The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Bush gets tributes at Kennedy Center Honors program

- Photos and text from wire services

WASHINGTON >> Last year’s Kennedy Center Honors ceremony was almost overshadow­ed by controvers­y surroundin­g the sitting president. This year’s event took place in the shadow of the death of a former commanderi­n-chief.

Sunday night’s ceremony honoring lifetime artistic achievemen­t featured multiple tributes to former President George H.W. Bush, who died Friday night at age 94.

The night kicked off with an extended standing ovation in Bush’s memory at the request of hostess Gloria Estefan.

“I think it’s appropriat­e to recognize 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 Estefan, who recalled being invited to the White House and how Bush “literally spent 45 minutes patiently talking to my eight-yearold son” about how the government worked.

Within days of that White House visit, Estefan’s tour bus was in a serious accident that left her nearly paralyzed and President Bush called her in the hospital, she said.

For the second straight year, President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump declined an invitation to the awards. They returned to Washington before dawn Sunday from the Group of 20 summit in Argentina.

The Trumps skipped last year’s ceremony after several of the honorees — most notably leftist television producer Norman Lear — threatened to boycott if he attended. This year, nobody issued that kind of overt threat, but the Trumps still announced three weeks ago that they wouldn’t attend.

David Rubenstein, the chairman of the board for the Kennedy Center, said after intermissi­on that he often thinks about the values Bush brought to public service.

“I never met a more decent man, a more philanthro­pic person, a more genuine person,” Rubenstein said.

Bush attended the Kennedy Center Honors for most years during his presidency — and even afterward, during his son’s presidency — but like other leaders, he was pulled away by major issues that demanded his time. Bush didn’t attend in 1989 because he was at a summit in Malta. Jimmy Carter missed the 1979 awards because of the Iran hostage crisis. Bill Clinton was on his way to a conference during the 1994 Kennedy Center awards.

Trump, however, is the first president to miss them twice.

Had he gone to the Kennedy Center, he might have faced opposition from at least some of the honorees, including Cher and Lin-Manuel Miranda.

Trump and his administra­tion have put unpreceden­ted distance between themselves and the arts and science communitie­s. No arts or humanities medals have been announced or handed out since September 2016, when Barack Obama was president — the longest gap by months since the awards were establishe­d in the mid-1980s.

 ?? KEVIN WOLF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? 2018 Kennedy Center Honorees, front row form left, Wayne Shorter, Cher, Reba McEntire, Philip Glass, back row from left, the co-creators of “Hamilton,” Thomas Kail, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Andy Blankenbue­hler, Alex Lacamoire pose for the group photo at the State Department for the Kennedy Center Honors State Department Dinner on Saturday in Washington.
KEVIN WOLF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 2018 Kennedy Center Honorees, front row form left, Wayne Shorter, Cher, Reba McEntire, Philip Glass, back row from left, the co-creators of “Hamilton,” Thomas Kail, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Andy Blankenbue­hler, Alex Lacamoire pose for the group photo at the State Department for the Kennedy Center Honors State Department Dinner on Saturday in Washington.

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