Return to tradition: Biden celebrates Bette Midler, Joni Mitchell at
Kennedy Center Honors
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[December 06, 2021]
By Jeff Mason and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden
celebrated artists including Bette Midler, Joni Mitchell and Lorne
Michaels on Sunday at the Kennedy Center Honors, bringing back
presidential participation to an annual event skipped by Republican
Donald Trump.
Singer Justino Díaz and Motown founder Berry Gordy rounded out the group
of artists selected by the Kennedy Center for top honors this year at a
show that had been upended by politics and the restrictions of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
"To all of the Kennedy Center honorees past and present, thank you for
sharing your gift with the nation and ... with the world," Biden said at
a black-tie reception at the White House.
Trump did not hold such a reception during his four years in office and
did not attend the show at the Kennedy Center.
The arts community largely did not object to that absence. Singer and
actress Cher, an honoree in 2018 and an outspoken Trump critic, said she
would have had to accept the award in a bathroom if Trump had come.
Biden, his wife, Jill, Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband,
Doug Emhoff, all attended the ceremony, as did House of Representatives
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.
"It is quite nice, very nice, to see the presidential box once again
being occupied," comedian David Letterman said at the beginning of the
show. The crowd rose in a standing ovation.
The awards recognize a lifetime of achievement in the performing arts.
The show did not take place in 2020 because of the pandemic. Instead,
last year's honorees were celebrated in a scaled-down event earlier this
year.
Audience members on Sunday had to provide proof of vaccination against
COVID-19.
Midler, a singer and actress, has received Grammy, Emmy, Tony and Golden
Globe awards for a career spanning decades, with over 30 million albums
sold around the world. Actresses Goldie Hawn, Scarlett Johansson and
Barbara Hershey paid tribute to her at the event. "Nothing stops Bette,"
Hawn said.
Midler dished to reporters about the reception on her way into the
Kennedy Center. "It was divine at the White House," she said. "Very
clean. Lovely. Great staff. Food was excellent. Wine was a little
sweet."
'I THINK I'M IN A DREAM'
Singer-songwriter Mitchell, a Canadian known for songs such as "Both
Sides, Now" and "Big Yellow Taxi," is a multi-Grammy recipient and an
inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. The show opened with
performances of her songs "The Circle Game" and "A Case of You" by Norah
Jones and a soaring rendition of "River" by Brandi Carlile.
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Kennedy Center Honorees, operatic bass-baritone Justino Diaz,
Saturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels, singer-songwriter Joni
Mitchell, actress and singer-songwriter Bette Midler, and Motown
founder, songwriter, producer, and director Berry Gordy, pose for
the 44th Kennedy Center Honors class photo following the Medallion
Ceremony at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., U.S.
December 4, 2021. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno
Michaels, also a native of Canada, is the creator and executive
producer of the long-running NBC sketch comedy show "Saturday Night
Live."
Biden noted SNL had used seven comics to play him over the years.
"If you can't laugh at yourself, we're in real trouble, and you make
me laugh at myself a lot," Biden said during his remarks at the
White House, referring to Michaels. Current and former SNL cast
members lauded and roasted the producer during the show and singer
Paul Simon sang "America."
Diaz, a bass-baritone opera singer from Puerto Rico, was celebrated
with performances from "Carmen" and "Faust."
"It's like coming home again," Diaz told reporters as he entered the
Kennedy Center. "Except a different part of the house: I'll be in a
very easy chair and I don't have to sing."
Gordy, a songwriter and record producer from Detroit, founded the
Motown record label that became synonymous with a jazz- and
blues-influenced musical sound popularized by Black artists
including Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and Lionel Richie,
whose careers he helped shape.
Wonder sang and played from the Kennedy Center stage, including "You
are the Sunshine of My Life" and "Superstition." Smokey Robinson
also sang and paid tribute to his friend.
"I think I'm in a dream ... and it's a wonderful dream," Gordy told
reporters.
The Kennedy Center Honors will be broadcast on CBS television
network on Dec. 22.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Peter
Cooney and Karishma Singh)
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