fbpx
Wikipedia

Debutante

A debutante, also spelled débutante, (/ˈdɛbjʊtɑːnt/ DEB-yuu-tahnt; from French: débutante [debytɑ̃t], 'female beginner') or deb is a young woman of aristocratic or upper-class family background who has reached maturity and, as a new adult, is presented to society at a formal "debut" (UK: /ˈdbjuː, ˈdɛbjuː/ DAY-bew, DEB-yoo, US: /dˈbjuː/ day-BEW; French: début [deby]) or possibly debutante ball. Originally, the term meant that the woman was old enough to be married, and part of the purpose of her coming out was to display her to eligible bachelors and their families, with a view to marriage within a select circle.

Debutantes at the Chrysanthemum Ball in Munich (2012)

Austria

 
Some attendees of the 2013 Vienna Opera Ball

Vienna, Austria, still maintains many of the institutions that made up the social, courtly life of the Habsburg Empire.[citation needed] One of those is the most active formal ball season in the world. From 1 January to 1 March, no fewer than 28 formal balls, with a huge variety of hosts, are held in Vienna. Many are for specific nationalities, like the Russian Ball or the Serbian Saint Sava ball; social groups like the Hunter's Ball or Verein Grünes Kreuz ball, or trade groups like the Coffee Roasters or Doctors Ball. Some of these balls also have debutantes. However, the two that are best known for their debutantes are the Officer's Ball and the Vienna Opera Ball.

The Ball der Offiziere [de] is considered to be the direct successor of Vienna's Imperial Court Ball. The modern version was founded in 1919, by the association Alt-Neustadt, an association of graduates of the Theresian Military Academy. They have organized the ball publicly since 1926.[1] The Ball is held on the third Friday of January across the twenty-three salons of the Vienna Hofburg Palace and includes nine bands of different styles of music, military formations, and dancing troupes from around the world. The patron is the President of the Republic and it is hosted by the Chief of the Defense Staff.[2] The entrance and presentation of the 80 debutantes is the highlight of the opening event, followed by the presentation of ministers of state, then the Diplomatic Corps, and finishes with the debutantes leading the first formal Viennese waltz to the music of "The Blue Danube". The ladies are from the nobility, daughters of senior ranking military officers, or female officers in the Austrian military. They are presented to the Minister of Defense.[3] The dress code is evening dress: floor-length gowns for women, and white tie and tails for men or mess dress uniform for military members. The final ceremonial is the blowing of the hunt horns and takes place at 4 o'clock in the morning.

The Vienna Opera Ball is held in the auditorium of the Vienna State Opera which is turned into a large ballroom. On the eve of the event, the rows of seats are removed from the stalls, and a new floor, level with the stage, is built. The ball does not start until around 10 pm when the Austrian president and his guests enter the imperial balcony. Their arrival is heralded by trumpets. The Austrian national anthem is played followed by the European anthem. There are performances of the state opera ballet company and classical arias sung by the opera stars. These are normally a small selection of Italian opera and famous Austrian pieces. The highlight of the opening ceremony is the introduction of 180 debutante couples. These are carefully selected young women and men who have successfully completed an application program and a strict classical dance choreography organised by the Elmayer dance school. The debutantes are led into the opera house to the sounds of Carl Michael Ziehrer's Fächerpolonaise. The dress code is evening dress: white tie and tails for men; strictly floor-length gowns for women. White opera gloves are still mandatory for female debutantes at the Vienna Opera Ball.[4]

Australia

 
Young women making their debut accompanied by the younger attendants in Queensland (1948)

In Australia, debutante balls (or colloquially "deb balls") are usually organised by high schools, church groups or service clubs, such as Lions or Rotary. The girls who take part are in either Year 10, 11 or 12 at high school (i.e. aged between 15 and 18). The event is often used as a fund-raiser for local charities.

The Australian debutante wears a white or pale-coloured gown similar to a wedding dress. However, the dress does not come with a train on the skirt, and the debutante does not wear a veil. The boy wears black tie or another formal dress suit.

It is customary for the female to ask a male to the debutante ball, with males not being able to "do the deb" unless they are asked, similar to a Sadie Hawkins Dance. The debutantes and their partners must learn how to dance in ballroom style. Debutante balls are almost always held in a reception centre, school hall, the function room of a sporting or other community organisation, e.g. RSL club, or ballroom. Usually they are held late in the year and consist of dinner, dancing, and speeches.

United Kingdom

 
An 1890s-era debutante gown

In the United Kingdom, the presentation of debutantes to the Sovereign at Court used to mark the start of the British social season. The presentation of debutantes at court was also a way for young women of marriageable age to be presented to suitable bachelors and their families, in the hopes of finding a suitable husband. Bachelors, in turn, used the court presentation as a chance to find a suitable wife.

Those who wanted to be presented at court were required to apply for permission to do so, and to be made by ladies who had been presented to the Sovereign, such as the mother of a young woman, or her mother-in-law if she was married. If the application was accepted, they would be sent a royal summons from the Lord Chamberlain to attend the Presentation on a certain day. According to Debrett's, the proceedings on that day always started at 10 am. In addition to debutantes, older women, and married women who had not previously been presented, could be presented at Court.

On the day of the court presentation, the debutante and her sponsor would be announced, the debutante would curtsy to the Sovereign, and she would leave without turning her back.

