When you hobnob with Hollywood types, it's not surprising to develop an appreciation for the dramatic. That's what came over Phillip Sun, a talent agent, the day he pulled his girlfriend, psychotherapist Perri Monkarsh, inside a circle of roses her friends had placed on the beach near their Los Angeles home, bent to one knee, and proposed. "It was the most romantic thing I could think of," says Phillip. He then took his elated fiancée to a nearby restaurant, where family and friends had gathered to share hugs and congratulations—and to inspect the dazzling ring. Phillip had created the three-carat round brilliant center-stone ring with the help of Perri's cousin, jewelry designer Ashleigh Bergman.
The wedding weekend was no less spectacular. It was important to the couple to celebrate the coming together of their Jewish (Perri) and Chinese (Phillip) heritages. Friday night's rehearsal dinner at a Chinese restaurant featured a traditional tea ceremony. And Saturday afternoon, July 2, 2016, at the wedding itself, they took their vows before 275 guests and celebrated their shared traditions. Both of Perri's parents walked her down the aisle to Bruce Springsteen's "Thunder Road"—a surprise for her mom, who had entered to the same song at her own wedding 31 years prior. Perri's cousin officiated, having prepared for the service by getting advice from Phillip's mother and grandmother as well as both of Perri's parents about the meaning of marriage in Chinese and Jewish cultures.
Consideration for their family and friends was at the forefront of the reception as well, from the food and music choices to the décor and dress code. "Our attire was 'colorful cocktail,'" Perri recalls. "Everything else was very white and green, and we wanted our guests to bring the color and life to the party. And they did."
For people planning the biggest day of their own lives, they were unusually focused on their guests. Maybe that's because they themselves had been wedding guests when, three years earlier, they noticed their first sparks of romance. "No one was dancing, so we looked at each other and were like, 'Let's dance!'" says Perri. "We were just trying to get the party started."
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