T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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587.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Apr 29 1991 11:43 | 15 |
| Your responsibilities are only those that are asked of you by the couple
getting married. Make no assumptions. At a minimum, you may be responsible
for the ring that the groom gives to the bride, and for signing the
marriage certificate. Everything else is optional. Certainly the list
you present is traditional, but ask your friend how much or how little
he'd like you to do.
In particular, there may be some items (for example, decorating the car),
that the couple may NOT want at all. Others (toasts, etc.) may be
done by others.
Oh, and according to Dave Barry, you may have to assist the groom with
the rental of the forklift.
Steve
|
587.2 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Mon Apr 29 1991 12:05 | 6 |
| um, Steve,
I missed that Dave Barry, did he give any idea what the fork lift was
*for*?
Bonnie
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587.3 | and not for the wedding gifts, :-) | NOVA::FISHER | It's Spring | Mon Apr 29 1991 12:07 | 6 |
| IF I HAD TO use my imagination in a Dave Barry sense, I would guess
that it has something to do with carrying the bride over the
threshhold.
Just guessing,
ed
|
587.4 | Check it out | STAR::BARTH | Ride the whims of your mind | Mon Apr 29 1991 12:08 | 8 |
| Yeah, definately ask if they want the car decorated. My beautiful
'68 Camaro was decorated at my wedding and I was ripped. Ok, ok,
they didn't hurt the car, but it made me VERY nervous that they
would, and the bride (and groom) are already nervous enough as it
is. I agree that you should check out your responsibilities with
the couple and make sure your assumptions are correct for them.
Karen.
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587.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Apr 29 1991 13:27 | 3 |
| I posted the Dave Barry item in LAB::WEDDINGS last week - check for yourself.
Steve
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587.6 | thank you | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Mon Apr 29 1991 14:22 | 4 |
| I will, tho, that's not a file I have any reason to follow normally
;-).
Bonnie
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587.7 | best man - or crazy man's keeper :-) | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Mon Apr 29 1991 17:40 | 16 |
| I've been a "Best man" twice and had one once. Steve's note .1 is
a good one. In most places you'll sign the marriage certificate.
Carrying the rings (that one always made me nervous) and giving a
toast at the reception are the other two most common things. Other
then that try and keep the groom calm. Not always easy. Especially if
the bride is late arriving at the church. :-) When I was my cousins
best man we both viewed my job has keeping him sane. I ran around and
handled a bunch or errands for him before the wedding, took the Tux's
back after, and drove him and the bride around after the wedding.
It all depends on the groom. But usually it's a lot of fun and as long
as you remember that the groom may be running a little ragged and so
just do things his way you'll be better friends after then before.
Assuming you make allowances for "his condition."
Alfred
|
587.8 | Joe, let me introduce you to the groom's father. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Apr 30 1991 10:42 | 4 |
| Depending on how the ushers have been chosen you may know guests
that they do not. Nothing upsets an "important" guest more than not
being recognised and correctly escorted, so hovering behind the ushers
and providing introductions may be part of your job.
|
587.9 | Protect them from "guests"... | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Whittlers chip away at life | Wed May 01 1991 22:09 | 12 |
|
One thing you can do that the B&G may appreciate is to help keep the car
from being "overly decorated" or worse, have someone do something that is
going to cause a problem down the road (so to speak!) I had a guest at our
wedding tuck a note in by my gas cap, supposedly written by my new wife
that I was kidnapping her and to send help. Not cute, not funny, and if
someone else had found it, who knows what would have happened? I was
honeymooning in Virginia and W. VA, so there is agood possibility some
local gas attendant (Yes, it was 24 years ago next month and they really
*did* have gas attendants!) might have taken matters into his own hands....
Vic
|
587.10 | A memorable toast makes a difference | SWAM1::ANDRIES_LA | and so it goes ... | Thu May 02 1991 12:50 | 10 |
| A few, well-chosen words can set a wonderful tone for the reception.
Give it a good deal of thought, practice in front of a mirror, speak
straight from your heart, and forget about being funny unless you've
got the brilliant comic touch of a Bill Cosby.
I gave the toast at my best friend's wedding. I used a quote Camus
to wish the couple equal measures of love and friendship in their
marriage. They still talk about it.
LArry
|
587.11 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Thu May 02 1991 14:38 | 3 |
| How about entering it here for general use, Larry?
Wil
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587.12 | | SWAM1::ANDRIES_LA | and so it goes ... | Thu May 02 1991 21:14 | 24 |
| (This is from memory, so the exact phrasing may be a bit off.
Enough disclaimers. This was my toast at my best friend's
reception:)
I thought of something funny to say, but thought better of using it.
I feel a quote from Albert Camus would be more appropriate:
"Do not walk in front of me, for I may not follow.
Do not walk behind me, for I may not lead.
Just walk beside me and be my friend."
I know Mike and Lori's love for each other will last their whole
lives. My wish for them is a life full of friendship to compliment
their love; to feel the peace and serenity which comes from being
in the presence of someone with whom you can truly be yourself.
{Raising the glass} With love and friendship, here's to the bride
and groom.
(So it goes ...)
LArry
|
587.13 | Getting 'Down and Dirty' at the Bachelor Party... | AKOV06::DCARR | Its not the neat, its the notion! | Fri May 03 1991 17:58 | 52 |
| One thing I didn't see on the list was that you might be expected to
hold the cards at the reception line - I only mention it because my
best man spilled his drink on my shoes trying to juggle a handshake, a
card, and a drink :-) (Great start on the video :-)
Now, as far as the bachelor party goes, mine (my brother was BM), and
my brothers (vice-versa) were made memorable events by:
(A) a roast (for me) - I was too hammered to remember much, but I do
know that everybody else had fun listening to my 'friends' :-) recount
some of the more embarrassing moments in my life (and it took a LONG
time :-)...
