The
Role and Duties of the Groom
When one imagines the organisation of
a wedding, one always imagines that the whole thing is put
together by the bride and her mother and that the groom's
tasks extend to no more than accepting congratulatory rounds
in the pub and buying a few trinkets for the best man and
ushers.
One imagines wrong.
The groom's duties start at the beginning of the whole affair
with the purchase of the engagement ring. The first few
months of organisation are when the major decisions of wedding
and reception venues are decided as well as the choice of
photographer, videographer and caterer. The decision also
has to be made as to what kind of wedding it should be.
It would be unfair to the bride to expect her to reach any
of these decisions alone.
Next comes the guest list; who is to be invited to the ceremony
and who to the evening festivities? The groom should co-ordinate
this with that of his parents and present a finalised list
to the bride's mother.
The Wedding Day
The bridegroom and the best man should arrive
at the wedding venue about twenty to thirty minutes before
the service is due to start. The groom would generally not
engage in much conversation during this time but would wait
quietly, seated on the right front pew or row of seats.
After the ceremony and signing of the registry the groom
walks back up the aisle with his new wife on his left and
then usually on to the formal photographs.
After the photographs the next event is the reception. The
bride and groom stand at the end of the reception line up
and at this time the groom should introduce the bride to
members of his family or his friends who she has not already
met.
The meal and speeches are next and the groom's speech follows
that of the bride's father. His speech should thank everyone
who helped organise and who contributed to the wedding,
to thank the bride's parents for giving him their daughter
and should always end with a thank you and toast to the
bridesmaids.
Following the meal and the speeches comes the cutting of
the cake, and then shortly afterwards the first dance. Traditionally,
the bride's father cuts in and the groom invites the bride's
mother to dance. The bride's father cuts in again and the
groom resumes the dance with his new wife.
After this, the bride and groom have no more duties as such,
and can spend the rest of the evening mingling, dancing
and chatting.
If you are leaving on honeymoon from the reception you should
change at the reception venue, make sure the best man and
bridesmaids are left in charge of any clothing and gifts
that you may leave behind. If you are not leaving from the
reception and plan to stay until the end, get the best man
and chief bridesmaid to make sure that everyone knows this,
since some people won't expect to leave until the bride
and groom have done so.