An afternoon of 'First Class'

In the blink of an eye Hospitality went from a reasonable crowd to collapse.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
20 April 2023 Thursday 23:50
12 Reads
An afternoon of 'First Class'

In the blink of an eye Hospitality went from a reasonable crowd to collapse. It was when they mixed, as in a good cocktail, the youth led by Albert Ventura and Joel Parra and the experience that Epi and Loquillo carry so well. Talking about what they know (basketball, and rock, of course) and competing in height, they unexpectedly hit the corridors (and the views of the lower floors) in a chorus that grew first with the arrival of David and José Manuel Muñoz, the Estopas ( and the madness they unleash), and then with that of Javier Sotomayor, Josep Maria Minguella and the adored (no one signs more autographs than him) Charly Reixach. Even Mala (one of Javier de las Muelas' guests in his requested Dry Martini corner) joined the ephemeral party to steal all the attention with her lime green dress and balance demonstration which he did over his sock boot (white and striped, like tennis) topped off with a championship heel.

Meanwhile, Natalia Berenguer, David García, Tito Ramoneda, Sophie Pagnon and Gabriele Palma, as well as Natalie Batlle, Jesús Arroyo, Luis Sans and Jordi Romanyac, were trying to advance to the tent of La Vanguardia (where Javier Godó, count of Godó, and Carlos Godó were talking to the counselor of the Presidency, Laura Vilagrà) to collide through those impossible corridors with the Next Level tennis delegation with Ramzi Shaubi at the head looking for their lives to advance to the Aspic restaurant. Lucía Sáez-Benito, who many remember for her time on Netflix's First Class, had its premiere there (with the foamed egg and steak as star dishes), and who later visited her series partner and soul of the Las Marquesas agency, Álex Agulló, in the cozy Mango tent. And later, when the Starship exploded in its first test run (and Elon Musk recognized that you learn with kicks) and Alcaraz got tangled up in the center in his second set against Bautista, pilot Dani Juncadella landed at the Rolex booth with a unique Daytona. The one that won the 24 hours (at Daytona, of course) and that has "Winner 2023" engraved on the back. It was happening while a trio of mayors were meeting in the presidential box. There were, almost aligned, Ernest Maragall, Jaume Collboni and Xavier Trias.