![]() ![]() Thirty years ago, Central Park was a seedy and scary place. Living a lavish life on the park isn’t what it used to be. Committee chairwoman Kamie Lightburn agrees: “Because none of us have backyards, we rely on the park to entertain our children.” “It’s a happy and uplifting cause and I’m grateful to be a part of it,” she drawls, swinging her mane of blond hair. A member of the elite Women’s Committee of the Central Park Conservancy, Beach is one of only 80 uptown ladies with a special job: raising money for the park’s 21 playgrounds. Preppy and polished, Beach looks (and sounds) like an advertisement for a sorority from the 1950s - only, this is New York society in 2010. Thirty-three-year-old Southern transplant Kathryn Beach (pictured) has been living in New York City for 11 years with her college sweetheart. Most of us abandoned our hairspray a couple of decades ago, but those hailing from “dinky” Denison, Texas, still rely on the shellac as part of their daily beauty regimen.
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