The Reagans with Nick and me, actress Kate Nelligan and football great Walter Payton at the White House
My mother always pointed to Nancy Reagan as the ultimate
Lady, one who knew exactly how a lady should behave and never raised her voice
or appeared inappropriately dressed.
Sadly, my mother passed away in January of 1985 (of congestive heart failure, the same thing that took
the former First Lady Nancy last Sunday) so she never got to hear about our
first meeting with President Reagan and Nancy in October of 1985 and our second
one—at a White House state dinner—the following March.
It was the Reagans’ U.S. Ambassador in Charge of Protocol,
Selwa “Lucky” Roosevelt, who introduced us to the Reagans after Nick’s book “Eleni” was published in 1984--about the life and
death of his mother during the Greek civil war.
Eleni was tried and executed by Communist guerrillas because she had
organized the escape of her children from their mountain village. In 1985 “Eleni” became a film starring Kate
Nelligan as Nick’s mother and John Malkovich as the adult version of Nick, who,
while a foreign correspondent for The New
York Times, researched the details of her death.
Lucky Roosevelt gave a signed copy of “Eleni” to the Reagans,
who both said in interviews that it was
the best book they read that year. They also enjoyed the film. In October of
1985, Lucky invited us to a glamorous dinner party given by her and her
husband, Archie Roosevelt, a grandson of Theodore. The guest list included actress Glenn Close,
author Jerzy Kosinski, and Abe Rosenthal, the editor of The New York Times. I could
not tell you what we ate, but here are some things I remember from that party:
Lucky had to install $10,000 worth of new draperies in her house to satisfy the
security people. On the night of the
dinner, her street in Georgetown was closed, and behind every heavily draped
window stood an armed guard. Nick and I
both sat at the President’s table where he regaled everyone with anecdotes and funny
stories filled with details—facts and figures rolled effortlessly off his
tongue.
One thing I remember is that, between the main course and
dessert, the First Lady took out a compact to re-apply her lipstick. This was something that my late mother had
insisted was not proper behavior, so I sent a silent mental telegram to heaven,
telling her, “If Nancy Reagan can do it, then I can do it.”
As the dinner ended, both tables of guests moved toward the
living room. I found myself walking beside the First Lady and I exclaimed to
her “He’s such a marvelous story teller!”
I quickly forgot my comment, but Nancy remembered it,
because she noticed and remembered every detail and everything that anyone
said.
A few months later, early in 1986, Nick and I received an
invitation to a state dinner at the White House to be given by the Reagans on
March 18 “on the occasion of the visit of the Prime Minister of Canada (Brian)
Mulroney and Mrs Mulroney.” I began an
arduous search for a dress and, with Nick’s help, I settled on one with a long
black skirt and a pleated white bodice, folded like a fan.
On the day in Washington, we inched forward to the White
House door in a rented limousine and finally were welcomed by military aides
who checked our passports. We were led down a long hall and into a room where
the roped-off press waited and our names were announced. The aide with the microphone whispered to me
“I like your dress”. I was in heaven. At the top of a staircase, aides handed us our table assignments. Nick
was at table nine, I was at 11. Little
did I know what a significant number it was.
The U. S. Marine Orchestra serenaded us to the East Room,
decorated with white tulips and flowering cherry trees strung with tiny white lights. We began to recognize celebrities, including ballerina
Cynthia Gregory, Fiat chairman Gianni Agnelli, columnist William F. Buckley and
Prince Karim Aga Khan with Princess Salimah Aga Khan, who was wearing a double
row of diamonds interspersed with emeralds as big as marbles.
The orchestra broke into “Ruffles and Flourishes” as a voice
announced the Reagans and the Mulroneys. The first lady was wearing a floor-length
Galanos gown in wide horizontal stripes of sparkling gold and silver.
They formed a receiving line which we were directed through,
husbands first. (Unaccompanied ladies, like Kate Nelligan was that night, were provided with a military escort for the evening.) Then we headed toward the State Dining Room with tables decked
with gold candlesticks, gold flatware and gold bowls of red and white
tulips. And of course Nancy’s famous
Reagan china service that cost $200,000 (but from private, not taxpayers’
funds.)
I was led to a table in front of the fireplace and when I
saw Mila Mulroney led to a seat across from me, I began to realize—yes there he
was! I was at the President’s table—an
incredible favor to a non-famous person like myself.
In retrospect I think it was the remark I made to Nancy
about the President’s storytelling that won me that place, because I later
learned that the First Lady herself handled every detail of the seating for
every event.
The others at the President’s table were: Walter Payton, the
famous running back for the Chicago Bears, Allen Murray the chairman of Mobil,
Donna Marella Agnelli, Burl Osborne, president and editor of the Dallas Morning News, and Pat Buckley, who sat
next to the President, smoking throughout the meal.
Once again President Reagan kept us entertained with non-stop
stories. I was so rapt that, when a
waiter stood behind me holding a bowl, the President gestured to me, saying,
“You’d better take some salad.” He was telling a series of stories about ghosts
his family had encountered in the White House—stories that I like to re-post at Halloween.
I remember every detail of that evening—both the
embarrassing ones and the glorious ones
Embarrassing: after dinner ended and everyone headed to the next room
for demitasse and after-dinner liqueurs, I sidled around our table to see if I
could snitch the President’s hand-lettered place card. As I closed in, the majordomo, a genial
white-haired gentleman, handed me the place card.
“Somebody always comes to get it for a souvenir”, he said, smiling.
Glorious moment: after a concert in the East Room, the
Reagans danced to tunes from Broadway musicals, played by the Marine Dance Band.
Before the clock struck midnight, they started to head off toward their private
quarters and as they passed, the First Lady suddenly stopped and seized my hand
and Nick’s saying, “We must have a photograph with the Gages before we
go.” I lost the ability to speak. Nancy pulled Kate Nelligan and Walter Payton
into the picture. Flashbulbs popped and then the Reagans were gone. I wouldn’t
have been surprised if, at the stroke of midnight, I turned into a pumpkin.
Here’s what I know about Nancy Reagan, who is now reunited
with the love of her life: she noticed every
detail, she was the power behind the throne, and my mother was right, she was a
great lady.
1 comment:
Another wonderful post! I enjoy reading them so much. Thank you for sharing. Carole.
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