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Monday, February 28, 2011

Ball Saison

HAK orchestra and papier mache giraffe

Much like the Prom time in the USA - between mid-March and early April where the malls become choked with teenage girls looking for the "perfect" dress, boys look into renting tuxedos, and the likes of Seventeen Magazine produce articles on finding your perfect hairstyle for Prom, which of the 9,000 Claire's accessories is going to go with Katy Perry-inspired sparkles, and a quiz to take to figure out if you're a Promzilla (like Bridezilla. but for 17-year-olds). Here's a hint: if you have to take the quiz...you probably are.

Such things are not restricted to the USA, however. Austria also seems to have a prom-type thing - even a prom-type season! Which is going on right now. Lots of schools are going all out for these "balls." Last weekend, I went to the one at the HAK. The theme was Africa (not New York like the HLW or Hollywood like the Gymnasium) and there were plenty of people to enjoy it.

Here's a list of differences:

1. Alcohol is served in Austria. (How could it not be?)
2. Parents, siblings and other family of the graduates, teachers, alumni and community members are all invited as well as students (or at least they can buy a ticket...)
3. There is an Eintanzen (beginning of the ball - waltz and other old-people stuff for parents).
4. There is a "midnight show" where the students perform some talent show-type thing, or a dance, or a skit for everyone at the ball which they have rehearsed - done at midnight (obviously).
5. Food is also served. Cakes are especially popular (it's Austria, remember?)

An example of Eintanzen
Photos from Gym ball:



 <-- Statue of Liberty in Hollywood? Need you ask this question? Every town in America has a statue of liberty - that is, if you're from Europe.











And, why not?     --->



NB: I was planning on making two posts, but since I took my sweet time about it, and there wasn't really much to photograph or differentiate between the two dances, here you are: kurzfristig geuploadet, as one is known to hear in these parts.






Fashion, fun, starlets and safaris: you can have it all!



Zebra wall art from the HAK



























Did these experiences make me nostalgic for my high school days? Not exactly, but I had a pretty good time. Did they make me think, "God, I'm old!"? Well, in a way. Did I become enlightened as to the vast cultural differences between Austrian and the USA? Actually, I've been to three of these now, and if I didn't get it the first time...shame on me.

4 comments:

  1. Miss Liberty's dress is a little short and she's not holding her tablet correctly.

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  3. Yeah, I actually found the whole statue a bit confusing...she sort of reminds me of the statue of "liberty" in front of the Blackstone restaurant in Green Bay - where Mom got food poisoning, remember? It is so funny to me to thing that Europeans fetishize America in the same way Americans do Europe. I don't get why what you *don't* have is vastly superior to what you do, or why America is the "land of plenty" and Europe is the "cultural center of the world" - as if the planet were actually Disney World and the Epcot Center

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  4. I realized rereading my comment that I made a really BAD typo...what happens when the "u" and the "i" are right next to each other on the keyboard! ((blush))

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