Photo: Jill Colvin

“New York Times reporter Annie Karni on duty with the White House press pool”.

There is a saying among veteran White House correspondents that theirs is “the most glamorous beat in journalism — to anyone who’s never worked it.”

Exhibit A:The New York Times’ Annie Karnion press-pool duty forPresident Donald Trump’sstate banquet Mondaywith Japan’s Emperor Naruhito.

“The guidance that we needed a floor-length gown for tonight’s imperial banquet came hours before my flight departed. I only own one floor-length gown. So, here I am, pooling a presidential event in my wedding dress,” Karnitweeted Mondayfrom a holding room in the Imperial Palace in Tokyo.

Karni, wearing the ivory gown from her2015 wedding, was one of a half-dozen White House reporters and photographers permitted to cover, on behalf of the entire press corps, the leaders’ brief remarks preceding their six-course meal.

“We were seated in a small, very hot room, somewhere in what felt like the basement of the palace, with mostly just bananas and orange juice for dinner” she tells PEOPLE in an email from Tokyo.

Karni says that with no time to shop for — or borrow or rent — the unexpectedly required floor-length dress before departure last week, she had no choice but to reach into “the back depths of the closet” and fold (!) her wedding gown into her carry-on bag.

“It wasn’t a big, poofy wedding dress, so it wasn’t totally out of the question,” she says.

Adding to the glamour, the president’s schedule that afternoon allowed less than two hours between the end of his news conference and the departure of his motorcade for the dinner that includedFirst Lady Melania Trump.

Karni had to use most of that time for writing andfiling her storyon the news of the day.

New York Timesreporter Annie Karni on duty with the White House press pool following President Trump during his state visit to Japan.Shannon Pettypiece

“New York Times reporter Annie Karni on duty with the White House press pool”.

From left: First Lady Melania Trump and President Donald Trump with Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako at the Japanese Imperial Palace on Monday.Kazuhiro Nogi/AP/REX/Shutterstock

Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Naruhito, Masako. U.S. President Donald Trump, center left, and First lady Melania Trump, front left, are greeted by Japan’s Emperor Naruhito, center right, and Empress Masako, front right, upon their arrival at the Imperial Palace for a state banquet in Tokyo

“So I sat in a ‘hold’ room in the basement of the hotel for 90 minutes, next to a colleague who was also scrambling on deadline, with all of my luggage, trying to finish our story,” Karni says.

“I changed in the bathroom about 10 minutes before the press vans were coming to pick us up.”

“I wore the same flat shoes I’d been wearing all week, so the dress was too long without heels,” Karni says, adding that an extra-long gown made extra-tricky work of getting in and out of a motorcade van with her luggage in tow.

“Other than that, it was quite comfortable!”

And, she adds, the dress might yet be called back into duty: “Next time I’m invited to a black-tie affair that isn’t someone else’s wedding, seems like it works!”

source: people.com