(B) To upstage my brother, I was the MC for "Double Jeopardy", where I
made 3x5 cards with 'answers' to specific questions about HIS
embarrassing past... and I told him he had to get enough "money", by
getting enough right, to "win" his presents (or I would take them).
That, and the fact that he had to do a shot glass of beer for each
missed question*$ ($10 card, one shot, $50 or five shots) insured that
he tried his HARDEST to give the right answer (wonderful way to get him
to abuse himself! :-)
We had some really funny categories, too - "Incredibly Stupid Acts"
(incredibly stupid because the merely stupid were too numerous to list
:-), "Great Moments in Sports History" (falling down on a penalty shot
in hockey, or Answer: "this phrase describes Rich' style of basketball"
- he leaps up, "What is out of control!" (Correct for $30 :-)...
Let's see - oh yes, one was "Nights you Can't Remember" (lots of shots
there :-) (I'll take "Nights I can't remember" for $50.. Answer:
The last guest to leave your bachelor party :-) :-) Another one was
something to do about his prior women..
And of course, the "final jeopardy" answer was "The Most Beautiful
Woman You'll EVER Kiss", to which he of course give the name of his
fiance (it WAS being taped, after all :-) - and, after informing the
"judges" (other attendees), that he once kissed Christie Brinkley, he
of course had to finish with 5 shots of beer (they were BIG glasses,
too :-)...
One note: make sure the old man, or other relatives, won't go nuts if
they hear something they shouldn't - although I think the fact that my
old man learned some 'wild' things about us brought us closer..
We recorded the whole thing too - some of the funniest comments came
from the crowd - that tape is a riot, I'll have to listen to it again
:-)
Anyway, thanks for the memories - have fun with it, and don't just do
the boring videos/stripper stuff...
Dave
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587.14 | Whoops! Looks like I was a note early! :-) | AKOV06::DCARR | Its not the neat, its the notion! | Fri May 03 1991 18:06 | 1 |
|
|
587.15 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon May 06 1991 10:10 | 8 |
| If you are offering a toast for someone who is getting
married a second time, you might remind them of the
Spanish proverb on this subject. English translation:
"Man is the only animal that stumbles
twice on the same stone."
Wil
|
587.16 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon May 06 1991 12:56 | 5 |
| Re: .15
Wil, I HOPE you were kidding with that suggestion!
Steve
|
587.17 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon May 06 1991 14:05 | 7 |
| I wasn't kidding, but obviously it would have to be
delivered in an environment in which a lot of kidding
was going on...
Maybe the bachelor party, rather than the wedding reception...
;-)
|
587.18 | thanks | BOBBIN::BILLINGS | Court Jester ;-=) | Fri May 10 1991 12:53 | 13 |
| Thanks for all the good advice so far! Let's see...I only have to do
what the bride and groom ask, be nice to their car, keep the groom
from completely losing his mind, and make a memorable, not impromptu,
toast at the reception.
I think I can do it!
re .9: I don't know. Putting a kidnapping note in the gas tank
sounds pretty funny to me.
re .12: If my toast is half as good as yours, it'll be twice as good
as the one I was working on. Well said.
|
587.19 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Fri May 10 1991 22:16 | 8 |
| in re .18 and notes in the gas tank...
someone put a note in ours that we were newly weds.......
that was really special and we saved it .......
24 years ago ;-)
BJ
|
587.20 | It could have been messy..... | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Carvers are on the cutting edge | Sun May 12 1991 23:55 | 20 |
|
> in re .18 and notes in the gas tank...
> someone put a note in ours that we were newly weds.......
> BJ
I wrote .9 about the kidnapping note in the gastank.....And I found
nothing funny about it at all. We were travelling in Virginia and W.
Virginia where guns are common they didn't hire rocket scientists to pump
gas. Some local boy could easily have been taken in and thought he would be
a hero. While going to school in that area I found the tendancy was to
shoot first and ask questions later. I still consider this note extremely
stupid nearly 24 years later.....
On the other hand, a note stating you were newlyweds shouldn't be cause for
confusion, heroics, or concern.
Vic
|
587.21 | | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | Just A Country Boy | Fri Jun 07 1991 12:43 | 9 |
| RE: .9 Yeah, we've all seen deliverance. You might have been playing
the part of Ted Beatty.:')
Actually West Virginians aren't as they are usually depicted. My wifes
fammily is from West Virginia and they have all their teeth and use
multi-syllabled words.;')
Mike
|
587.22 | Montani Semper Libri...... | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Carvers are on the cutting edge | Sun Jun 09 1991 22:00 | 22 |
| <<< Note 587.21 by MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER "Just A Country Boy" >>>
> RE: .9 Yeah, we've all seen deliverance. You might have been playing
> the part of Ted Beatty.:')
> Actually West Virginians aren't as they are usually depicted. My wifes
> fammily is from West Virginia and they have all their teeth and use
> multi-syllabled words.;')
Mike
I spent 4 years in college in W.VA, so I know plenty of folks there who
match your description, I only thought it was a poor idea because there are
a few who "don't" match your description. I also know some folks down that
way who, while not long in schooling, are fine people and I count them as
my friends as well.
PS: I haven't seen deliverance......sorry I don't have a reference for Ted
Beatty..... 8^)
Vic
|
587.23 | I married a Mountain Momma | GRANPA::TDAVIS | | Mon Jun 10 1991 11:10 | 5 |
| Regarding last two, I went to college in West Virgina, and also married
a fine women from the Charleston area. We both love the area, and are
looking forward to retire there someday, in fact if we get offered
"the package", we will go there,and start all over. I love that
state, and I can not wait to leave the east coast.
|