Staying in for the Friendship Shelter
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BARBARA DIAMOND
Dinners will be served in homes across Laguna and a couple outside
the city on Saturday night to raise funds for Friendship Shelter.
The Laguna Beach shelter is a temporary home for men and women
trying to get back on their feet.
Forty hosts will participate in the fundraiser this year. Some are
new and some -- such as Ellin Henderson and the Rev. Colin Henderson
-- have been involved with the shelter since it was a hope and a
prayer.
“The shelter is lucky to have such friends,” said Jill Silver
Edwards, chair of the event and a dinner host with husband, Steve.
Other Laguna Beach hosts include Joan Silverman, Ilene Glassman
and Donna Smith at Glassman’s home; Barbara and Greg MacGillivray,
Jany and George Gade and Bruce Dwyer at the MacGillivrays’ -- they
trade off with the Gades; Sue Freeman and John Hancock and Joy
Dittberner and Tom Peters at the Freeman/Hancock home; Tom and Martha
Davis, Jeff and Debbie Mulligan and David and Margaret Peterson at
the Davis home; and Suzy and Jeff Eighanayan, Meg and John Casalaspi,
Jim Palmer and John O’Neill, Lauren and Richard Packard, Jane Knight
and Mark Kjer, Kathy and Jim Conrad and Ellen and Adrian Kuyper, all
in their own homes.
Dinners also will be hosted by Lynette Braunstein in Laguna
Niguel; Nadia Bozzetti and Brennan Cassady in Newport Beach; and
Binnie Beaumont and George Western in Corona del Mar.
“Dinners Across Laguna is a wonderful evening of good food and
good friends,” Edwards said.
The hosts provide the guests and some of the food. Major food
donors include Cafe Zinc, 5 Feet, French 75, Neff Neff Catering,
Sundried Tomato, Laguna Culinary Arts and Tivoli Terrace.
“Without the restaurants, the hosts and the guests, there would
not be an event,” Edwards said.
And without the event, programs at the shelter would either be
curtailed or canceled. Programs include budgeting one’s income and
job-seeking skills, not to mention food and moral support.
For more information about the shelter or to make donations of
services, goods or money, call (949) 494-6928.
A CHEERY NOTE
Susie McCalla Ornellas sent holiday greetings to friends from
Hawaii where she moved with her husband, Frank, and children last
year.
The McCalla family owned the Forest Avenue drug store for more
than 40 years, daughter following in dad’s footsteps as the
pharmacist. Ornellas said she misses everyone, but life is good.
“I know all of you quit believing it when we said we were going to
move [here] someday, but we did it,” Ornellas wrote.
She and the kids -- Garrett, Kristina and Jackie -- moved into
their new digs at the end of July. Furniture and boxes from their
former home showed up two days later, and Frank arrived a month
later.
“[The kids] have found there is life after California,” Ornellas
said. “Of course, Hawaii was a pretty good second choice.”
Garrett recently had a camp-out in a 200-year-old mountain lodge.
Kristina swam with the dolphins on a field trip. Jackie is into
dance, drama and sleepovers. Mom and dad swim daily in the ocean.
“We are blissful, the happiest we’ve ever been,” the letter
continued. “Whoever would have thought I could be happy without that
crazy wonderful little pharmacy?”
STILL WELDED
Roger Jones’ notion to produce a bio-flic about Katy Weld and the
late John Weld is not the first proposal she has heard.
“I think it is exciting, but it’s happened three times before,”
Katy Weld said Tuesday. “The books were optioned, but never produced.
However Roger Jones is a go-getter -- and his wife is a darling.”
Jones is the author of three books and owner with his wife,
Sherill Bottjer, of Villa Rockledge. As reported in the Coastline
Pilot on Jan. 23, Jones is rounding up the last of the funding needed
to begin production on “Chasing the Moon.”
The film will lean heavily on “Fly Away Home,” John Weld’s account
of his life as a Hollywood stunt man.
It was during his second stint in Hollywood, as a screen writer,
that John and Katy Weld met at a party hosted by Florence “Pancho”
Barnes at her oceanfront home on the property known as Smithcliffs.
“There were two houses on the property,” said Katy Weld, a budding
actress at the time, known as GiGi Parrish when she first saw John.
“Florence lived in one house, and her grandmother had the other.”
Barnes was a stunt pilot in Hollywood and built a landing strip on
the North Laguna bluffs to fly in the movie crowd for parties. The
landing strip was closed when one of Barnes’ friends couldn’t stop at
the end of the downhill runway and was killed on the rocks below,
Katy Weld said.
“Florence brought Hollywood to Laguna Beach,” Katy Weld said. “Her
grandmother didn’t like Florence’s friends and said she wished she
would move away. Florence said, ‘Fine, I’ll get my friend to move the
house.’
“So Aubrey St Clair moved the 14-bedroom home to Crown Point,” she
said. “Unfortunately, like everything else in Florence’s life, it
disintegrated.”
But the Welds’ love affair never disintegrated. They were married
67 years before his death in 2003 at the age of 98. During their
years together, the Welds published the Laguna News Post for many
years and owned an automobile franchise in town; and John wrote
books, 12 of them published. Constance Morthland -- and somebody
ought to document her life -- hosted autographing parties at her Moss
Point estate.
Katy Weld lives alone now at the Inn at the Fountains in Dana
Point.
“One place is almost as good as another when you lose your other
half,” she said.
“But come visit,” she said. “I have a drink every afternoon at 4.”
Here’s looking at you, kid.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, CA 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite
22; call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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