Daphne's and Tricia's Wedding
From Shadow Unit Wiki
Daphne Worth and Tricia Andreoli announced their engagement to marry each other (officially, form a Domestic Partnership) on July 16, 2008. [1] Their engagement party was July 18th [2], and the wedding happened September 6, 2008. [3]
Wedding Guests
This list of wedding guests comes from a LiveJournal list posted by Daphne. Her comments are in parentheses:
- John Worth
- Loretta Worth (great-aunt. Springfield, IL. Not likely to come.)
- Frances Andreoli
- Ben and Jaqui Andreoli (in Germany. Also not likely.)
- Joseph Peter Andreoli (who'd better come, since he still owes me for taping his ankle after he fell off his ski boots)
- James, Diane, and Tori Andreoli
- Marian Andreoli, Mitchell Vincent, and Lucia Andreoli Vincent
- Erik Holt
- Gail Petoski
- Hafidha Gates
- Chaz Villette
- Solomon Todd
- Nicolette Lau
- Daniel Brady
- Esther and Ben Falkner, Rebekah Falkner, Deborah Falkner
- Stephen Reyes
- Peter Pauley
- Carol Scholler and Shavaughn Scholler-King
- David and Gina Feldman
- Tanika Ravo
- Tasha McAndrews
- Michael Ordman
- Archie Boles (he won't come, but I couldn't resist)
- Mina and Nancy Brown-Casey
Stag/Doe Party
On September 5, Hafidha and Chaz took Daphne, Tricia and some of the guests to the pre-wedding party. Daphne wasn't quite sure whether to call it a stag party, a doe party, or a "stag in drag" party. [4] The party was held at the Marrakesh restaurant in Washington, DC. [5] Daphne, at least, had a grand time (although she claims she ate too much). [6]
The Wedding
Despite Daphne's fear that FBI business would intervene [7], and despite pouring rain from Tropical Storm Hanna [8], the wedding took place as planned in Post Hall on the Mount Vernon campus of George Washington University in Washington, DC. The first indication that the wedding had, in fact, occurred was Sol asking Daphne, "So, how does it feel to be Mrs. Tricia Andreoli?" on her LiveJournal. Brady had bet a hot fudge sundae that Sol wouldn't ask that. [9] Later that evening, Daphne reported simply, "That worked." [10]

