Not to be all holier than thou, but if there’s one thing I
know how to do, it’s throw a dinner party. I’ve been doing it since I was a
teenager. Now that I am 44, I have quite a bit of experience under my belt. I am aware of the quote:
"The test of good manners is to be patient with the bad ones" but for today’s blog…we’re going to talk
about it for God’s sake. Sometimes when I go to a dinner party (even at my
fancy friend’s house) sometimes I think, “Oh my God, were these people raised
by wolves?” We all know the basics of dinner party etiquette but I have my
own suggestions…
As a hostess…
1. The most important role one has as a hostess is to be
present. There is nothing ruder than inviting guests for an 8 o’clock party and
waltzing into the living room at 8:45 because one was in the bedroom putting on
false eyelashes. So rude. One needs to be ready at 8 o’clock when the first
guest arrives.
2. Have everything ready before guests arrive. Do not run around
the house as the guests are arriving, lighting candles, setting the table, tasting
the hors d’oeuvres, screaming at the caterer or trying to put the children to
bed. Get organized for God’s sake or don’t have the party.
3. Make everyone feel welcome. Make sure everyone has a
drink and a comfortable place to sit. Make everyone feel special. Make sure to
introduce the guests to each other. Start the conversation for them with a
little funny story and then move on to the next couple. It is necessary to be
the ringleader of this party and one does not want the party to be stagnant.
Sometimes the hostess will have to break the ice for people because some people
are socially inept.
4. Do not split up couples at the dinner table. They came
together…they want to sit together. We are not in preschool where we need to
learn how to talk to others. Besides, David would be lost without me at the
other end of the table. He’s not really a people person (he’s French), if you
catch my drift. We are better as a team and by team, I mean I do all the
talking.
5. Do not, under any circumstances, usher guests out of the
house after dessert because one “has to get up early.” So rude. Even if a guest
overstays his welcome by two hours, just endure it.
2. One should not ever ever ever ever get drunk. Drunk
people scare me and if a guest were to be drunk at one of my dinner parties,
they would never be invited back. Ever. One word: Blacklist. Don’t even get me
started on the use of a toothpick. I swear to God, one of my aunts (father’s
side, obviously) brings her own toothpicks to a dinner party. I don’t even know
how we are related. Oh, now I remember, by marriage.
3. Do not dominate the dinner party. It’s not a stage, for
God’s sake. One must try to be interesting, witty, engaging and slightly
demure. Always introduce yourself and look people in the eye. This is no time
to be bashful (learn how to fake it if necessary.) Additionally, do not mention
a guests’ plastic surgery. Do not talk about Botox, chemical peels, implants,
tucks, nips, lifts or ones favorite plastic surgeon (even if he is at the
party).
4. Do not eat loudly, animal. Do not put your napkin in your
shirt, toddler. Do not push your plate away when you are finished, brat. Do not
leave your soup spoon in the bowl, fool. Do not butter an entire piece of bread,
pig. Use your utensils appropriately, hillbilly. Do not reach for food, ask
for it to be passed, heathen. Do not start eating until everyone has been
served, egoist. Don’t share food, hippie. If you are a vegetarian…shut up
because no one cares.
5. Dress appropriately, for the love of God. If one shows up
to my dinner party in a tank top, I will poison ones gazpacho.
(Sorry I seem so grumpy today. I woke up not feeling well,
hating all my caregivers because they either talk to me too much or completely
ignore me or expect to be congratulated for doing their job, worried my
daughter was on an airplane today to Spain, had a dream that my apartment
caught on fire and I couldn’t save my cat, disappointed that someone was mean
to my favorite person Tom, could not find my favorite pajamas, we were out of
milk for my morning latte, and the Real Housewives of Orange County concluded.)
Would It Kill You to Stop Doing That?
By Henry Alford
purchase HERE
Manners
by Kate Spade
purchase HERE
Tiffany’s Table Manners For Teenagers
purchase HERE
A Butler’s Guide to Table Manners
by Nicholas Clayton
purchase HERE
The Fabulous Girls Guide to Decorum
by Kim Izzo and Ceri Marsh
purchase HERE
A Guide to Elegance
by Genevieve Antoine Dariaux
purchase HERE
The Charleston Academy Of Domestic Pursuits
by Suzanne Pollak & Lee Manigault
purchase HERE
Good manners For Nice People Who Sometimes Say F*CK
by Amy Alcon
purchase HERE
How to Be a Lady
by Candace Simpson Giles
purchase HERE
Okay, now that we all know how to behave, let’s start this
little series on The Art of Entertaining. Stay tuned for tomorrow. Hint:
“Shooters.” By the way, I’ll try to come back tomorrow with an attitude
adjustment. :-)
