Inside the Met Gala: Real-life cardinal gets star treatment
NEW YORK — It was cocktail hour at the Met Gala, the most glittery and exclusive event on the New York social calendar, and celebrity guests were thronging around the imposing Temple of Dendur at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, sipping drinks and munching on canapes. Pretty much everyone in the room was famous, some hugely so, but one guest seemed to be getting a little more attention than most: Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Roman Catholic archbishop of New York.
“Cardinal, have you met Huma?” someone asked, leading him over to Huma Abedin, the longtime Hillary Clinton aide. Others waited their turn to speak to him. It seemed fitting, on a night when all the stars were trying to channel the theme of Catholicism, that the real-life cardinal in attendance was a star among stars.
Dolan was effusive about the exhibit making its debut that evening, “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination.” He was particularly enamoured with the stunning pieces — 42 of them — on display from the Sistine Chapel sacristy at the Vatican, many never seen outside Rome or in public at all, including jewel-encrusted tiaras and intricately embroidered papal cloaks, known as copes. “Those pectoral crosses, those copes, are you kidding me?” he said admiringly. A waiter came by with tiny mini-grilled cheese sandwiches. “You got any tomato soup with that?” Dolan joked.
Nearby stood actor Gary Oldman with his wife, Gisele Schmidt, watching the crowd quietly. The Met Gala is the kind of party where you can be this year’s best actor Oscar winner, and nobody takes much notice. (For the record, best actress winner Frances McDormand was there too, with a bright blue bouquet of leaves around her head, as was last year’s winner, Emma Stone — no leaves.)