crowds of people, cars and taxis. A yellow glow from the lights of the outdoor café across the cobblestoned street. A beautiful night; I wished I could have stayed to take it all in.

Uptown on East 57th Street in a four-story penthouse owned by David Copperfield, starting on the fifty-fourth floor, Cornelia Guest, Mr. Copperfield, Chris Heinz and Dan Peres were hosting a party to launch Fete Accompli! The Ultimate Guide to Creative Entertaining (Clarkson Potter), a new book “written and lived by” Lara Shriftman and Elizabeth Harrison and Karen Robinovitz.

The authors, Harrison and Shriftman, started a publicity and public relations business eight years ago in their names which has become one of the top pr firms in the country with offices here, in Miami and in Los Angeles. Earlier this year they were acquired this year by Omnicom Group a strategic holding company, listed on the New York Stock Exchange, that manages a portfolio of global market leaders in advertising, marketing services, specialty communications, interactive/digital media and media buying services.
The Copperfield pool
Elizabeth Harrison, David Copperfield, and Lara Shriftman
Last night’s book launch was a textbook demonstration of the team’s talents not only for party-giving but promotion. The Copperfield penthouse which was built in the 1970s originally for General Motors heir Stewart Mott (I’m not sure he ever lived there) has a swimming pool on its top floor, and 360-degree views of the city in all its glory. You can see clear out to New Jersey, north, west and south, Westchester, Connecticut and Long Island. It’s beyond breathtaking. Mr. Copperfield who made his fortune (as everybody knows as the world’s most famous magician, has a huge museum collection of penny arcade games from the late 19th, early 20th century. And, they all work, so the far flung room was filled with guests inserting their pennies (there were buckets of them about the room) and playing.

There were hundreds of guests and the party was set up by the Fait Accompli concept – music (by Samantha Ronson, Lighting (by Bentley Meeker), all kinds of food including neatly stacked pyramids of Krispy Kreme donuts which I did not resist, cocktail bars with special drinks provided by Rose’s cocktail infusions, flowers – roses white and red, and candy everywhere.

It was a trip and although the party was called for 7 to 10,
at ten-thirty it was only beginning to wind down. It was such a beautiful night in New York and such a beautiful night to be outside fifty-four stories above the city swimming in lights as far as the eye could see, that nobody wanted to leave.
David Copperfield showing us around his penthouse apartment
The playroom housed a museum collection of penny arcade games from the late 19th, early 20th century
Entering the living room
The bedroom (where the magic happens - We couldn't resist)

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David Copperfield and Nicole Miller
Elizabeth Harrison and Keith Schweibel
Deborah Schoeneman and Alex Roy
Mimi So, Lara Shriftman, and Bonnie Fuller
Dylan Lauren and friend
Claudia Cohen and friend
Amy Sacco
Patrick Thomas and Natalie Leeds
Jay Snyder and Nicole Miller
Gustavo Arango, Susan Sidor, and Christian McPherson
Douglas Hannant, Jane Holzer, and Frederick Anderson
Flamethrower R. Couri Hay
David Copperfield takes aim
Andrew Saffir and Daniel Benedict
Nina Garcia
Albert Hage
Richard Johnson and Sessa von Richthofen
Ann and Annabelle Jones
Christian Leone and Peter Som
Walking through the reception room to the east terrace
I love Krispy Kreme donuts even though I don't allow myself to eat them very often because when I do I go overboard. When we were leaving the party, back down on 57th Street at the northwest corner of Lexington Avenue where Charles Stephen Cohen's skyscraper with plaza stands today, I remembered that before this building went up, a donut shop was located there for years. Inside the shop on the south wall (so that you could see it walking by) was a large frame portrait of a donut with the words underneathe it: "As you go through life brother, whatever be your goal, keep your eye upon the donut, and not upon the hole."
Looking east on 57th Street from the terrace
Looking east on 58th Street (with the Bloomberg Building on the left)
Looking southwest towards the Empire State Building and the GE Building on the right



August 18, 2004, Volume IV, Number 129
Photographs by Jeff Hirsch/NYSD.com

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© 2006 David Patrick Columbia & Jeffrey Hirsch/NewYorkSocialDiary.com