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Metropolis / Passing Through; When Ladies Gather for Tea; [Home Edition]
LESLEE KOMAIKO. Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, Calif.: Jul 8, 2001. pg. 1
Full Text (757 words)
(Copyright (c) 2001 Los Angeles Times)
Tom Trikilis and his wife, Jeanine, opened their first Olivia's Doll House Tea Room eight years ago in Valencia. Today there are three Southern California locations, and two more on the way. The tearooms--colorful, lacy, feminine affairs--are favorite party destinations for young ladies who enjoy not just a spot of tea (actually lemonade), but the chance to don one of the hundreds of dress-up gowns on hand, as well as full makeup and coiffures applied by tearoom staff. Trikilis, 52, formerly a television producer, names his daughter Olivia, now 12, as the principal inspiration for the venture. "She loved to dress up," he says. Furthermore, he adds, "'I thought the birthday party places were crappy. They smelled and gave you nothing, and got you in and out as fast as they could. Olivia's Doll House is beautiful and smells like a rose."
We dropped by the West Hollywood location for the birthday party of Katie Contreras, a second-grader at American Martyrs School in Manhattan Beach, who invited about a dozen friends to celebrate the Big Eight.
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Danielle Rode, 8
How much tea do you drink a week? I drink some soda, Coca-Cola.
What's the best food to eat with tea? Pizza.
Should you stick out your pinkie when drinking tea? No. I don't.
What's the best birthday present you've ever gotten? A Poochie. You know, the electric dog.
Is it better to give or receive? Receive. If you give a gift that you really like, you have to give it away to someone else. But going to a birthday [party], I get a gift in return, a goodie bag. |
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