Arts & Entertainment Happily Ever After A new exhibit will help your wedding be magical and memorable. Elizabeth Applebaum Special to the Jewish News K anchana Ketkaew and Boonthawee Siengwong didn't want a typical wedding. So when the two married earlier this year in Thailand, Kanchana covered her gown with live scorpions. This was, no doubt, inspired by the enviable title to which she holds claim: the Guinness Book of World Records' "Scorpion Queen:' for most days spent with the creepy creatures (32 days, 3,400 scorpions). Kanchana met her husband, a.k.a. the "King of Centipedes" (28 days, 1,000 cen- tipedes), at a snake farm. The two were married while inside a large coffin at a haunted house. Amazingly enough, a scorpion wed- ding isn't for everyone. Take the 2004 The exhibit will feature four chuppot to inspire themed weddings. nuptials of Vanisha Mittal and Amit Bhatia. This gathering, for the daughter of Indian steel tycoon L.N. Mittal, didn't have many-legged insects, but it did last for many days, had many, many guests and cost many, many, many millions. The tab for the six-day affair, which included a reception at the Palace of Versailles, was $60 million, making it the most expen- sive wedding in history. Then there are those who pass on the bugs and big bashes and pop off to Vegas. Among them: former Pistons star Dennis Rodman and actress Carmen Electra, Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, Joan Crawford and then-Pepsi chairman Alfred Steele, Kirk Douglas and Ann Buydens, Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos. The latter, touchingly enough, were for- ever joined at the "Chapel of Cheese." A mezuzah by Steven Goodman; the All in good taste: Michelle Bommarito's Whether you're looking for something artist uses a wide array of materials cakes have appeared on the Food involving scorpions, a relatively simple — from mother of pearl to turquoise to Network. get-together in Vegas or anywhere else, fossilized ivory — in his art. or a grand affair along the lines of the Mittal event, planning a wedding is a challenge. continue through March 8, with exhibits ful, it's even delicious when you consider But it just got a little easier. offering everything a bride and groom, those cakes. And it will offer so many "Mazel Toy! The Art of Marriage" parents and future in-laws, guests look- great ideas to couples planning their own opens 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 11, at ing to bring a memorable gift or anyone weddings." the Janice Charach Epstein Gallery in just sentimental about weddings could the West Bloomfield JCC, with a fashion possibly need. All events are free and You Are Cordially Invited ••• show, sponsored by Macy's and featuring open to the public. First stop: dream weddings. The theme's models from Virtuoso Salon, along with "This is one of the most unique exhib- the thing for many couples planning their champagne and cake tasting and music its you will ever see said the gallery's big day. A Hawaiian theme, perhaps, or a by the Pro Arte Duo. "Mazel Toy!" will director, Terri Stearn. "It's fun, it's beauti- Hollywood motif might be up your alley? 40 January 1t 2007 Or maybe just a lovely lace chuppah (wedding canopy) with white flowers. Representatives from four party planners — Emerald City Designs, Gourmet Parties, Outstanding Weddings and Events, and Special Occasions by Sparkman Event Planning — will pres- ent their idea of the perfect nuptial decor. Each dream wedding will be displayed under a chuppah in the main lobby of the gallery. Next stop: food. Of course, the bride and groom usually don't remember what they ate at their wedding, though more often than not it involves chicken. The exception is the wedding cake, which can be basic enough or memorably extrava- gant, in the mold of hip-hop stars Nas and Kelis, whose 2005 wedding cake was covered in 24-karat gold. Whatever your taste (both flavor and design- wise), you can find ideas at "Mazel Toy!" — from Chef David's Gourmet Pastry, Pavlina Cakes and local baker Michelle Bommarito, a guest on the Food Network's Holiday Cake Off. And whether you're interested in a modest handful of daisies or a bouquet of imported gardenias for every table, flowers are an integral part of the wed- ding. Learn more from the experts at Christopher's Personal Touch, Emerald City Designs, Breath of Spring and Westborn Market. Upstairs will be a classic collection of wedding art and objects for purchase. Among them will be works by Hillary Fisher, who also serves as a gallery assis- tant and guest curator of "Mazel Tov! The Art of Marriage." Fisher, 24, who holds a BFA from Western Michigan University, has loved to paint since she was a tiny girl, "since I could hold a paintbrush," she says. Her Wedding in Jaffa, which will be among the items in the exhibit, was inspired by a visit to Israel last year. A couple was getting married — no one Fisher knew — and the bride's deli- cate veil blew up in the wind and danced around. Fisher snapped a photo, which then became the basis for her painting. It's by no means a duplicate, though. Instead, Fisher recalled the scene, then painted textures. From the textures emerged the images of the lovely Israeli bride and her groom.