The court dress was traditionally a white evening dress, but shades of ivory and pink were acceptable. The dress featured short sleeves and the young woman also wore long white gloves,[5] a veil attached to the hair with three white ostrich feathers, and a train, which the debutante would hold on her arm until she was ready to be presented. Debutantes would wear pearls, but many would also wear jewellery that belonged to the family.

After the debutantes were presented to the monarch, they would attend the social season. The season consisted of events such as afternoon tea parties, polo matches, races at Royal Ascot, and balls. Many debutantes would also have their own "coming-out party" or, alternatively, a party shared with a sister or other member of family.

The last debutantes were presented at Court in 1958, after which Queen Elizabeth II abolished the ceremony. Attempts were made to keep the tradition going by organising a series of parties for young women who might otherwise have been presented at Court in their first season (to which suitable young men were also invited) by Peter Townend.[6] However, the withdrawal of royal patronage made these occasions decreasingly significant, and scarcely distinguishable from any other part of the social season.[7] The Queen Charlotte's Ball, a contemporary revival of the traditions of presentation at court, continues under the patronage of the Duke of Somerset.

The expression "debutante", or "deb" for short, has continued to be used, especially in the press, to refer to young women of marriageable age who participate in a semi-public, upper class social scene. The expression "deb's delight" is applied to good looking, unmarried young men from similar backgrounds.

In popular culture in the United Kingdom

Dame Ngaio Marsh's 1938 novel Death in a White Tie is set in a London season. When Detective Inspector Alleyn's mother informs him that she is going to bring out his niece, whose parents are in Suva, Alleyn replies: “Good Lord, mama…you must be demented. Do you know what this means?’”[8] In addition to the murder mystery, the reader is treated to an entertaining view of the effect that the Season has on a variety of characters.

In the 1933 film Our Betters, based on Somerset Maugham's 1917 play by the same name, an American heiress marries an English aristocrat for love. When she discovers on her wedding day that he married her for her money, she sets out to take revenge. Her defiant actions include wearing a daring black gown to her younger sister's presentation at court.

United States

American debutante balls

 
58th International Debutante Ball, 2012, New York City (Waldorf-Astoria Hotel)

The upper classes of the United States developed social traditions related to British practices. Today a cotillion or debutante ball in the United States is a formal presentation of young women, debutantes, to "polite society", typically hosted by a charity or society. Those introduced can vary from the ages of 16 to 18 (younger ages are more typical of Southern regions, while older are more commonplace in the North). In some areas, 15- and 16-year-olds are called "junior debutantes".

One of the most prestigious, most exclusive, and most expensive debutante balls in the world is the invitation-only International Debutante Ball held annually at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City, where girls from prominent world families are presented to high society. The International Debutante Ball has presented princesses, countesses, baronesses and many European royalty and aristocrats as debutantes to high society, including Princess Katarina of Yugoslavia, Vanessa von Bismarck (great-great-granddaughter of Otto von Bismarck), Princess Natalya Elisabeth Davidovna Obolensky (granddaughter of the Prince Ivan Obolensky, who was the Chairman of the International Debutante Ball and himself the grandson of John Jacob Astor IV – founder of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel), Princess Ines de Bourbon Parme, Countess Magdalena Habsburg-Lothringen (great-great-granddaughter of Empress Elisabeth "Sisi" of Austria) and Lady Henrietta Seymour (daughter of the Duke and Duchess of Somerset).[9]

Daughters and granddaughters of billionaire businessmen, high-ranking politicians, such as United States presidents, senators and congressmen, and ambassadors have also been presented at the International Debutante Ball; for example, Tricia Nixon, Julie Nixon, Jennie Eisenhower, Ashley Walker Bush (granddaughter of President George H. W. Bush and niece of President George W. Bush), Lucinda Robb (granddaughter of President Lyndon B. Johnson), Christine Colby (daughter of CIA director William Colby), Hollister Knowlton, Charlotte and Catherine Forbes (granddaughters of Malcolm Forbes), and Christina Huffington (daughter of Arianna Huffington of The Huffington Post).[10][11][9] Ivanka Trump (daughter of President Donald Trump) was invited but chose not to attend.[12]

To gain admission to a debutante ball, debutantes must usually be recommended by a distinguished committee or sponsored by an established member of élite society, typically their mothers or other female relatives. Wearing white gowns and satin or kid long gloves,[13] the debutantes stand in a receiving line, and are introduced individually to the audience. After the debutante is announced, she is walked around the stage, guided by her father who presents her. Her younger male escort joins her and escorts her to make way for the next. Each debutante brings at least one escort, sometimes two.

Many debutante balls select escorts and pair them with the debs to promote good social pairings. Cotillions may be elaborate formal affairs and involve not only "debs" but also junior debutantes, escorts and ushers, and flower girls and pages. Every debutante must perform a curtsy, also known as the St. James Bow or a full court bow to the attendees. The exception are Texas debutantes who are presented at the International Debutante Ball at New York City's Waldorf Astoria Hotel, who perform the "Texas Dip". This gesture is made as the young woman is formally presented. Débutante balls exist in nearly every major city in the United States. They occur more frequently and are larger affairs in the American South.[citation needed]

The Christmas Cotillion in Savannah, Georgia, first held in 1817, is the oldest debutante ball in the United States. Many cities such as Dallas and Atlanta have several balls in a season. Dallas, for example, has a ball sponsored by the traditional Idlewild organization. Some balls sponsored by modern organizations, such as the Dallas Symphony Orchestra Presentation Ball and La Fiesta de las Seis Banderas, raise money to benefit charities.

