Showing posts with label Kennedy Center Honors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kennedy Center Honors. Show all posts

Monday, December 5, 2011

Secretary Clinton's Remarks at 34th Annual Kennedy Center Honors Dinner


Well, I wish there were a video of this, but I do not remember DOS ever providing video from this event.   Her remarks, as always,  are witty and informative.  In many repressive regimes artists and entertainers are among the political prisoners, a good thing to remember the next time we enjoy Fred Armisen doing one of his hilarious routines as Barack Obama on SNL.


Remarks at 34th Annual Kennedy Center Honors Dinner at the Department of State


Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Benjamin Franklin Room
Washington, DC
December 3, 2011


Good evening, and let me welcome you to the Benjamin Franklin Room here on the 8th floor of the State Department. (Applause.) We have so many wonderful, distinguished guests here. But since this is Washington, let me acknowledge Secretary Sebelius of the Health and Human Services Department. (Applause.) Let me thank the members of Congress who support the Kennedy Center year in and year out. Let’s give them a round of applause. (Applause.) And let me acknowledge Mayor Gray from Washington, D.C., who is our host mayor for this event.
This is the 34th time we have celebrated the Kennedy Center Honors, and I am delighted to be here with you again. Some of you mentioned during the receiving line that you always wonder if I will make it. So do I. (Laughter.) Every year I end up flying all night to make it back to this dinner, but I am so grateful I do. (Applause.) And tonight, we have the opportunity to salute the luminous talents of our honorees and their many contributions to the American artistic landscape.
Now, you will hear more about each of our honorees, but I have to tell you it’s pretty exciting for me to be here with Barbara Cook, and Barbara is still knocking audiences off their feet; Sonny Rollins, since I’m married – (applause) – to a sax player; Yo-Yo Ma, who has performed for American presidents for 50 years. (Applause.) That means he started when he was six years old. And I’ve got to tell you, Neil Diamond, who has been in every part of my life. (Applause.) Neil Diamond’s hair alone is remarkable. (Laughter.) And as someone whose hair has occasionally caused a certain comment or two, I think I’m allowed to say that. (Laughter.) And of course Meryl Streep, who has been so consistently brilliant. (Applause.) She’s like a shape changer. You’re never quite sure what you’re going to see. And then when you see it, you go, “Oh, I recognize that.” It is absolutely perfect, and we’re so pleased she could be here.
Now, I will leave the achievements of many of our honorees to our emcee for the evening, the incomparable, absolutely extraordinary Renee Fleming – (applause) – who has been a friend for so many years. And I think we all join with her and her new husband in congratulating them for this wonderful marriage that they have achieved. And we just wish them the very best.
Now, I was told earlier that because I was First Lady for eight years, because I was lucky enough to be married to Bill Clinton, who’s sitting with Sonny Rollins over there, I got to host the Kennedy Center Honors eight years. And this is my third year as Secretary of State welcoming you all here for this fabulous dinner. And I’m always struck by how wonderful it is for us to be able to celebrate the American arts, which have meant so much to all of us, but also means so much around the world.
Now, we know that American music, particularly rock and roll, and American movies really penetrated the Iron Curtain during the Cold War. But it’s also true that as I now travel around the world and meet people who weren’t born during the Cold War, who are now the artists and the activists of their own nations, they still are so influenced by American culture. I think that’s a good thing. I think the freedom, the creativity, the openness – (applause) – that they’re exposed to really gives them a sense of what is possible.
I was just in Burma, and I met with a group of civil society activists, many of whom had just come out of jail with the recent release of 200 prisoners. I met the leading comedian in Burma, who is prohibited from performing by the government still. I met the leading hip hop artist of Burma, who has not been able to perform, because everyone has been threatened who would give him a venue, and this is after these men served five, ten, eleven years in prison. And they are so connected and yearning for what goes on outside of this very closed country. Well, that’s an extreme example, but it’s indicative of what I see everywhere I go.
I remember when I was in India in 1995, and I met with a large group of Indian women who were part of an organization called SEWA, which was almost a union formed to help these very, very poor women organize to be able to demand their rights. And we were meeting in Gujarat province, and we were sitting under a tent, and some of them had walked actually two days to get to meet me. And we talked about their struggle for rights and the problems of survival they faced every single day. And at the end of the meeting, they stood up and sang “We Shall Overcome” in Gujarati. Now, that’s a song made famous because of American spirituals, because of our civil rights movement. It had crossed oceans and decades and languages to unite people. And it was such a beautiful expression of the human spirit.
And I think often about the contributions that all of you who are artists make every day. You may not know it, but somewhere in a little, tiny room in Burma or even in North Korea, someone is desperately trying to hear you or to see you, to experience you. And if they are lucky enough to make that connection, it can literally change lives and countries.
I remember when Vaclav Havel was here for a state dinner that Bill and I hosted, and we asked him, “Who do you want to have come perform at your state dinner?” And he said, “I want Lou (inaudible).” (Laughter.) He said, “Because all those years in prison and all those years behind the Iron Curtain, his music penetrated. And we could identify with the anger and the passion and the extraordinary determination that it embodied.”
So art also becomes more powerful when we experience it together, and I think the Kennedy Center is a real celebration of that. When the artists are chosen, it’s a tribute not only to the individual honorees, but to the American artistic experience. So tonight, when we honor Neil and Barbara and Sonny and Yo-Yo and Meryl, we are not just honoring their individual accomplishments as extraordinary as they are and what they have meant to each of us individually, we are honoring what they stand for and what they mean for the human spirit, for creativity. And what that stands for to me is America. And it makes the world a better place. And it gives to me extra tools that I can use in my diplomacy, because I really believe that the breadth and depth of American creativity is one of the strongest tools that we have.
So for all of those and many other reasons, particularly the individual times that I have enjoyed each of these artists, I am delighted once again to host you. And now I would like to welcome the Kennedy Center’s chairman, David Rubenstein, to the podium, who will, as he has done ever since he became chairman, surprise you that a billionaire can be so funny. (Laughter.) So David, please come join us. (Applause.)

