St. Petersburg Times Online: World&Nation
TampaBay.com
Place an Ad Calendars Classified Forums Sports Weather
tampabay.com

printer version

Bushes bring capital's elite to fiesta for Foxes

©Associated Press

© St. Petersburg Times,
published September 6, 2001


WASHINGTON -- First lady Laura Bush called it a "sentimental first," an intimate and elegant dinner for friends. But from the hot pink bodice on her red lace gown to President Bush's cowboy boots, from the tequila sauce on the dessert to the fireworks on the back lawn, most elements of the Bushes' premier state dinner shouted, "Fiesta!"

Strolling violinists and 12-foot trees festooned with white impatiens framed the Grand Foyer as the Bushes opened the White House on Wednesday to Mexican President Vicente Fox, his new bride, Martha Sahagun de Fox, and just 130 guests.

Some, like tenor Placido Domingo, won the coveted invitation for their Hispanic heritage, others for their political connections to Bush. His home state of Texas exported a sizable crew, led by Gov. Rick Perry. Brother Jeb Bush, the governor of Florida, also made the cut.

Their parents, Barbara and former President George Bush, did not.

"We wanted this to be ours," said the current first lady.

It was a Texas kind of night, and Bush was not the only one to pair his tuxedo with cowboy boots, but at least his were a stately black. Texas artist Luis Jimenez kicked through the East Room receiving line in bright red boots.

Clint Eastwood, the lone Hollywood star, sounded keen on this White House's distaste for celebrity glamor. "I'm not from Hollywood myself," the actor said as he arrived. Washington Redskins cornerback Darrell Green and Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, arrived a day after they announced their retirements.

Mrs. Bush said she had been determined to keep the crowd small and the receiving line from "going on forever" so that the Foxes could say more than a quick hello to the people they met. She claimed Eastwood and Green for her dinner table. The president was seated with Domingo.

Senate Republican leader Trent Lott elbowed into the spotlight as reporters surrounded Eastwood, who did a two-year stint as mayor of Carmel, Calif. "We're looking for a candidate for governor out there in California," Lott said as Eastwood walked away in search of his dinner place card. "Come back, come back . . . !"

Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, the very last to arrive, was assigned a back table with Vice President Dick Cheney, Bush's designated arm-twister on Capitol Hill. Daschle and House Democratic Leader Dick Gephardt were about the only Democrats included. The Bushes' bipartisan gesture extended to the cola wars. Executives from both the Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo were invited.

Making her debut as the nation's hostess, Mrs. Bush knew there were standards to meet. "People expect a beautiful and elegant formal dinner at the White House," she said. The only hand-me-down she used from the Clintons was the gold-rimmed Millennium china that Hillary Clinton had ordered for the White House.

But throughout the mansion, small hints of playfulness contrasted with sober dignity, starting with Mrs. Bush's gown of "lollypop red" by designer Arnold Scaasi. A hot pink underlayer peeked from beneath sequined red lace for an overall effect that Mrs. Bush delighted in as "very festive." Huge stones sparkled at her throat, but three aides to the first lady could not say whether they were diamonds or paste, only that they were borrowed from Scaasi's archive collection.

Sahagun wore a more understated aubergine sheath atop toe-crushing stilettos that, despite their 4-inch heels, left her barely clearing the shoulder of her husband's 6-foot-5 frame.

In the State Dining Room, each floral arrangement of white lilies, roses and hydrangea was filled with 175 limes, evocative of a frothy margarita.

Under the portrait of Abraham Lincoln, guests had to navigate a confounding place setting of three gold forks, three gold knives and an oversized spoon. Bush, who gave up drinking at age 40, made his toast with a glass of 7-Up.

On orders from the president to serve red meat and spicy stuff, chef Walter Scheib picked low-fat bison, encrusted it with pumpkin seeds and served it alongside potatoes whipped with poblano chilies. Pastry chef Roland Mesnier offered guests a drizzle of red chili pepper sauce or tequila sabayon with their mango and coconut ice cream.

The classy after-dinner performance of opera singer Dawn Upshaw was juxtaposed with fireworks, which guests crowded onto the balcony to watch.

"This is a sentimental first dinner for us," Mrs. Bush told reporters in the hours beforehand, as aproned workers scurried about their finishing touches.

"It's just like a party at your own house where, at the last minute, you're washing the windows, wiping the fingerprints off the doors, setting the table."

