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True Romance Four real-life weddings that celebrated love, Sarasota-style. Hannah Wallace |
It was the Sarasota event of the year—just what Mark Famiglio had in mind. “We wanted to show our guests what this town was all about,” says the prominent entrepreneur, who celebrated his wedding to attorney Jennie Lascelle with a spectacular reception at that quintessential Sarasota landmark, the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art.
Wearing internationally crafted finery—his tuxedo was hand-sewn in the Italian village where his grandmother was born; her gown was by Spanish designer Hannibal Laguna (the bridesmaids wore Vera Wang)—the bride and groom welcomed some 500 guests (including just about every VIP in town) to the museum’s courtyard, just a few feet from the new gallery that will bear Mark’s name.
Dinner under the stars, featuring Maine lobster and beef
Wellington, was prepared as a personal tribute to the couple
from close
friend
and renowned local caterer Phil
Mancini.
Another friend, B-52s
frontman Fred
Schneider, led a full
orchestra in a serenade that
preceded performances by
Washington, D.C.’s Sound Connection and
famed
Beatles tribute band
Beatlemania—as well as
more than a
few songs sung
by Mark and members of his
musically inclined
Italian family.
Extravagance and
theatricality came
together for
an
eye-popping
climax. “We cut the cake and bam, the
fireworks
started,” says
Mark.
As a spectacular 30-minute pyrotechnic
display
lit up the sky over the museum’s
David, Beatlemania
made an
encore appearance. The opening song? All You Need Is
Love.
HOMESPUN HAPPINESS
Steve Ellis and
Sherri Mills, 10/14/06
For what was to be the second marriage for both, Sarasota real estate agent Sherri Mills, 40, and health and fitness entrepreneur Steve Ellis, 52, wanted an intimate, relaxed wedding celebrating family and nature. Long before their engagement, Sherri’s children, Robert and Alexandra, had taken to calling their blended family the Crystal Clear Solutions Group, a sort of family club. Steve and Sherri embraced the CCS as an expression of the bond between what they call their four-member “tribe.”
Set in tiny Mary’s Chapel among the oaks and palms of Historic Spanish Point, the ceremony hosted only 11 guests—best friends and parents, each of whom shared a personally selected reading during the service. The kids were allowed to choose their own roles: Alexandra, 15, wanted to throw the bouquet; 12-year-old Robert asked to be his new stepfather’s best man.
During the exchange of vows—which had been written both to each other and to the children—Steve declared that not only had he chosen Sherri to be his wife, he had chosen Robert and Alexandra to be his family as well. He then gave each child a feather, as a bird outside unexpectedly filled the chapel with song. Robert and Alexandra were visibly moved. “They lost it,” Sherri says happily. “We ran out of tissues.”
THEIR SOUTHWEST FLORIDA GREEK
WEDDING
Brad Kunz and Kimber Karras,
11/4/06
The winter wedding of Brad Kunz, 26, and Kimber
Karras, 30, was, for
the bride, an emotional
experience from the very beginning.
“The limo
pulled up
to the church, and my brother and father
were standing
there,” says Kimber. “And
I just burst into
tears.”
Brad and Kimber are representative of many Southwest Floridians: He’s a Midwesterner in construction; she’s from West Virginia and works for a retirement community. Appropriately, their wedding combined three Sarasota traditions: a Greek Orthodox ceremony at St. Barbara’s followed by a reception at the Lakewood Ranch Country Club—and all of it masterminded by wedding planner Sigrid Gebel, the widow of famed circus animal trainer Gunther Gebel-Williams.
Honoring Kimber’s Greek Orthodox upbringing, the traditional ceremony involved a number of Hellenic wedding rituals. Wearing headbands made of flowers and attached by a ribbon, the bride and groom were thrice crowned as king and queen of their household. Then they walked together around the altar three times—their first steps as man and wife.
The reception featured a pure white theme (a tribute to the snowy Novembers of the couple’s home states) and more tears of joy as Kimber shared dances—and festive foods—with her new husband and the rest of her family, including her 93-year-old grandmother, Yaya. “You can’t have a Greek wedding without Greek pastries, and you can’t have baklava without Yaya,” says Kimber proudly. “She danced up a storm.”
TRADITION,
TRADITION
Jeffrey Sedacca and Nikki Feldbaum,
11/26/06
For a small Jewish wedding in their Indian Beach back yard, the marriage of Jeffrey Sedacca and Nikki Feldbaum garnered quite a guest list. “We wanted something special, yet small,” says Nikki, a jewelry designer whose bridesmaids included a bevy of Sarasota socialites. “We had friends come in from Thailand and India.”