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Slideshow: Hillary Hosts Kennedy Center Honors Dinner


Traditionally, the Secretary of State hosts a gala reception dinner at the State Department  before the awards ceremony.  The honorees this year are Yo-Yo Ma,  Meryl Streep,   Neil Diamond.  Sonny Rollins, and  Barbara Cook.  


Hmmmmmm... just yesterday I made a comment about Hillary and Suu Kyi appearing to be a little star struck with each other.  So I think Meryl  must have been simply awestruck to be honored the same year at the same ceremony as Barbara Cook.   I know she looks like she is keeping her cool, but from a young age Meryl has been a HUGE fan... dating back to Cook's days on Broadway in "The Music Man."  Even after winning many awards. Meryl has often spoken of how much she adores Cook.  This must have been an enormous  thrill for her! 


WJC was having a grand time, and you can see for yourself that Mme. Secretary was looking simply exquisite!  Top of her game!  Wow!  I love everything about this gown on her, the color, the cut, the fit.  When she hosts these dinners, it always blows me away that she is usually more gorgeous and glamorous than the movie stars.   This year was no different.  Smashing, Mme. Secretary!


Sunday, December 5, 2010

Hillary Clinton’s Kennedy Center Gala 2010: Slideshow and Remarks

Last night's post had only the first few photos available. Here is a more complete treatment. In the "class picture," Getty images identifies the principals as follows:
Top row, from left to right: Michael M. Kaiser, President, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts; Merle Haggard; Bill T. Jones; Sir Paul McCartney; and David M. Rubenstein, Chairman, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Bottom row, from left to right: United States Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton; Jerry Herman; Oprah Winfrey; and George Stevens, Jr. , creator of 'The Kennedy Center Honors'.

Here are Mme. Secretary's remarks.

