“My Fair
Lady” British-style High Tea
12th annual Taking Tea in Taylorville
Friday,
Dec. 7 & Saturday, Dec. 8, 2007
“My Fair Lady” is the theme of the 11th annual British-style
tea to be presented on Friday, Dec. 7 and Saturday, Dec. 8 by
the Taylorville Tourism Council.
An opulent menu will be served at 11 a.m. both days in the auditorium
of Taylorville Memorial Hospital, 201 E. Pleasant St. Doors will
open at 10:30 a.m. for the traditional promenade, when tea-goers
are invited to stroll among circular tables and view the elaborate
settings up close.
All tables will be set by local hostesses using
their own china, crystal and silver. Fanciful centerpieces reflecting
holiday themes and distinctive tableware, including museum-quality
heirlooms, create a sparkling vista. The arrangements are so elaborate
that even chairs wrapped in tulle and satin add to the pageantry.
At the start of each tea, one attendee will be chosen by random
drawing to reign as
“My Fair Lady” over the event. Each
day’s winner will be “crowned” with a magnificent
hat created for the occasion by local artisan Jane Kutch. Winners
will keep the hats as a memento of tea tune in Taylorville. The
hats will be adorned in ruffles and flourishes that evoke costumes
worn by Audrey Hepburn as Eliza Doolittle in the Oscar-winning
file “My Fair Lady,” the inspiration for this year’s
tea.
The annual vintage style show, narrated by tea
chairman Charry Fines, will feature fashions from Yolande Perkins
Oglesby, a great-granddaughter of Taylorville pioneer Horatio
Vandeveer, who rode the old Eight Judicial Circuit with Abraham
Lincoln. Highlighted by a flapper-style dress, the apparel will
be modeled by local students.
Each guest will be served a sumptuous menu comprised of six sandwiches,
a scone and five desserts, all prepared by celebrity chefs, and
hot raspberry tea. Among delectables will be the “Henry
Higgins Cucumber Sandwich” from Marylee Lasswell of One-East
Market Restaurant and Ann Bandy’s “Get Me to the Church
on Time Wedding Cake.”
Priced at $20 each, tea tickets may be reserved
at Cottage Rose Gifts and Crafts, east side of
the historic Taylorville Square, or call the shop at 217 824 9447.
Ticket price includes a keepsake cookbook.
The tea is a special event of the annual Christmas
Home Tour organized on the same dates by the Taylorville Tourism
Council.
Proceeds from both events will go toward reconstruction of
the 1902 rotunda on the third floor of the Christian County Courthouse
on the Taylorville Square.
For tea and tour information, call 217 824-9447.
High Tea Tickets on sale now! $20
“Carriage Lane” Holiday Home Tour
18th Annual Holiday Home Tour
10 am to 8 pm Friday, Dec. 7
10 am to 6 pm Saturday. Dec. 8, 2007
Two talk-of-the-town restorations and six other sparkling
locations will open their doors to the public for “Carriage
Lane,” the 18th annual Christmas Home Tour to be presented
by the Taylorville Tourism Council.
Scheduled for Friday, Dec. 7 and Saturday,
Dec. 8, the pilgrimage will showcase triumphs of history
achieved by imaginative local rehabbers who saved a 1911 carriage
house on East Market Street and rescued a turn-of-the-century
residence on East Park Street.
In the spirit of the season, the eight destinations on this year’s
tour will be festooned in Christmas splendor. Previews from host
families indicate a banner year for twinkling lights outside and
rooms aglow inside. On the pilgrimage will be:
* Carriage house of Dan and Joyce Marsango,
402 E. Market Street.
Tour-goers will be the first to view the meticulous
restoration of the formerly rundown structure, which once graced
the grand mansion known in its later years as the Colonial Hotel.
The mansion succumbed to the ravages of fire and the elements,
but the revitalized, two-story, 3,000 square-foot carriage house
is poised for a new century with three-brick-tick walls and “reserved”
buggy parking.
Fancy fare will be serviced all day, both days,
at the carriage house during the tour’s annual complimentary
tea.
Tour-goers will feel they’re let in on secrets
when they wend among seldom seem artifacts from the Christian
County Historical Society Museum, including an 1864 coin minted
for Abraham Lincoln’s re-election. Items will be on display
both days at the carriage house, which soon will become the law
office of attorney David F. Fines.
* Home of Donnie and Sherry Mathon, 614
E. Park St.
The rehab of this old house evolved over nine months as the couple
guarded Old World grandeur and instilled 21st Century updates.
Basking in the glow of three chandeliers are turn-of-the-last-century
millwork, grand staircase, hardwood floors and fireplace. Tour-goers
will visit first, second and third floors, totaling 4,000 square
feet, and Donnie’s basement get-away, complete with heated
floor, saluting NASCAR and Harley-Davidson.
* Home of Sam and Angie Calandro, 9 Laurel
Court.
French doors open to a new glass-walled, slate-floored sunroom,
warmed by a black granite fireplace. A dramatic living room and
Tuscan kitchen evoke the family’s Italian heritage with
style and sentiment.
* Home of Bev Graham, 700 West Main Cross.
Outdoor lights and fanciful figures create a winter wonderland
around this 1905 classic home. With a decorated tree in every
room amidst heirloom furnishings, original five-panel doors and
stained glass windows, the interior showcases generations of toys
and ornaments that peel back the decades.
* Home of Dale and Mary Etta Smith, 801
W. Pauline
Mary Etta’s bold and beautiful decorating style is a singular
sensation. The marquee attraction will be a brilliantly decorated
tree filling a bow window and known as the neighborhood’s
“jewel box.” Brown, almost black living room walls;
“out of Africa” bedroom and English cottage kitchen
dazzle the senses.
* Home of Norman and
Ruth Ann Ward, 3941 Kennedy Road.
Newlyweds Norman, a retired coal miner, and Ruth Ann, formerly
principal of South School, chose this enchanting white cottage
with red shutters as their retirement haven. The amazing Technicolor
great room, garage turned yellow-dappled sunroom and Norman’s
Kansas City Chiefs hide-away define their new lives.
* First Presbyterian Church, 116 E. Franklin
St.
Hand-poured chocolates, homemade baked goods and other treats
will be stocked at a candy shop out. Live music will be performed
by local groups, The Backyard Gang and Harmony. Celebrating its
150th anniversary year, the church will open its gloriously decorated
sanctuary, featuring golden angels, both days the same hours as
the tour.
Priced at $8 in advance and $9 starting
Dec. 3, home tour tickets may be purchased at Collage
Rose Gifts and Crafts on the east side of the Taylorville Square;
The Top Drawer in Springfield, Junction Garden Center and News-Palladium
in Pana, Red Rooster Inn in Hillsboro and Ishmael Insurance Services
in Nokomis. Children 12 and under are free with an adult. On tour
days, tickets will be sold at all homes and Cottage Rose.
A portion of tour proceeds are designated for reconstruction
of the 1902 rotunda on the third floor of the Christian County
Court House on the Taylorville Square.
For more information, call 217 824-9447
* “Look for Lincoln” and you
could win a $1,500 shopping spree from Taylorville Home Source
• Enjoy complimentary all-day Cookie Buffet.
• Fabulous door prizes.