The National Cotillion and Thanksgiving Ball of Washington, DC., hosted by Mary-Stuart Montague Price, has met every November for over 60 years with proceeds going to Children's Hospital. Debutantes can formally participate in the ball for up to three years, wearing different colors each time to express their increasing sophistication: debutantes wear white, post-debutantes wear black, and the post-post debutantes wear red.[14]

Another "Old South" debutante ball is the St. Cecilia Society Ball held annually in Charleston, South Carolina. This ball is described in Alexandra Ripley's novel, Scarlett, the sequel to Margaret Mitchell's Gone With The Wind. The Society was formed in 1766 as a private subscription concert organization. Over the next fifty-four years, its annual concert series formed the most sophisticated musical phenomenon in North America. Its musical patronage ended in 1820. Today the St. Cecilia Society flourishes is one of South Carolina's oldest and most exclusive social institutions.[15] Today the St. Cecilia Society hosts the annual debutante ball. The society admits only those men whose fathers or brothers are members. The women must be from these families. In New Orleans, Louisiana, a debutante is usually presented at a ball during the Carnival season.

In New York City, there are still several deb balls, including the international one described above. Charity and social balls include the Infirmary (benefits the local hospital), the Society of Mayflower Descendants Ball, and the Saint Nicholas Society of the City of New York Ball (founded 1835). As an alternative to a ball, and more frequent in the North, a young woman's family might hold a "coming-out party" for her.[16]

 
Chicago's Palmer House hotel, traditional Ukrainian American debutante ball

Unlike the formal balls, which are held only at a traditional time of the year, the individual "coming-out party" may be held at any time of the year. Some are scheduled around such occasions as the debutante's birthday, or graduation from high school or university. In theory, the only women who could be invited would be those who had already made their débuts, thus affording a sort of rank-order to the debutante season. "Old-money" families often send their preteen sons and daughters to dancing classes, called cotillion, and etiquette lessons in preparation for these parties, which launch their children into society and act as major networking events. Even less grand debutante balls typically require debs to attend a few lessons in social dance, comportment, and in executing their curtsy.[citation needed]

Since the early 20th century, the African-American community organized its own tradition of social organizations, some of which sponsor similar charitable events and activities. They hold their own cotillions and debutante balls for their upper classes. Successful African Americans could meet and make connections with others of their status at such events, and make social, political and economic connections for the young women and men in their families. These formal cotillion and debutante balls still thrive as among the most traditional events of the African-American upper class.[17][18][19]

Various Ukrainian émigré organizations in the United States, such as the Ukrainian American Medical Association of North America, the Ukrainian Engineers' Society of America, Plast Ukrainian Scouting Organization, and the Ukrainian American Youth Association have hosted annual black-tie debutante balls since after the Second World War. They are used to raise funds for charities and to introduce young Ukrainian ladies between the ages of 16 and 18 to their local ethnic Ukrainian communities. Ukrainian American debutante balls take place in American cities with substantial populations of Ukrainians, such as Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia, Newark, and Washington D.C. Beside the traditional waltz of the debutantes, one of the highlights of these balls is the Kolomyjka, which usually takes place past midnight. Every guest may spontaneously demonstrate their skills in Ukrainian dances, such as the Hopak or Arkan. Kolomyjka dances tend to last upwards of a half-hour of nonstop folk dancing. Afterward traditional black-tie ball dances are revived.[20][21]

Author Ann Anderson suggests that the high school prom of public schools is the democratic version of the debutante ball. It requires no membership in the upper class nor family restrictions to girls or boys participation.[22]

Debutante balls in U.S. television and films

Several television series focused on young people from wealthy families include episodes with debutante events. "The Debut," an episode of The O.C. (a drama about wealthy Californians), featured a representation of an American debutante ball. "Hi, Society," (season 1, episode 10), "They Shoot Humphreys, Don't They?," (season 3, episode 9), "Riding in Town Cars with Boys (season 5, episode 10), and "Monstrous Ball" (season 6, episode 5) of Gossip Girl, also from The O.C. creator Josh Schwartz, features a debutante ball in New York City. "Presenting Lorelai Gilmore", an episode of Gilmore Girls shows Rory Gilmore as a debutante. She makes her debut at a Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) debutante ball that her grandmother helped put together. In The Critic, Jay Sherman's younger sister Margo is persuaded to attend her debutante ball. In BoJack Horseman, the titular character's mother, Beatrice, is shown attending her debutante ball as a young adult through flashbacks in the season 4 episode "Time's Arrow".

In the premiere of The City, Whitney Port's reality show, her co-worker Olivia Palermo describes her first pair of Manolo Blahnik shoes, which she wore to her "Deb" at the age of 18.

Crime dramas have investigated début-related crimes. "Zoo York," an episode of CSI: NY, featured the CSI team investigating the murder of a debutante. Medical examiner Evan Zao says that he had attended a debutante ball. "Debut", an episode of Cold Case, tells the story of a young girl who is murdered the night of her debutante ball. In an episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, entitled "Streetwise", detectives investigated the rape and murder of a debutante.