Kennedy Center Honors Dinner


Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
December 4, 2010



SECRETARY CLINTON: It is such a delight to welcome you back here for this wonderful national tradition. It is, by any standard we can imagine, the best weekend in Washington. (Applause.) And it is the tenth time since I have been involved with helping to host some of the Kennedy Center Honors. For eight years, Bill and I were privileged to host at the White House, and now as Secretary of State I get the great honor of hosting you here.

And it was really extraordinary standing in the receiving line and seeing the genres and generations going by. (Laughter.) The full breadth and depth of American artistry and the diversity of this extraordinary, dynamic nation of ours. I am writing a cable about it, which I’m sure you’ll find soon on your closest website. (Laughter and applause.)

And this year, once again, we have an exceptional group of honorees. But in addition to the honorees, there are so many distinguished American leaders, icons, exemplars, and models here in this dinner. I cannot possibly name and recognize all of you. But it is, for us, a wonderful way to celebrate the arts by having those of us in government and politics and business come together and say to the American artistic community how much we value you and how greatly you enrich our country and how you are – (applause) – really our best exports.

As I travel around the world, I see firsthand the impact of American culture. And in the vast majority of my experiences, it’s exciting, it is inspiring, it’s dynamic; it gives particularly young people in places so far away a sense of freedom in their imagination and their aspirations. And for that, we are deeply grateful.

Now, in just a few minutes, the divine Jessye Norman, whom I was privileged to see receive her Kennedy Center laurel in 1997, will tell you more about the life and work of these five artists. So I will leave that her and our honorees, but I do want to just underscore why this is, for me, an event that stands out during the entire year and one that was worth flying very far to get back for – (laughter and applause) – because the great honor that I have being Secretary of State and going from country to country, meeting with leaders who share our values or, in many cases, reject them, but who all know that America stands for the liberation of the human spirit, who understand that the human drive to create adds texture and truth to our lives, and that it is universal and – yes – irresistible. And it may take decades in order for that to finally be accepted and realized, but we know it will happen. And we see it in our own lives and we see it in the work of so many of you who have brought great joy and challenge to us because of your willingness to go out there, to be vulnerable, to expose yourself, to take a chance, and then to see what happens.

And that is certainly true of the artists that we are celebrating tonight. This evening is not about honoring American artists, so much as it is about honoring artists who have to shape America. And it is an important distinction, not only because one of our honorees is a Knight of the Realm – (laughter) – but because America has always been influenced by the experiences and contributions of other cultures. Now, we certainly have our own signature way of doing things, but we thrive on the influx of ideas from all over the world. And as our nation of immigrants – proudly a nation of immigrants – becomes more diverse and our world more connected, our arts become even richer.

And our artists then, in effect, absorb and play back what is happening in the larger society. They reinterpret and remake all of those influences and create something new – an unmistakably American export that inspires and challenges people beyond our borders. So the circles of inspiration and creation continues, and overcomes the barriers that divide us. As I travel, I don’t just meet with heads of state or foreign ministers, but I try always to meet with citizens, and particularly young people. So I do town halls or other kinds of settings where I say a few words and then let people ask me questions. And there is just such a palpable influence of the American ideal which so often is transmitted because of the work of our artists. And I thank you for that because it does give a common ground, a common vocabulary that is often lacking that can help bring people together and bridge our differences.

The people that we honor tonight are really exemplars of what that means. Bill T. Jones recently won a Tony Award for his stunning choreography of Fela!. And he took the life and work of a Nigerian activist and pioneering Afrobeat composer and showed how it was originally influenced by American jazz and funk, and then went far beyond.

Jerry Herman is an icon of American musical theater – one of our great contributions to world arts. And we know him best for the distinctly American stories he tells through music and lyrics, but it was something that ranges from the story of Israel to Hello, Dolly! and covers a lot of ground in between.

Now, Paul McCartney has practically redefined music over the course of his lifetime, inspiring thousands of others. And I have to confess, Paul, several waves of teen girl hysteria – (laughter). I can still remember – and this really dates me – so there are a lot of young people here, but we used to have three television channels and we had black and white TVs, and every Sunday night, everybody in America watched the Ed Sullivan Show. (Laughter.) And that’s where we first saw the Beatles.

