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The awards were presented Saturday night at a State Department dinner. Rice addressed each honoree, beginning with Freeman, who once played the president in the movie "Deep Impact." "I know that when you played the African-American president of the United States, most people thought that would happen when a comet hit," Rice said, drawing laughs and cheers. "But wonder of wonders, fiction has become true." Freeman, 71, who starred this year in "The Dark Knight," also made headlines after suffering broken bones in a Mississippi car crash in August. The Oscar-winning actor said he was still recovering from nerve damage in his left hand and wore a glove to control the swelling. Denzel Washington and Clint Eastwood testified to their success working with Freeman. "You're a great good luck charm," said Eastwood, a 2000 honoree. "Everything you touch is fine by me." For Tharp's presentation, actress Lily Tomlin said Tharp sees dance everywhere she looks: "This is a woman who saw the Beach Boys and made a ballet." Kennedy Center President Michael Kaiser, who worked with Tharp at the American Ballet Theater, said Tharp taught him "the difference between making a ballet and making art." ___ On the Net: John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts:
http://www.kennedy-center.org/
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