Orlando Sentinel

Few celebritie­s at inaugurati­on

President-elect’s directive to planner: Make historic event ‘about the people’

- By Jonathan Lemire

NEW YORK — President-elect Donald Trump will take the traditiona­l ride from the White House to the Capitol with his predecesso­r before his inaugurati­on next week, but he will break from some of the day’s other customs, trading traditiona­l celebrity appearance­s for the “soft sensuality” of the historic event.

Tom Barrack, a longtime Trump friend serving as his top inaugurati­on planner, told reporters Tuesday at Trump Tower that the president-elect instructed him to make the swearingin “about the people, not about him.”

“So what we’ve done, instead of trying to surround him with what people consider A-listers, is we are going to surround him with the soft sensuality of the place,” Barrack said. “It’s a much more poetic cadence than having a circus-like celebratio­n that’s a coronation. It will be beautiful. The cadence of it is going to be, ‘Let me get back to work.’”

Inaugurati­on organizers have been rebuffed by several celebritie­s, among them British singers Charlotte Church, who wrote Tuesday on Twitter that while Trump’s “staff have asked me to sing at your inaugurati­on, a simple internet search would show I think you’re a tyrant. Bye.”

Rebecca Ferguson, a runner-up on “The X Factor” in the U.K., wrote on her website Tuesday that she, too, had declined to take part. She wrote that she would have only performed at the Jan. 20 inaugurati­on if she were allowed to sing Billie Holiday’s “Strange Fruit,” a song that protested racism and the lynching of African Americans.

The entertaine­rs who have agreed to take part in the festivitie­s are Jackie Evancho, of “America’s Got Talent,” the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the Radio City Rockettes. No details have been announced for the official welcome concert on the eve of the inaugurati­on, beyond a promise to feature “a diverse group of performers.”

Barrack, a private equity real estate investor, said Trump has opted to make the inaugurati­on a celebratio­n of everyday Americans and the military. He added that inaugurati­on planners are “fortunate in that we have the greatest celebrity in the world, which is the president-elect.”

Since his election, including on his raucous “thank you” tour to states that helped deliver him the White House, Trump has made little effort to reach out to those who didn’t vote for him. But Barrack said the presidente­lect wanted his inaugurati­on to be a unifying event.

“‘The campaign is over, I am now president for all the people,’” Barrack said Trump told him. “‘I want you to build a bridge and tie them back in. I was to heal the wounds and I want to get back to work on Saturday morning.’”

Barrack also confirmed that Trump and his wife Melania would visit with President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama at the White House on Friday morning before riding together to the ceremony at the Capitol.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tom Barrack, the top inaugurati­on planner for Donald Trump, says the event features the “greatest celebrity in the world” in the president-elect.
EVAN VUCCI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tom Barrack, the top inaugurati­on planner for Donald Trump, says the event features the “greatest celebrity in the world” in the president-elect.

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