Films with debutante themes include Metropolitan (1990), Whit Stillman's feature film, a comedy of manners set during the deb season in Manhattan, and What a Girl Wants (2003), in which Amanda Bynes plays an American teen whose estranged father is a British lord, and who is presented at a coming-out party. Bynes is also featured in She's The Man, in which the main character attends a debutantes preparation program and finally a ball. Something New, a romantic comedy, has a scene of upper-class African Americans at a cotillion on the West Coast. The Debut (2001), a film on contemporary Filipino-American life, explores a wide variety of cultural themes through an informal debutante event.

The 1992 film The Addams Family is centered on the reconciliation of Gomez and Fester Addams. They had a falling out as teenagers at a debutante ball. In the film Little Women (1994), a "coming-out" party is given. Aunt March talks to Marmee about when Meg will be introduced into society.

Borat Subsequent Moviefilm (2020) includes a scene at a debutante ball at Johnston–Felton–Hay House in Macon, Georgia.[23]

Latin America

In Mexico, Dominican Republic, Panama, Puerto Rico and Paraguay, debutantes are young girls who take part in a Festival de Debutantes, or a "Quince Años", held for their fifteenth birthdays. Quinceañera parties are also held in the United States among Latino communities from these nations.

In Brazil and Mexico, such events are called Baile de Debutante (Spanish and Portuguese) or Festa de Debutante (only Portuguese), or Quince Años (Spanish) or Quinze Anos (Portuguese).

In Panama, the Debutante Ball is organized by Damas Guadalupanas. It is a charity event held at Club Union. It takes place when girls are seniors in high school (17–18 years old). This follows the Quince Años, which takes place when they are 15.

See also

References

  1. ^ Michael Mayerböck: 21 January 2011 Wiener Hofburg. in: Der Soldat, Nr. 2/2011 21 January 2011, S. 1.
  2. ^ 60 Jahre Bundesheer – Musikalischer Auftakt in das Jubiläumsjahr. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  3. ^ "Ball der Offiziere 2023 – Jetzt geht es los!" (in German). Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  4. ^ "Make Your Debut At The Vienna Opera Ball-Dresscode". wiener-staatsoper.at. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  5. ^ "Coronet Debutante Ball". coronetdebutanteball.org. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  6. ^ "Obituary: Peter Townend". The Daily Telegraph. 18 July 2001. Archived from the original on 6 July 2014. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  7. ^ The semi-autobiographical novel Past Imperfect (2008) by Julian Fellowes is an informative description of participating in 'The Season' in these final years compared to its height.
  8. ^ Marsh, Ngaio (1999). Death in a white tie. Internet Archive. London : HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-651257-8.
  9. ^ a b "In vogue on NYSD". NYSD. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  10. ^ "Christine M. Colby to Marry". New York Times. 16 November 1986. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  11. ^ "Hollister Knowlton Betrothed To David H. Petraeus, a Cadet". New York Times. 12 May 1974. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  12. ^ "Debutantes make their bows to society at NY gala". AP News. 2 January 2017. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  13. ^ "A guide for purchasing gloves for Carnival balls and presentations". nola.com. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
  14. ^ Debutante's Guide to Life. Cornelia Guest. 1986. p.108
  15. ^ Each of the historic invitations held in the St. Cecilia Society Collection at the South Carolina Historical Society, which span from 1841 through the 20th century, names the location of the event.
  16. ^ In the case of Helen Barney, the term "debutante ball" was applied to the "coming-out party" given her by her uncle, William Collins Whitney, at his home at 871 Fifth Avenue, New York City, on 5 January 1901. Cleveland Amory, Who Killed Society?, pp. 502–503. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1960.
  17. ^ Anderson, Adrienne. . Cotillions of Color. Archived from the original on 8 March 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  18. ^ Hann, Christopher (15 November 2010). "The Lost History of Black Cotillions". Drew News. Drew University. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  19. ^ Casimir, Leslie (18 July 2004). "COTILLIONS MAKE A COMEBACK Courtly Tradition Updated By African-Americans". New York Daily News. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  20. ^ "Ukrainian Debutante Balls 2018 Roundup". Ukrainian Weekly. Ukrainian National Association. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  21. ^ Khrystyna, Bondareva. "Ukrainian Ball in Chicago". Ukrainian Chicago Magazine. Vidia. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  22. ^ Anderson, Ann (2012). High School Prom: Marketing, Morals and the American Teen. McFarland. pp. 7–10. ISBN 9781476600079.
  23. ^ "Is the 'Borat 2' Debutante Ball Scene Real? Reporter Recounts His Filming Experience". Distractify. 26 October 2020. Retrieved 25 April 2021.

Further reading

  • Alvarez, Julia. Once upon a Quinceañera: Coming of Age in the USA (Penguin, 2007), the Hispanic version
  • Butler, Nicholas Michael. Votaries of Apollo: The St. Cecilia Society and the Patronage of Concert Music in Charleston, South Carolina, 1766–1820. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2007.
  • Chenier, Elise. "Class, Gender, and the Social Standard: The Montreal Junior League, 1912–1939." Canadian Historical Review 90#4 (2009): 671–710. in Canada
  • Jabour, Anya. Scarlett's Sisters (Univ of North Carolina Press, 2007) on upper class Southern belles
  • Lewis, Cynthia, and Susan Harbage Page. "Secret Sharing: Debutantes Coming Out in the American South." Southern Cultures 18#4 (2012): 6–25.
  • Marling, Karal Ann. Debutante: Rites and Regalia of American Debdom (2004) excerpt
  • Neeland, Elizabeth C. "The Woman in White: An Analysis of Women's Meaning-making Experiences in Debut" (MA thesis. University of Georgia, 2006) online, a case study of the 2005 Blue Gray Colonel's Ball in Montgomery, Alabama, to study Southern debutante culture

