Joni Mitchell and Bette Midler among Kennedy Centre honorees
WASHINGTON: Folk legend Joni Mitchell and beloved actor Bette Midler are among this year’s class of Kennedy Centre honourees, one of America’s most prestigious arts awards.
Along with Motown icon Berry Gordy, opera singer Justino Diaz and Lorne Michaels, creator of the acclaimed comedy sketch show Saturday Night Live, they will be celebrated at the centre’s annual gala.
The night of red-carpet glitz in Washington in December will end up being the centre’s second set of honours this year.
Having been forced by the pandemic to cancel the gala last winter, the centre held a more subdued series of smaller socially-distanced events and tributes in spring for the 43rd class of honourees.
“After the challenges and heartbreak of the last many months, and as we celebrate 50 years of the Kennedy Centre, I dare add that we are prepared to throw ‘the party to end all parties’ in DC on Dec 5th, feting these extraordinary people and welcoming audiences back to our campus,” the centre’s president Deborah Rutter said in a statement.
The honours are normally a major fundraiser for the Kennedy Centre, Washington’s performing arts complex that serves as a living monument to president John F Kennedy.
The centre had said it expected to lose an estimated US$45.7 million in potential revenue during the 2020-2021 season, after the pandemic forced the cancellation of much of its programming.
December’s bash will likely be the first attended by a sitting US president since Barack Obama’s tenure, should Joe and Jill Biden renew what was once a traditional outing before the presidency of Donald Trump.
Trump is unpopular in the culture and entertainment communities and several of the honoured artists threatened to boycott if he attended during his first year in office.