In an uncharacteristically wild evening that culminated in a debacherous party filled with hookah smoke, an exotic fruit bar, and a pulsing, packed dance tent in Moroccan decor, the 47th annual Meridian Ball proved to be one of the liveliest of Washington's social season. With the goal of promoting global leadership across the public and private sectors, this classic Washington party with a non-partisan, global feel found a Goldilocks-sweet spot with a choose-your-own-adventure format that allowed guests to dance to relax if they wanted and have plenty of wild company on the dance floor if they didn't. The addition of a DJ'ed tent attracted a lively young crowd without alienating their traditional guests, making for a multi-generational event that felt like a buzzy pop-up club in all the right ways. Two dozen embassies hosted chic pre-ball dinners, allowing long-established guests a tasteful onset to the evening. They converged on the Meridian International Center to join the White-Meyer Meridian-held dinner guests and 200-300 post-dinner revelers for dessert, drinks, and dancing into the wee hours. Despite the lack of politicians due to the congressional recess, or perhaps because of it, the party took a wilder turn than most as diplomats and business tycoons mixed, drank, and danced into the wee hours of Saturday morning.

WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 16: Meridian International Center staffers and their friends relaxed in one of the Meridian Ball's several hookah smoking tents, complete with lounge chairs, layered carpets, and poofs for added seating as guests puffed away. From left, Matthew Mitchum, Rebekah Nantz, Hunter Kafcsak, Louis McCabe, Nicole Colameta, Sara Anderson, Kailee Shah, and Zak Kafsak (Photo by Kate Warren for The Washington Post via Getty Images).
WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 16: Meridian International Center staffers and their friends relaxed in one of the Meridian Ball's several hookah smoking tents, complete with lounge chairs, layered carpets, and poofs for added seating as guests puffed away. From left, Matthew Mitchum, Rebekah Nantz, Hunter Kafcsak, Louis McCabe, Nicole Colameta, Sara Anderson, Kailee Shah, and Zak Kafsak (Photo by Kate Warren for The Washington Post via Getty Images).
In an uncharacteristically wild evening that culminated in a debacherous party filled with hookah smoke, an exotic fruit bar, and a pulsing, packed dance tent in Moroccan decor, the 47th annual Meridian Ball proved to be one of the liveliest of Washington's social season. With the goal of promoting global leadership across the public and private sectors, this classic Washington party with a non-partisan, global feel found a Goldilocks-sweet spot with a choose-your-own-adventure format that allowed guests to dance to relax if they wanted and have plenty of wild company on the dance floor if they didn't. The addition of a DJ'ed tent attracted a lively young crowd without alienating their traditional guests, making for a multi-generational event that felt like a buzzy pop-up club in all the right ways. 

Two dozen embassies hosted chic pre-ball dinners, allowing long-established guests a tasteful onset to the evening. They converged on the Meridian International Center to join the White-Meyer Meridian-held dinner guests and 200-300 post-dinner revelers for dessert, drinks, and dancing into the wee hours. Despite the lack of politicians due to the congressional recess, or perhaps because of it, the party took a wilder turn than most as diplomats and business tycoons mixed, drank, and danced into the wee hours of Saturday morning.
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493408054
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16. Oktober 2015
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