Let the wedding bells ring — extremely quietly.
The daughter of a wealthy Significant Apple genuine estate family’s dream nuptials grew to become a nightmare when a Brooklyn hotel unsuccessful to disclose a “severe” sounds restriction that forced company to move to a cramped, “dingy” room off-web site for tunes and dancing, according to a new lawsuit.
“It was quite, incredibly devastating,” Marjorie Newman, the mom of bride, explained to The Post. “This was intended to be her night to shine and it was all taken away from her.”
The bride, Jessica Alovis, 29, and groom, Matt Alovis, 30, tied the knot at a lavish ceremony with 200 guests at the Brooklyn Pier 1 Lodge on Sept. 18 for a selling price of hundreds of thousands of pounds, according to a lawsuit submitted on behalf of Marjorie and Russell Newman, who footed the invoice for their daughter’s huge working day, like $150,000 on bouquets alone.
But the newlyweds discovered just after the reception started that a rule restricted audio to a “woefully low” decibel amount that attendees could hardly hear, in accordance to the go well with submitted very last Monday in Brooklyn Supreme Courtroom.
The audio-shushing disaster spoiled the couple’s initial dance and — after a DJ refused to change up the tunes — relegated company to a smaller, dark home on the second ground of a creating subsequent doorway, according to the Newmans, who are suing the hotel and their wedding planner, “The Genuine Housewives of Miami” star Guerdy Abraira.

Less than an hour into the reception, the wedding was moved from a spacious, very well-adorned reception house to a bare-bones “afterparty” area that fit only 60 persons and had seating for a lot less than a dozen, the Newmans mentioned.

“There was nowhere to sit. There was not one flower in that place. Most