External links

  • The Débutante, Chapter XVIII of Emily Post's Etiquette (1922), at Bartleby.com
  • The Debutante, a short story by Leonora Carrington
  • The British Court Presentation
  • The Economist – Débutante scene in Houston

debutante, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sch. For other uses see Debutante disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Debutante news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A debutante also spelled debutante ˈ d ɛ b j ʊ t ɑː n t DEB yuu tahnt from French debutante debytɑ t female beginner or deb is a young woman of aristocratic or upper class family background who has reached maturity and as a new adult is presented to society at a formal debut UK ˈ d eɪ b juː ˈ d ɛ b juː DAY bew DEB yoo US d eɪ ˈ b juː day BEW French debut deby or possibly debutante ball Originally the term meant that the woman was old enough to be married and part of the purpose of her coming out was to display her to eligible bachelors and their families with a view to marriage within a select circle Debutantes at the Chrysanthemum Ball in Munich 2012 Contents 1 Austria 2 Australia 3 United Kingdom 3 1 In popular culture in the United Kingdom 4 United States 4 1 American debutante balls 4 2 Debutante balls in U S television and films 5 Latin America 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksAustria Edit Some attendees of the 2013 Vienna Opera Ball Vienna Austria still maintains many of the institutions that made up the social courtly life of the Habsburg Empire citation needed One of those is the most active formal ball season in the world From 1 January to 1 March no fewer than 28 formal balls with a huge variety of hosts are held in Vienna Many are for specific nationalities like the Russian Ball or the Serbian Saint Sava ball social groups like the Hunter s Ball or Verein Grunes Kreuz ball or trade groups like the Coffee Roasters or Doctors Ball Some of these balls also have debutantes However the two that are best known for their debutantes are the Officer s Ball and the Vienna Opera Ball The Ball der Offiziere de is considered to be the direct successor of Vienna s Imperial Court Ball The modern version was founded in 1919 by the association Alt Neustadt an association of graduates of the Theresian Military Academy They have organized the ball publicly since 1926 1 The Ball is held on the third Friday of January across the twenty three salons of the Vienna Hofburg Palace and includes nine bands of different styles of music military formations and dancing troupes from around the world The patron is the President of the Republic and it is hosted by the Chief of the Defense Staff 2 The entrance and presentation of the 80 debutantes is the highlight of the opening event followed by the presentation of ministers of state then the Diplomatic Corps and finishes with the debutantes leading the first formal Viennese waltz to the music of The Blue Danube The ladies are from the nobility daughters of senior ranking military officers or female officers in the Austrian military They are presented to the Minister of Defense 3 The dress code is evening dress floor length gowns for women and white tie and tails for men or mess dress uniform for military members The final ceremonial is the blowing of the hunt horns and takes place at 4 o clock in the morning The Vienna Opera Ball is held in the auditorium of the Vienna State Opera which is turned into a large ballroom On the eve of the event the rows of seats are removed from the stalls and a new floor level with the stage is built The ball does not start until around 10 pm when the Austrian president and his guests enter the imperial balcony Their arrival is heralded by trumpets The Austrian national anthem is played followed by the European anthem There are performances of the state opera ballet company and classical arias sung by the opera stars These are normally a small selection of Italian opera and famous Austrian pieces The highlight of the opening ceremony is the introduction of 180 debutante couples These are carefully selected young women and men who have successfully completed an application program and a strict classical dance choreography organised by the Elmayer dance school The debutantes are led into the opera house to the sounds of Carl Michael Ziehrer s Facherpolonaise The dress code is evening dress white tie and tails for men strictly floor length gowns for women White opera gloves are still mandatory for female debutantes at the Vienna Opera Ball 4 Australia EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Young women making their debut accompanied by the younger attendants in Queensland 1948 In Australia debutante balls or colloquially deb balls are usually organised by high schools church groups or service clubs such as Lions or Rotary The girls who take part are in either Year 10 11 or 12 at high school i e aged between 15 and 18 The event is often used as a fund raiser for local charities The Australian debutante wears a white or pale coloured gown similar to a wedding dress However the dress does not come with a train on the skirt and the debutante does not wear a veil The boy wears black tie or another formal dress suit It is customary for the female to ask a male to the debutante ball with males not being able to do the deb unless they are asked similar to a Sadie Hawkins Dance The debutantes and their partners must learn how to dance in ballroom style Debutante balls are almost always held in a reception centre school hall the function room of a sporting or other community organisation e g RSL club or ballroom Usually they are held late in the year and consist of dinner dancing and speeches United Kingdom Edit An 1890s era debutante gown In the United Kingdom the presentation of debutantes to the Sovereign at Court used to mark the start of the British social season The presentation of debutantes at court was also a way for young women of marriageable age to be presented to suitable bachelors and their families in the hopes of finding a suitable husband Bachelors in turn used the court presentation as a chance to find a suitable wife Those who wanted to be presented at court were required to apply for permission to do so and to be made by ladies who had been presented to the Sovereign such as the mother of a young woman or her mother in law if she was married If the application was accepted they would be sent a royal summons from the Lord Chamberlain