City Times

Kennedy Center gala honours best in arts

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HOLLYWOOD ALISTERS AND Washington politicos celebrated the best in performing arts on Sunday at the Kennedy Center Honors gala, which opened with a standing ovation for late president George H.W. Bush.

The posh annual awards programme — a rare night of red-carpet glamour in the US capital, now in its 41st year — honoured an eclectic class of artists: actress and pop superstar Cher, radical composer Philip Glass, country singer Reba Mcentire and jazz saxophonis­t Wayne Shorter.

In a first, the Kennedy Center — the performing arts complex that serves as a living monument to slain president John F. Kennedy — also paid tribute to a work of art, the musical sensation Hamilton.

Show host Gloria Estefan, a member of last year’s class of honorees, opened the festivitie­s with a sombre tribute to Bush, who died over the weekend at age 94.

“I think it’s appropriat­e to recognise the passing of a wonderful man who dedicated his life to service and who graciously attended this event many times during his administra­tion, laughing, applauding, singing along and even shedding a tear from right up there in the presidenti­al box,” said the pop diva.

The president traditiona­lly sits next to the honorees, but last month, Melania Trump’s spokeswoma­n said the first lady and husband President Donald Trump would once again skip the star-studded show.

Pop queen and fashion icon Cher, a vociferous critic of the Republican president, welcomed Trump’s second consecutiv­e no-show.

Asked what she would have said to the president, the 72-year-old laughed and said simply: “Go away.”

For Kennedy Center president Deborah Rutter, the decision to honor Hamilton

— the story of Alexander Hamilton and America’s other founding fathers, set to show tunes and rap anthems — was a no-brainer.

“It really felt like we shouldn’t wait to acknowledg­e that this work has transforme­d how we think about art,” Rutter said of the Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng box-office smash that opened in New York in 2015.

“We should really note that this is a pivotal moment in the world of our performing arts.”

Lin-manuel Miranda, the composer and lyricist behind the groundbrea­king musical, performed several numbers himself along with members of the show’s original cast.

Speaking on the red carpet prior to the ceremony, the 38-year-old praised the Kennedy Center for the “celebratio­n of our collaborat­ion.”

“It’s an acknowledg­ment that musicals don’t happen alone,” said Miranda.

The awards gala also featured performanc­es from

American Idol winner Kelly Clarkson, jazz prodigy Esperanza Spalding and mercurial pop pioneer Cyndi Lauper.

Comedian Whoopi Goldberg showed up to honour Cher, and Paul Simon delivered a tribute to Glass.

Shorter, who was in Miles Davis’ quintet more than 50 years ago, was honou red for his compositio­ns and leading role in the creation of the jazz fusion genre as co-founder of the band Weather Report.

“My gratitude can be described like this: I’m very happy that many of you have reached across the aisle for something called ‘jazz’,” the 85-year-old said at a pre-gala.

Mcentire beamed as she strode the red carpet in a royal blue dress that made her signature red hair pop.

“I’m thrilled to death,” said Mcentire, who joined fellow country greats Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton as a Kennedy Center honoree.

Cher said she was still in shock over the award. “Meryl told me once, ‘You do things for the art, and if the award comes it’s a bonus’,” she said, referring to actor Meryl Streep.

“I never thought I was the right person to win this award — because I’m a little bit out there.”

Glass, who at 81 is one of the greatest living composers known for his prolific output and wide-ranging approach to classical music, said he was simply “excited to be on stage with these other people.”

“The production of art in this country is astonishin­g,” said Glass, whose Symphony

No. 12 based on David Bowie’s album Lodger will premiere in January at the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic.

“The arts are the face of America,” he continued.

“It’s how Americans know who we are and it’s how people in other parts of the world know who we are.”

Meryl (Streep) told me once, ‘You do things for the art, and if the award comes it’s a bonus’.” Cher

 ??  ?? Kennedy Center honorees Wayne Shorter, Philip Glass, Reba Mcentire, Cher, Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter; back row from left, Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan, Grace Rodriguez, and honorees, Thomas Kail, Lin-manuel Miranda, Andy Blankenbue­hler and Alex Lacamoire
Kennedy Center honorees Wayne Shorter, Philip Glass, Reba Mcentire, Cher, Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter; back row from left, Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan, Grace Rodriguez, and honorees, Thomas Kail, Lin-manuel Miranda, Andy Blankenbue­hler and Alex Lacamoire
 ??  ?? Adam Lambert was there too!
Adam Lambert was there too!
 ??  ?? Amanda Seyfried is all smiles
Amanda Seyfried is all smiles
 ??  ?? Pop pioneer Cyndi Lauper
Pop pioneer Cyndi Lauper

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