The guest list

Guest list for the White House state dinner with President Bush and Laura Bush:

Mexican President Vicente Fox and first lady Martha Sahagun de Fox

Foreign Affairs Secretary Jorge Castaneda

Interior Secretary Santiago Creel

Luis Felipe Bravo Mena, president, National Action Party

Amalia Garcia, president, National Democratic Revolution Party

Dulce Maria Sauri, president, Institutional Revolutionary Party

Beatriz Paredes, president, Chamber of Deputies

Fernandez-Cevallos, president, Chamber of Senators

Felipe Calderon, president, committee of political coordination, Chamber of Deputies

Ricardo Salinas, president, TV Azteca

Lorenzo Zambrano, director-general, CEMEX

Emilio Azcarraga, president, Televisa

Carlos Slim, president, Carso Group

Moises Saba, businessman, Mexican textiles

Enrique Krauze, political analyst

Sergio Aguayo, political analyst

Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham and Jane Abraham

Tobin Armstrong and Anne Armstrong

Attorney General John Ashcroft and Janet Ashcroft

Sen. Joseph R. Biden, D-Del., and Jill Biden

Rep. Henry Bonilla, R-Texas, and Deborah Knapp Bonilla

Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Columba Bush

Andrew Card, White House chief of staff, and the Rev. Kathleene Card

Vice President Dick Cheney and Lynne Cheney

Douglas N. Daft, chairman and chief executive, Coca-Cola Co., and Delphine Daft

Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.D., and Linda Hall Daschle

Jeffrey Davidow, U.S. ambassador to Mexico, and Joan Davidow

Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M., and Nancy Domenici

Placido Domingo, artistic director, Washington and Los Angeles operas, and Marta Domingo

Clint Eastwood, actor, and Dina Ruiz Eastwood

Roger A. Enrico, vice chairman, PepsiCo, and Rosemary Enrico

Donald Burnham Ensenat, U.S. chief of protocol, and Taylor Ensenat

Emilio Estefan Jr., producer and chairman, Estefan Enterprises, and his niece Lili Estefan

Commerce Secretary Donald Evans and Susan Evans

Tony Garza, commissioner, Texas Railroad Commission, and DeAnna Ortiz

House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., and Jane Gephardt

Alberto R. Gonzales, counsel to the president, and Rebecca Gonzales

Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, and Wendy Lee Gramm

Darrell Green, Washington Redskins cornerback, and Jewell Green

Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and Andrea Mitchell, NBC News

Stephen Hadley, deputy national security adviser, and Ann Hadley

House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., and Jean Hastert

Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and Dorothy Helms

George Herrera, president, United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and Linda Allen Herrera, director of communications, Department of Health and Human Services

Arizona Gov. Jane Dee Hull and Terrance Hull

Brit Hume, Fox News, and Kim Schiller Hume, Fox News

Ray L. Hunt, chairman, Hunt Consolidated Inc., and his son Hunter L. Hunt

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, and Ray Hutchison

Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., and Judith Wolverton

Luis A. Jimenez, artist, and Susan Jimenez

Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., and Tricia Lott

Roger Mahony, archbishop of Los Angeles, and Thomas A. Chabolla, secretariat director for pastoral and community services, Archdiocese of Los Angeles

John F. Maisto, National Security Council, and Maria Maisto

Abel Maldonado, California assemblyman, and Laura Maldonado

D.R. "Dee" Margo, chief executive, John D. Williams Co., and Adair Margo

Housing Secretary Mel Martinez and Kitty Martinez

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Cindy McCain

Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta and Deni Mineta

Anthony Munoz, former Cincinnati Bengals player, and Dianne Munoz

Eduardo Najera, Dallas Mavericks, and Jennifer Najera

Sylvia Orozco, executive director, Mexic-Arte Museum, and her mother Aurora Orozco

Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Anita Perry

Secretary of State Colin Powell and Alma Powell

Chief Justice William Rehnquist and his daughter Janet Rehnquist

Condoleezza Rice, national security adviser, and the Rev. Matt Hennessee

Ricardo Romo, president, University of Texas at San Antonio, and Harriett Romo

Pedro Sevcec, anchor, Telemundo, and Raquelin Gonzalez

Gen. Henry H. Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Carolyn Shelton

Former Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., and Ann Simpson

Warren W. Tichenor and Rhonda S. Tichenor

Sara Martinez Tucker, president, Hispanic Scholarship Fund, and Greg A. Tucker

Dawn Upshaw, soprano, and Michael Nott

Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman and Kevin Herglotz

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick

Back to World & National news
Back to Top

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
 
Special Links
Susan Taylor Martin


From the Times wire desk
  • Patients haunted by pharmacist's dosage deception
  • Fox sets immigration reform deadline
  • Nelson a force in shuttle hearing
  • Senator withdraws leaks legislation
  • Bushes bring capital's elite to fiesta for Foxes

  • From the AP
    national wire
    From the AP
    world desk