to attend the Presentation on a certain day According to Debrett s the proceedings on that day always started at 10 am In addition to debutantes older women and married women who had not previously been presented could be presented at Court On the day of the court presentation the debutante and her sponsor would be announced the debutante would curtsy to the Sovereign and she would leave without turning her back The court dress was traditionally a white evening dress but shades of ivory and pink were acceptable The dress featured short sleeves and the young woman also wore long white gloves 5 a veil attached to the hair with three white ostrich feathers and a train which the debutante would hold on her arm until she was ready to be presented Debutantes would wear pearls but many would also wear jewellery that belonged to the family After the debutantes were presented to the monarch they would attend the social season The season consisted of events such as afternoon tea parties polo matches races at Royal Ascot and balls Many debutantes would also have their own coming out party or alternatively a party shared with a sister or other member of family The last debutantes were presented at Court in 1958 after which Queen Elizabeth II abolished the ceremony Attempts were made to keep the tradition going by organising a series of parties for young women who might otherwise have been presented at Court in their first season to which suitable young men were also invited by Peter Townend 6 However the withdrawal of royal patronage made these occasions decreasingly significant and scarcely distinguishable from any other part of the social season 7 The Queen Charlotte s Ball a contemporary revival of the traditions of presentation at court continues under the patronage of the Duke of Somerset The expression debutante or deb for short has continued to be used especially in the press to refer to young women of marriageable age who participate in a semi public upper class social scene The expression deb s delight is applied to good looking unmarried young men from similar backgrounds In popular culture in the United Kingdom Edit Dame Ngaio Marsh s 1938 novel Death in a White Tie is set in a London season When Detective Inspector Alleyn s mother informs him that she is going to bring out his niece whose parents are in Suva Alleyn replies Good Lord mama you must be demented Do you know what this means 8 In addition to the murder mystery the reader is treated to an entertaining view of the effect that the Season has on a variety of characters In the 1933 film Our Betters based on Somerset Maugham s 1917 play by the same name an American heiress marries an English aristocrat for love When she discovers on her wedding day that he married her for her money she sets out to take revenge Her defiant actions include wearing a daring black gown to her younger sister s presentation at court United States EditAmerican debutante balls Edit 58th International Debutante Ball 2012 New York City Waldorf Astoria Hotel The upper classes of the United States developed social traditions related to British practices Today a cotillion or debutante ball in the United States is a formal presentation of young women debutantes to polite society typically hosted by a charity or society Those introduced can vary from the ages of 16 to 18 younger ages are more typical of Southern regions while older are more commonplace in the North In some areas 15 and 16 year olds are called junior debutantes One of the most prestigious most exclusive and most expensive debutante balls in the world is the invitation only International Debutante Ball held annually at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City where girls from prominent world families are presented to high society The International Debutante Ball has presented princesses countesses baronesses and many European royalty and aristocrats as debutantes to high society including Princess Katarina of Yugoslavia Vanessa von Bismarck great great granddaughter of Otto von Bismarck Princess Natalya Elisabeth Davidovna Obolensky granddaughter of the Prince Ivan Obolensky who was the Chairman of the International Debutante Ball and himself the grandson of John Jacob Astor IV founder of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel Princess Ines de Bourbon Parme Countess Magdalena Habsburg Lothringen great great granddaughter of Empress Elisabeth Sisi of Austria and Lady Henrietta Seymour daughter of the Duke and Duchess of Somerset 9 Daughters and granddaughters of billionaire businessmen high ranking politicians such as United States presidents senators and congressmen and ambassadors have also been presented at the International Debutante Ball for example Tricia Nixon Julie Nixon Jennie Eisenhower Ashley Walker Bush granddaughter of President George H W Bush and niece of President George W Bush Lucinda Robb granddaughter of President Lyndon B Johnson Christine Colby daughter of CIA director William Colby Hollister Knowlton Charlotte and Catherine Forbes granddaughters of Malcolm Forbes and Christina Huffington daughter of Arianna Huffington of The Huffington Post 10 11 9 Ivanka Trump daughter of President Donald Trump was invited but chose not to attend 12 To gain admission to a debutante ball debutantes must usually be recommended by a distinguished committee or sponsored by an established member of elite society typically their mothers or other female relatives Wearing white gowns and satin or kid long gloves 13 the debutantes stand in a receiving line and are introduced individually to the audience After the debutante is announced she is walked around the stage guided by her father who presents her Her younger male escort joins her and escorts her to make way for the next Each debutante brings at least one escort sometimes two Many debutante balls select escorts and pair them with the debs to promote good social pairings Cotillions may be elaborate formal affairs and involve not only debs but also junior debutantes escorts and ushers and flower girls and pages Every debutante must perform a curtsy also known as the St James Bow or a full court bow to the attendees The exception are Texas debutantes who are presented at the International Debutante Ball at New York City s Waldorf Astoria Hotel who perform the Texas Dip This gesture is made as the young woman is formally presented Debutante balls exist in nearly every major city in the United States They occur