said Friedman. "I never in my life saw a dress like this." She said her other daughter, Edita, who served as Gabby's maid-of-honor, also looked beautiful. "She looked like a natur- al Russian from California. "It was nice to see both kids all dressed up," she said. "I always see them running around in torn, baggy jeans. To me, they looked like absolute movie stars." Heller said her makeup was put on heav- ier than normal for the pictures. "I had tons of powder on, burgundy lip liner, fake eyelashes and I exaggerated my eyebrows," said Heller. "I wanted more dra- ma; I wanted to look bright and vibrant." Heller said her makeup wasn't the only thing done a little bit differently. "I did my hair in a wave; it looked like the 1920s," she said. "The whole image was like that." Heller said what made her wedding tru- ly special was the fact that it was just plain "fun." "We really had a blast," she said. "Some- one brought Russian caviar and we had a table set up with Russian vodka. We had wonderful hors d'oeuvres, even though we didn't get to taste many; but I heard they were great." Friedman couldn't agree more with her daughter about the food. "Believe me, no one left that wedding hungry," she said. "The food wasn't boring at all. We didn't have the regular boring chicken; we had a chicken gourmet strudel." Heller said she took off her dress and changed into something more comfortable because she wanted to enjoy herself and kick up her heels. Friedman said she was very pleased with the outcome and still cannot believe how fast the day went. "It's amazing; you plan six months for something," she said. "You blink and it's , over. Friedman said she was so exhausted from the planning, she and her husband Eu- gene took their own "second honeymoon" in California after the wedding. But not be- fore a party for her parents — a 50th wedding anniversary the next day! As for the newlyweds, they spent time in the four corners; Nevada, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico. "We slept under the stars and stayed in a 1930s cabin," she said. "This wasn't the typical vacation on the beach. We went down an 11,000-foot mountain on mountain bikes for 15 miles." Heller said it was the best vacation she ever took and can't believe people go to Disney World instead. "I'm glad more and more people are vacationing in the United States," said Heller. "I think we have the most beautiful country in the world." Heller works at the spa performing permanent makeup on a long list of clients she has built up on her own. Her new husband is in the remodeling busi- ness with Fairway Construction. "It's such a small world," said Fried- man. "I've known Ben's mother for 20 years; she's a client of mine." Friedman says her daughter and Heller were friends for a long time, but then it turned into a romance. She said her daughter met Ben in college, but Friedman says she was never impressed with him. "He used to have long hair and wore torn-up jeans; he looked like a hippie," she said. "Three years later, he cleaned himself up and he is a won- derful person. He stole her heart and mine." Friedman said her new son-in-law and her daughter get along because they have so many common interests. "They both love hiking in the mountains, bike riding; he's very ro- mantic," she said. Heller said her husband proposed on one knee while they were on a pic- nic in the woods in May 1993. "He was so nervous when he asked her, he lost the ring in the grass," said Friedman. "They're wonderful to- gether and that's the way it should be." So it should. 0 Top: The bride and groom stand under the chuppah sur- rounded by the bridal party. Above: A formal portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Heller. STYLE • 1-3RIDES 1995 •17