Saturday, 11 January 2014

Dean Bell Events party planners san antonio

Dean Bell Events (http://www.deanbell.com/) company specializes in creative themed galas. Theme parties and event planning is all we do.

We have a large inventory of mexican and western props plus many oversize sets of NASA and Beatles themes. And let us help you plan for major family events like 'Sweet 16', Quinceaneras and reunions.

Here's a guaranteed way to make sure your guests have a good time—make them a part of the entertainment. Put 'em in neon cowboy hats and bandanas, strike up the band and introduce them to line dancing.Having a good time in the early west could sometimes pose a problem. The early settlers were predominantly men and they weren't too keen on dancing cheek to cheek.

Cowboys loved to dance but not necessarily with each other. Line dancing allowed a whole group to whoop it up—nobody was left out and everybody got to party.Line dancing really took off when Billy Ray Cyrus recorded 'Achy Breaky Heart' in 1992. Years later and that song has snowballed into the biggest dance craze ever. Line dancing choreographed to country music has since become an international craze. Call to include this colorful and unique entertainment for your upcoming events!

Our company began as a small entertainment agency in 1973. After years of being a traveling musician, booking agent and graphic artist with theatrical design experience, a situation occurred where my client's decorator was unable to show up for a theme event.

Knowing my background in design, the client asked me to do something - anything to save their event. Having less than 12 hours to showtime, we briefly conferred on some ideas and decided to decorate with a huge expanse of fabrics and lighting effects. The theme was vaguely "Evening in Paris" and needed a light, airy, pastel palette of colors?on a very limited budget.

We purchased every yard of netting, tulle and silk fabric we could find prior to store closings. Our entire crew worked through the night draping and hanging fabrics to create a lush setting of a Paris niteclub on the 1920s. Sort of Toulouse Lautrec meets Moulin Rouge.

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