more frequently and are larger affairs in the American South citation needed The Christmas Cotillion in Savannah Georgia first held in 1817 is the oldest debutante ball in the United States Many cities such as Dallas and Atlanta have several balls in a season Dallas for example has a ball sponsored by the traditional Idlewild organization Some balls sponsored by modern organizations such as the Dallas Symphony Orchestra Presentation Ball and La Fiesta de las Seis Banderas raise money to benefit charities The National Cotillion and Thanksgiving Ball of Washington DC hosted by Mary Stuart Montague Price has met every November for over 60 years with proceeds going to Children s Hospital Debutantes can formally participate in the ball for up to three years wearing different colors each time to express their increasing sophistication debutantes wear white post debutantes wear black and the post post debutantes wear red 14 Another Old South debutante ball is the St Cecilia Society Ball held annually in Charleston South Carolina This ball is described in Alexandra Ripley s novel Scarlett the sequel to Margaret Mitchell s Gone With The Wind The Society was formed in 1766 as a private subscription concert organization Over the next fifty four years its annual concert series formed the most sophisticated musical phenomenon in North America Its musical patronage ended in 1820 Today the St Cecilia Society flourishes is one of South Carolina s oldest and most exclusive social institutions 15 Today the St Cecilia Society hosts the annual debutante ball The society admits only those men whose fathers or brothers are members The women must be from these families In New Orleans Louisiana a debutante is usually presented at a ball during the Carnival season In New York City there are still several deb balls including the international one described above Charity and social balls include the Infirmary benefits the local hospital the Society of Mayflower Descendants Ball and the Saint Nicholas Society of the City of New York Ball founded 1835 As an alternative to a ball and more frequent in the North a young woman s family might hold a coming out party for her 16 Chicago s Palmer House hotel traditional Ukrainian American debutante ball Unlike the formal balls which are held only at a traditional time of the year the individual coming out party may be held at any time of the year Some are scheduled around such occasions as the debutante s birthday or graduation from high school or university In theory the only women who could be invited would be those who had already made their debuts thus affording a sort of rank order to the debutante season Old money families often send their preteen sons and daughters to dancing classes called cotillion and etiquette lessons in preparation for these parties which launch their children into society and act as major networking events Even less grand debutante balls typically require debs to attend a few lessons in social dance comportment and in executing their curtsy citation needed Since the early 20th century the African American community organized its own tradition of social organizations some of which sponsor similar charitable events and activities They hold their own cotillions and debutante balls for their upper classes Successful African Americans could meet and make connections with others of their status at such events and make social political and economic connections for the young women and men in their families These formal cotillion and debutante balls still thrive as among the most traditional events of the African American upper class 17 18 19 Various Ukrainian emigre organizations in the United States such as the Ukrainian American Medical Association of North America the Ukrainian Engineers Society of America Plast Ukrainian Scouting Organization and the Ukrainian American Youth Association have hosted annual black tie debutante balls since after the Second World War They are used to raise funds for charities and to introduce young Ukrainian ladies between the ages of 16 and 18 to their local ethnic Ukrainian communities Ukrainian American debutante balls take place in American cities with substantial populations of Ukrainians such as Chicago Detroit Philadelphia Newark and Washington D C Beside the traditional waltz of the debutantes one of the highlights of these balls is the Kolomyjka which usually takes place past midnight Every guest may spontaneously demonstrate their skills in Ukrainian dances such as the Hopak or Arkan Kolomyjka dances tend to last upwards of a half hour of nonstop folk dancing Afterward traditional black tie ball dances are revived 20 21 Author Ann Anderson suggests that the high school prom of public schools is the democratic version of the debutante ball It requires no membership in the upper class nor family restrictions to girls or boys participation 22 Debutante balls in U S television and films Edit Several television series focused on young people from wealthy families include episodes with debutante events The Debut an episode of The O C a drama about wealthy Californians featured a representation of an American debutante ball Hi Society season 1 episode 10 They Shoot Humphreys Don t They season 3 episode 9 Riding in Town Cars with Boys season 5 episode 10 and Monstrous Ball season 6 episode 5 of Gossip Girl also from The O C creator Josh Schwartz features a debutante ball in New York City Presenting Lorelai Gilmore an episode of Gilmore Girls shows Rory Gilmore as a debutante She makes her debut at a Daughters of the American Revolution DAR debutante ball that her grandmother helped put together In The Critic Jay Sherman s younger sister Margo is persuaded to attend her debutante ball In BoJack Horseman the titular character s mother Beatrice is shown attending her debutante ball as a young adult through flashbacks in the season 4 episode Time s Arrow In the premiere of The City Whitney Port s reality show her co worker Olivia Palermo describes her first pair of Manolo Blahnik shoes which she wore to her Deb at the age of 18 Crime dramas have investigated debut related crimes Zoo York an episode of CSI NY featured the CSI team investigating the murder of a debutante Medical examiner Evan Zao says that he had attended a debutante ball Debut an episode of Cold Case tells the story of a young girl who is murdered the night of her debutante ball In an episode of Law amp Order Special Victims Unit entitled Streetwise