What's going on with the Kennedy Center under Trump?
Send a link to a friend
[February 20, 2025]
By HILLEL ITALIE
Until a few weeks ago, the biggest news to come out of the Kennedy
Center in Washington, D.C., was its annual celebration of notable
American artists.
That has changed since the return of Donald Trump.
In the first month of his second term, the president has ousted the arts
institution’s leadership, filled the board of trustees with his
supporters and announced he had been elected the board's chair —
unanimously. In a statement this week to The Wall Street Journal, White
House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said: "The Kennedy Center learned
the hard way that if you go woke, you will go broke. President Trump and
the members of his newly-appointed board are devoted to rebuilding the
Kennedy Center into a thriving and highly respected institution where
all Americans, and visitors from around the world, can enjoy the arts
with respect to America’s great history and traditions.”
What is the Kennedy Center and how long has it been around?
Supported by government money and private donations and attracting
millions of visitors each year, the center is a 100-foot high complex
featuring a concert hall, opera house and theater, along with a lecture
hall, meeting spaces and a “Millennium Stage” that has been the site for
free shows.
The center's very origins are bipartisan.

It was first conceived in the late 1950s, during the administration of
Republican President Dwight Eisenhower, who backed a bill from the
Democratic-led Congress calling for a “National Culture Center.” In the
early 1960s, Democrat President John F. Kennedy launched a fundraising
initiative, and his successor, President Lyndon B. Johnson, signed into
law a 1964 bill renaming the project the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center
for the Performing Arts. Kennedy had been assassinated the year before.
Construction began in 1965 and the center formally opened six years
later, with a premiere of Leonard Bernstein’s “Mass,” otherwise known as
“MASS: A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players, and Dancers).”
Who has performed at the Kennedy Center?
The center has long been a showcase for theater, music and dramatic
performances, with artists ranging from the Paul Taylor Dance Company to
a joint concert by Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga. Other highlights have
included the annual Mark Twain Award for comedy, with recipients
including Lorne Michaels, Tina Fey and Bob Newhart, and the annual
Kennedy Center ceremony honoring outstanding artists, most recently
Francis Ford Coppola, Bonnie Raitt and the Grateful Dead, among others.
Presidents have routinely attended the honors ceremony, even in the
presence of artists who disagreed with them politically. The
good-natured spirit was well captured in 2002, during Republican
President George W. Bush's first term, when Steve Martin offered tribute
to honoree Paul Simon. Martin digressed into a tangent about pirated
music recordings and joked that he had been approached by Bush about
getting bootlegs of Barbra Streisand, a prominent Democrat.
“It's been nice being a citizen,” Martin added, as Bush and others
laughed in response.
Why is Trump focusing on the Kennedy Center now?
Trump mostly ignored the center during his first term, becoming the
first president to routinely skip the honors ceremony. One honoree,
producer Norman Lear, had threatened not to attend if Trump was there.
[to top of second column]
|

The Kennedy Center is seen Aug. 13, 2019, in Washington. (AP
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)
 Mirroring his overall governing
approach, Trump has been far more aggressive and proactive in his
second term, citing some drag show performances at the center as a
reason to transform it entirely.
“At my direction, we are going to make the Kennedy Center in
Washington D.C., GREAT AGAIN,” he wrote on his social media website
earlier this month. “I have decided to immediately terminate
multiple individuals from the Board of Trustees, including the
Chairman, who do not share our Vision for a Golden Age in Arts and
Culture.”
Meanwhile, the Kennedy Center website still includes a passage about
the core mission, one that strives “to ensure that the education and
outreach programs and policies of the John F. Kennedy Center for the
Performing Arts meet the highest level of excellence and reflect the
cultural diversity of the United States.”
Also listed on the site is a new project called “Promise of US,” for
which “the public is invited to submit an artistic self-portrait to
be part of a virtual wall of faces expressing the myriad diversity
of America’s peoples and the promise of America’s future. This
ever-expanding mosaic will be featured on the Center’s website and
social channels."
Who is in charge now?
Trump pushed out the incumbent board chair David M. Rubenstein, a
philanthropist and Baltimore Orioles owner. He now presides over a
board that by tradition was divided between Democratic and
Republican appointees, but is now predominantly Republican, with
recent additions including country star Lee Greenwood and White
House chief of staff Susie Wiles.
Kennedy Center President Deborah F. Rutter, brought on by Rubenstein
in 2014, was fired soon after the board shakeup. Trump replaced her,
on an interim basis, with diplomat Richard Grenell, who served as
the U.S. ambassador to Germany during the president's first term.
“I’m really, really, really sad about what happens to our artists,
what happens on our stages and our staff who support them,” Rutter
said during a recent interview with NPR. “The Kennedy Center is
meant to be a beacon for the arts in all of America across the
country.”

What has been the fallout?
The fallout is unprecedented. Kennedy Center consultants such as
musician Ben Folds and singer Renée Fleming have resigned and actor
Issa Rae and author Louise Penny have canceled appearances. During a
concert last weekend that proceeded as scheduled, singer-songwriter
Victoria Clark wore a T-shirt reading “ANTI TRUMP AF.”
Further controversy is possible. Next month's schedule includes
“RIOT! Funny Women Stand Up, a special comedy event in celebration
of Women’s History Month.” Conan O'Brien is to receive the Twain
award in an all-star event that will likely include jokes about the
president. (Representatives for O'Brien have not responded to
requests for comment.) The center also is scheduled to host “Eureka
Day,” a stage play centered on an outbreak of mumps, a sensitive
topic with the confirmation of vaccine critic Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |