(Press Release)
SALADO,
TEXAS, (May 11, 2008) – John Grainger Esch, co-founder of the Silver
Spur Theater (www.saladosilverspur.com) in the historic village and
former stagecoach stop of Salado, TX, was “nonplussed” last September
when Lindsey Lineweaver booked his venue for her wedding dinner and
party on Friday, May 9. The Spur had hosted weddings, receptions and
parties before.
That all changed about 3:30 p.m. on Friday afternoon.
“My
first hint this dinner and party were related to the wedding for the
daughter of the leader of the free world, was when a local policeman
outside my box office inadvertently mentioned the name ‘Jenna’,” said
Esch, an actor and former clown with the Ringling Bros. Barnum &
Bailey Circus.
“When
the Secret Service agents showed up minutes later with an
explosives-sniffing German shepherd and they began barricading Royal
Street, I had no doubt. Jenna Bush and Henry Hager’s highly private
wedding was about to spill over from Crawford, Texas, to our historic
village on the banks of Salado Creek.”
Indeed.
The Silver Spur Theater would host 120 wedding party guests for a
sit-down dinner. The Texas-sized celebration would add another 100
invited guests coming from the actual rehearsal and dinner elsewhere in
the popular tourist destination straddling the creek and busy
Interstate 35.
The
additional guests included the betrothed couple as well as the
President and First Lady. The father and mother of the bride visited
the party for about 45 minutes “with little fanfare inside,” Esch said.
Meanwhile, outside,
Salado police officers, Texas Highway Patrolmen, Bell County Sheriff’s
deputies and Secret Service agents kept locals at bay and carefully
checked residents trying to return to their nearby neighborhoods. Also
present throughout the evening was Karl Rove, President Bush's former
political consultant.
“Lineweaver”
turned out to be a wedding planner for Jenna Bush. And now, eight
months after that fateful phone call, “everything started getting very
crazy.” Esch said.
“Suzy
Evans, a friend of the Bush family, arrived with friends and began
decorating the theater. In the usual ‘Coming Soon’ and ‘Now Showing’
spaces, they placed large photos of Henry and Jenna, respectively. And
frankly, I don’t think the double entendre was intended.
“Between
those, they also had a beautifully arranged photo montage of the
wedding couple. Around the theatre they dangled clusters of bundled
flower blooms or nosegays, some as large as a grapefruit, and all in
various colors, perhaps to compliment the many pastel shades of the
bridesmaids dresses to be worn on the wedding day,” Esch recounted.
Decorations, Food & Drink
Round
tables were wrapped with burlap with a pastel ribbon pulling the cloth
in tight underneath the table. Napkins and votive candle holders in
Texas wildflower colors complemented the tables. Leather cowboy boots
had been painted wildly and turned into vases containing multicolored
Gerber daisies. Many tables had large sunflowers as their centerpiece.
Additional
tables were even placed on the outside patios, including the covered
portion in front of the box office window, giving the locals behind the
barricades a bit more about which to buzz.
English-made candles burning in the bathrooms had a lime-basil scent.
Austin
Catering of Austin, TX, provided the dinner, which began with hors
d’oeuvres, included a Southwest Caesar salad, a jalapeño-flavored
chicken, salmon, roasted potato wedges with chipotle sauce, ice tea and
coffee. An avocado bar featured pitted avocado halves with salsa,
cheese and other dressings.
Texas
brewed Shiner Bock and the Mexican Dos Equis beers were plentiful, as
well as a full complimentary bar. The party guests drank from clear
plastic cups with “Jenna and Henry” imprinted on them in burnished gold.
The
Spur Theater, which received the “2007 Business of the Year” award from
the Salado Chamber of Commerce in January, was developed in the
renovated and historic Guest & Sanford Granary & Feed Store
five years ago. The exterior retains the old feed signs and native
landscaping.
The
property is owned by Morris Foster of Stagecoach Properties, which also
has the famous Stagecoach Inn. The Inn dates back to 1861 and boasts a
long list of notable visitors, from Texas General and Gov. Sam Houston
to former White House Press Secretary Liz Carpenter, a Salado native.
The
Silver Spur Theater strives to revive a bygone era of family
entertainment, offering a trademark blend of live vaudeville acts, live
music, plays and classic cinema. Weddings, reunions, business
conferences, concerts, field trips, dances, even customized private
shows are also held at the venue (capacity 210) , with catering
available from the renowned Stagecoach Inn a block away and other area
restaurants.
Typical
show prices range from $8 to $15 or even up to $50 per person as the
weekend before when Kinky Friedman and Texas Poet Laureate Steven
Fromholz held a fundraiser for an animal rescue group. But on this
Friday night, there was no buying a ticket. It was strictly invitation
only and very private. No photos by the Spur staff were allowed once
the event started.
The Couple, Entertainment
Slightly
above it all, in the sound booth, Esch and Tony Blackman, Technical
Director of the Silver Spur, observed the dinner and party, with the
last guests leaving about midnight.
“Jenna
wore a dress that was a sleeveless, v-neck white top,” Blackman
recalled. “The skirt portion was black with a ruffle around the bottom.
As for the crowd, I’ve never seen so many navy blue blazers and
button-down shirts in one place.”
“Except
for the security, President Bush and Laura Bush, the crowd was mostly
twenty-somethings . . . a lot of young Republicans,” Esch added.
After
the dinner, the tables in the center of the theater were cleared away
to make a sizable dance floor. The Duke Merrick Band from
Charlottesville, VA, played country and country rock and featured
popular Texas songwriters during one portion of the party.
“Jenna
Bush had even burned special CDs of country and modern rock songs that
we played during the band’s breaks,” said Blackman. “So once the music
and dancing began, it was practically nonstop.”
The
Silver Spur Theater and Royal Street rocked on Friday night, May 9th,
but with “American royalty.” A young couple, Jenna and Henry, who for
all a nation’s curiosity and attention, simply wanted a memorable party
with close friends and family in a small Central Texas town. . .an
historic village that just added another chapter to his extensive lore
of significant Texas events.
And
the current show, which began its run the next night, was,
appropriately, A.R. Gurney’s “Love Letters.” Two characters only tell
the bittersweet story of their life-long relationship through their
letters to each other. It runs for two more weekends (six performances)
with different aged couples portraying the leads each weekend.
“Hopefully, Jenna and Henry’s love story will run for many, many years longer and with no intermissions,” quipped Esch.