The Phnom Penh Post

Stars awarded at Kennedy gala

- Olivia Hampton

AL PACINO, The Eagles, James Taylor, gospel and blues singer Mavis Staples and Argentine pianist Martha Argerich were celebrated on Sunday for their lifetime achievemen­ts at the last major arts gala attended by President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle.

It was a bitterswee­t moment, with Obama making one of his final goodbyes to celebrated artists as president.

The first couple received a long standing ovation as they entered the Opera House of the Kennedy Center, a monument to the late president John F Kennedy.

As he kicked off the evening, host Stephen Colbert said America was lucky to have a “passionate, intelligen­t and dignified” president.

That brought applause and by far the longest standing ova- tion from the sold-out crowd in the Opera House.

Colbert then joked: “Sir, I don’t know why you stood up. I was talking about Michelle.”

“This is a joyous day. It’s the best Christmas present!” Staples said on the red carpet about receiving what is considered the nation’s highest honour for lifetime achievemen­ts in the performing arts.

At 77, Staples lives up to the maxim that age is only a number.

“People ask me, ‘Mavis, when are you going to retire?’ Retire for what? I love what I’m doing and I intend to sing until I can’t sing no more, forever,” she said.

Aretha Franklin, Sean Penn, Kevin Spacey and Ringo Starr were among a series of surprise A-listers – the awardees are notoriousl­y kept in the black about who will pay tribute to them prior to the event – who serenaded and hailed the legacy of the award recipients.

Virtuoso Israeli-American violinist Itzhak Perlman, now wheelchair-bound, and 29year-old Chinese pianist Yuja Wang played on the huge stage in honour of Argerich, with Perlman saying he felt lucky to have been alive during her time.

At an earlier reception at the White House, Obama called the awards “one of the perks of the job that I will miss”.

Kennedy Center chairman David Rubenstein thanked the Obamas, who have hosted a reception for the honourees and attended the gala event for eight years, and offered them a “golden ticket” for free admission to any event at the national arts centre.

But there’s a catch. “Parking is extra,” he quipped.

Obama jokingly asked Eagles guitarist Joe Walsh, a notorious troublemak­er, not to trash the White House because he is leaving soon and wants his “security deposit” back.

Founding member Glenn Frey died in January, and his prior illness caused The Eagles to postpone their awards last year.

So Don Henley, Timothy Schmit and Joe Walsh received the medallions and rainbowcol­oured ribbons, as did Frey’s widow Cindy over the weekend.

“For our Eagles family, 2016 couldn’t have had a harder beginning or a more appropriat­e ending,” said band manager Irving Azoff.

Grammy Award-winner Juanes gave a stunning performanc­e of Hotel California with guitarist Steve Vai, who spoke of the “surreal” experience of playing the piece’s famed guitar riff in front of the musicians.

Garth Brooks, Sheryl Crow and Darius Rucker played some of Taylor’s best hits, including Carolina in my Mind and Sweet Baby James.

Taylor, 68, performed America the Beautiful at Obama’s second inaugurati­on in January 2013, while Staples, who like none other provided the music of the civil rights movement, sang at Kennedy’s inaugurati­on.

Argerich, 75, is widely considered one of the world’s best, if reclusive, living pianists.

For nearly two decades, she largely shunned solo perfor- mances, playing almost exclusivel­y with orchestras and chamber ensembles, until a sold-out recital at Carnegie Hall in New York in 2000.

“I was surprised. I didn’t think I was entitled,” Argerich, who is famously wary of publicity, said of learning she had won the award.

Academy Award nominee Don Cheadle hailed Pacino’s humility despite a long and storied career that has seen him perform in some 100 films and plays, including The Godfather, Scarface, Sea of Love, Heat and Scent of a Woman.

Kevin Spacey said Pacino “immerses us in his characters so we can experience the humanness in monsters and the monstrosit­ies in humans”.

 ?? CHRIS KLEPONIS/AFP ?? US President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama stand for the National Anthem during the 2016 Kennedy Center Honors on Sunday, in Washington, DC.
CHRIS KLEPONIS/AFP US President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama stand for the National Anthem during the 2016 Kennedy Center Honors on Sunday, in Washington, DC.
 ?? CHRIS KLEPONIS/AFP ?? Screen and stage actor Al Pacino, a 2016 Kennedy Center honouree, attends a reception with fellow honourees at the White House on Sunday.
CHRIS KLEPONIS/AFP Screen and stage actor Al Pacino, a 2016 Kennedy Center honouree, attends a reception with fellow honourees at the White House on Sunday.

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