ExtremeElegance.com  > Cities  >  New Orleans  >  Mardi Gras 2012  >  Mardi Gras 2012 Balls
Serving the following areas in and around the Greater New Orleans area and then some.....
ExtremeElegance.com  > Copyright 1999
Site Designed by EE
Extreme Elegance Limousine Service  •  1.866.799.5466  •  1.866.652.5466
New Orleans, Metairie, Kenner, Chalmette, Destrehan, Estelle, Gretna, Harvey, Jefferson, LaPlace, Luling, Mandeville, Marrero, Meraux, River Ridge, Slidell, Terrytown, Timberlane, Westwego, Woodmere, Abita Springs, Ama, Arabi, Avondale, Jean Lafitte, Lacombe, Madisonville, New Sarpy, Norco, Pearl River, Poydras, Reserve, Saint Rose, Violet, Waggaman, Barataria, Belle Chasse, Boutte, Bridge City, Covington, Eden Isles, Edgard, Elmwood, Folsom, Garyville, Hahnville, Harahan, and other areas within the Greater New Orleans area.
Our Partners  >  NewOrleansShuttle.com  •  NolaConcierge.com  •  MardiGrasConcierge.com
                                        • 
JazzFestivalConcierge.com  •  TasteNewOrleans.com
New Orleans Mardi Gras Balls
There are three distinct classes of invitations to the carnival balls. The first two are for men and women guests. Each card issued is a personal invitation to a lady or gentleman bearing their names and is not transferable. These invitations permit the invited guests to witness the staging of the tableau. Both lady and gentleman must be in evening clothes to gain admittance to the ball. Tuxedoes are permissible for gentlemen but no lady is allowed to enter tha ball if she is wearing a hat. Gentlemen receiving the regular invitations are known as "black coats" and are not allowed to participate in any of the dances until the krewe has left the floor which is usually after the 15th or 16th dance and near the midnight hour. Hermes, in this respect, has only eight maskers' dances which gives the gentleman guest or "black coat" an opportunity to dance at an earlier hour. Ladies receiving the regular invitations are accorded the same privileges as the gentlemen which is essentially that of an "audience".

The third type of invitation is extended to ladies who are requested to participate in the maskers' dances. These invitations are known as "call-outs" and the holders of "call-outs" are in effect the honored guests of the ball. Ladies with "call-outs" are accorded seats of honor on the floor of the ballroom. No men other than members of the floor and reception committees who must be in full costume de riguer and who are identified by red and white carnations, are allowed on the ballroom floor during the maskers' dances.

Ladies with "call-outs" remain seated until a masker "calls" for them to dance. The method of "call-outs" may be confusing to the uninitiated but is quite simple when explained or seen in operation. Following the tableau members of the floor committee seek a masker desiring to "call-out" a lady and ask the lady's name. The masker is identified by a number on his program. The committeeman shouts the name of the Lady in the "call-out" section. When she is located, he offers her his arm and leads her to the dance floor where she is presented to the masker who does not identify himself. She is presented with the krewe favor by the masker and following the dance returns to her seat to await another "call-out" while the masker requests a committeeman to obtain another "call-out" for the next dance. This procedure is followed intil the last of the maskers' dances when the entire krewe leaves the floor and turns the dancing over to any guest present at the ball.

The same rules predominate in the women's organization with the exeption that the women are masked and the gentlemen are "called-out".

In keeping with the policy of all krewes, the queen of a women's organization is not officially announced while, on the other hand, the identity of the king is formally made public when he is selected.

LET EXTREME ELEGANCE BRING YOU AND YOUR PARTY TO THE BALL!  ONLINE RESERVATIONS