detectives investigated the rape and murder of a debutante Films with debutante themes include Metropolitan 1990 Whit Stillman s feature film a comedy of manners set during the deb season in Manhattan and What a Girl Wants 2003 in which Amanda Bynes plays an American teen whose estranged father is a British lord and who is presented at a coming out party Bynes is also featured in She s The Man in which the main character attends a debutantes preparation program and finally a ball Something New a romantic comedy has a scene of upper class African Americans at a cotillion on the West Coast The Debut 2001 a film on contemporary Filipino American life explores a wide variety of cultural themes through an informal debutante event The 1992 film The Addams Family is centered on the reconciliation of Gomez and Fester Addams They had a falling out as teenagers at a debutante ball In the film Little Women 1994 a coming out party is given Aunt March talks to Marmee about when Meg will be introduced into society Borat Subsequent Moviefilm 2020 includes a scene at a debutante ball at Johnston Felton Hay House in Macon Georgia 23 Latin America EditSee also Quinceanera This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Mexico Dominican Republic Panama Puerto Rico and Paraguay debutantes are young girls who take part in a Festival de Debutantes or a Quince Anos held for their fifteenth birthdays Quinceanera parties are also held in the United States among Latino communities from these nations In Brazil and Mexico such events are called Baile de Debutante Spanish and Portuguese or Festa de Debutante only Portuguese or Quince Anos Spanish or Quinze Anos Portuguese In Panama the Debutante Ball is organized by Damas Guadalupanas It is a charity event held at Club Union It takes place when girls are seniors in high school 17 18 years old This follows the Quince Anos which takes place when they are 15 See also Edit Society portalAzalea Trail Maids Bachelor and Spinster Ball Celebutante Coming of Age Day Cug Hue Hng Debutante dress International Debutante Ball List of debutante balls in the United States Philippine debut Social Register Socialite Southern belle Sweet Sixteen Texas dip Veiled Prophet BallReferences Edit Michael Mayerbock 21 January 2011 Wiener Hofburg in Der Soldat Nr 2 2011 21 January 2011 S 1 60 Jahre Bundesheer Musikalischer Auftakt in das Jubilaumsjahr Retrieved 1 February 2015 Ball der Offiziere 2023 Jetzt geht es los in German Retrieved 8 November 2022 Make Your Debut At The Vienna Opera Ball Dresscode wiener staatsoper at Retrieved 9 November 2019 Coronet Debutante Ball coronetdebutanteball org Retrieved 29 July 2021 Obituary Peter Townend The Daily Telegraph 18 July 2001 Archived from the original on 6 July 2014 Retrieved 14 August 2012 The semi autobiographical novel Past Imperfect 2008 by Julian Fellowes is an informative description of participating in The Season in these final years compared to its height Marsh Ngaio 1999 Death in a white tie Internet Archive London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 651257 8 a b In vogue on NYSD NYSD Retrieved 17 December 2017 Christine M Colby to Marry New York Times 16 November 1986 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Hollister Knowlton Betrothed To David H Petraeus a Cadet New York Times 12 May 1974 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Debutantes make their bows to society at NY gala AP News 2 January 2017 Retrieved 17 December 2017 A guide for purchasing gloves for Carnival balls and presentations nola com Retrieved 24 January 2014 Debutante s Guide to Life Cornelia Guest 1986 p 108 Each of the historic invitations held in the St Cecilia Society Collection at the South Carolina Historical Society which span from 1841 through the 20th century names the location of the event In the case of Helen Barney the term debutante ball was applied to the coming out party given her by her uncle William Collins Whitney at his home at 871 Fifth Avenue New York City on 5 January 1901 Cleveland Amory Who Killed Society pp 502 503 New York Harper amp Brothers 1960 Anderson Adrienne About Cotillions of Color Cotillions of Color Archived from the original on 8 March 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Hann Christopher 15 November 2010 The Lost History of Black Cotillions Drew News Drew University Retrieved 28 February 2014 Casimir Leslie 18 July 2004 COTILLIONS MAKE A COMEBACK Courtly Tradition Updated By African Americans New York Daily News Retrieved 28 February 2014 Ukrainian Debutante Balls 2018 Roundup Ukrainian Weekly Ukrainian National Association Retrieved 9 February 2021 Khrystyna Bondareva Ukrainian Ball in Chicago Ukrainian Chicago Magazine Vidia Retrieved 9 February 2021 Anderson Ann 2012 High School Prom Marketing Morals and the American Teen McFarland pp 7 10 ISBN 9781476600079 Is the Borat 2 Debutante Ball Scene Real Reporter Recounts His Filming Experience Distractify 26 October 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Further reading EditAlvarez Julia Once upon a Quinceanera Coming of Age in the USA Penguin 2007 the Hispanic version Butler Nicholas Michael Votaries of Apollo The St Cecilia Society and the Patronage of Concert Music in Charleston South Carolina 1766 1820 Columbia University of South Carolina Press 2007 Chenier Elise Class Gender and the Social Standard The Montreal Junior League 1912 1939 Canadian Historical Review 90 4 2009 671 710 in Canada Jabour Anya Scarlett s Sisters Univ of North Carolina Press 2007 on upper class Southern belles Lewis Cynthia and Susan Harbage Page Secret Sharing Debutantes Coming Out in the American South Southern Cultures 18 4 2012 6 25 Marling Karal Ann Debutante Rites and Regalia of American Debdom 2004 excerpt Neeland Elizabeth C The Woman in White An Analysis of Women s Meaning making Experiences in Debut MA thesis University of Georgia 2006 online a case study of the 2005 Blue Gray Colonel s Ball in Montgomery Alabama to study Southern debutante cultureExternal links Edit Look up debutante in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Debutante Chapter XVIII of Emily Post s Etiquette 1922 at Bartleby com The Debutante a short story by Leonora Carrington The British Court Presentation The Economist Debutante scene in Houston Debretts Social Season and Debutantes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Debutante amp oldid 1148754641, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.