Rock and Roll Hall of Fames Makes Rocking Wedding Setting


Share
 
Rock and Roll Wedding

Photo by Nathan Migdal/Imagen Photos

The bride and groom made their wedding plans clear. “They said, ‘We don't want a traditional wedding; we want a blast,’” recounts Joe Mineo, president and chief creative director of Canfield, Ohio-based Something New Events. To fulfill their request, the Something New team took the rockin' wedding venue — Cleveland's iconic, I.M. Pei-designed Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum — and turned up the volume. The result: a September event for 400 that totally rocked.

BETWEEN A ROCK

Although the museum displays guitars rather than Gauguins, the rules that govern private events at cultural institutions stayed the same. In order to preserve public access, venue management prohibited the event team from loading in till the museum closed at 4 p.m., a scant 2 1/2 hours before the wedding began. Even then, the event team had to share one elevator with the rental company and caterer. The caterer had to improvise as well, setting up a temporary kitchen in an entryway, the only space available.

The Something New team wound up conducting its rehearsal in its own studio, making the wedding reception itself the only time the performers could work in the space. “Putting on an event is like putting on a Broadway show,” Mineo says. “You just pray there aren't any last-minute glitches.”

The performers rose to the occasion. Local rock bands played on the venue's main floor, summoning guests to the dance floors on all three museum levels. “It was almost like there were three different parties going on at once,” Mineo says. Gold-painted living statues of superstars Madonna and Elvis Presley greeted guests, who could also consult roving psychics.

WELL-ORCHESTRATED DECOR

The event team amped up the museum's array of artifacts from iconic acts ranging from the Who to U2 with a decor package that included chic lounge areas with red, white and orange couches flanked by white end tables and glowing coffee tables. Centerpieces featured vinyl records, and red lampshades sported guitar silhouettes. Color-changing LED lights kept the beat going, and robotic lighting fixtures quickened the pulse on the dance floor.

A roving cameraman captured the action on each floor; a live feed aired on a large screen on the venue's ground floor. “This added to the overall excitement and urgency of the event,” Mineo notes.

The end result of an event with a rocky start? “A wedding that was elegant,” Mineo says, “in the coolest way possible.”


Something New Events 4500 Boardman-Canfield Road, Canfield, OH 44406; www.somethingneweventsinc.com

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.


Commenting terms of use blog comments powered by Disqus

MOST POPULAR ARTICLES

SPECIAL EVENTS POLL



RESOURCE CENTER

Eventline newsletter subscription     Sourcebook

Gala Awards     the Special Event 2011

free product info     ISES

Advertise     Classifieds

Facebook   Twitter   RSS Feed   Email

Browse Back Issues

January-February 2012 November-December 2011 September-October 2011 July-August 2011 May-June 2011 March-April 2011