But it is exciting to have you here with us, and to have lived a life that has truly connected people from all over the world. Because our struggles for equality, our optimism about the future, our sense of adventure, is at the core of the American spirit. And no one captures that spirit better than Merle Haggard. He has chronicled the American experience for nearly half a century of ups and downs with great honesty, and poetry, and wry humor, and most importantly, hope. And he does tell us in a time of difficulty in his songs that adversity can be overcome, and everyone does get a second chance. Redemption is always at hand, whether you’re an individual or a nation.

And to say that Oprah influences American culture is like saying Jerry Herman writes a catchy tune – (laughter), or that Bill T. Jones is kind of flexible – (laughter). But her greatest strength is rooted in that heart that she has shared with America for so many years, and her just overwhelming desire to make a difference in the lives of people she will never meet but who feel like they know her. One Saudi woman told the American newspaper, The New York Times, a few years ago that, and I quote, “I feel that Oprah truly understands me…sometimes I think that she is the only person in the world who knows how I feel.” (Laughter and applause.)

So when we say that art is a common language that we share with one another and with people around the world, we’re not just paying lip service to something that sounds good in a speech. But we live it. We know that art changes the way that we think about ourselves, think about our surroundings, think about our country and our world. It opens our minds to new possibilities.

And tonight we are privileged to honor five remarkable people who move us, inspire us, and remind us of what the human spirit is capable of.

And now I’m turning it over to the chair of the Kennedy Center, David Rubenstein, who I heard gave a great speech at lunch. (Applause.) So, David, please.




Photos: Hillary Clinton's Kennedy Center Gala

There are not many photos available right now, but these are from this evening's Gala at the State Department. For the second year, Mme. Secretary hosted this extravaganza looking sumptuous. I am pretty sure the Squire of State escorted her although I have not a scintilla of evidence to that effect. I am simply figuring that I would not let her out on her own looking that beautiful. I am sure the Squire came along to keep her company.

One of the photo captions reads thus:
AP Photo

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, left, talks with Kennedy Center honorees for 2010 Jerry Herman, Merle Haggard, Bill T. Jones, and Paul McCartney while waiting for Oprah Whitney to arrive for a group photo after at a dinner held at the State Department honoring the recipients of the Kennedy Center Honors, in Washington, on Saturday, Dec. 4, 2010.



Oprah WHO? I have not found any photos with Oprah. Maybe Oprah intended it that way. Who knows? Who CARES? I do not miss her in these pics. Mme. Secretary looks absolutely smashing! Sir Paul seems to agree.




They refer to Oprah by the wrong last name! WHO is the most recognizable woman?

Monday, December 7, 2009

Secretary Clinton's Remarks at the Kennedy Center Honors Dinner



Remarks at the Kennedy Center Honors Dinner


Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Benjamin Franklin Room
Washington, DC
December 6, 2009

Well, good evening. (Applause.) We are delighted to host this annual Kennedy Center Honors dinner here in the Benjamin Franklin Room of the State Department, a room that has seen many distinguished visitors – kings, presidents, just last month, the Ecumenical Patriarch of the Orthodox Church. But this may be the most remarkable group yet: a goodfella, a soprano, and the Boss himself. It sounds like an HBO show, and we’re all in it. (Laughter.) It is exciting to have a chance to take just some time here at the beginning of the holiday season to not only honor our honorees, but to spend just a few minutes thinking about the great country that was each of their wellsprings.

Now, the incomparable Carol Burnett will talk more about the life and work of our honorees, but there are just a few points that I think bear making. One is that this is the first Kennedy Center Honors dinner without Senator Ted Kennedy. And I want to recognize the members of the Kennedy family who are here – Vicki Kennedy and Jean Smith and Caroline Kennedy, and so many wonderful memories. We really miss Ted, but we are so pleased that the Kennedy Center and this program continue on, because – (applause) – Senator Kennedy, like President Kennedy, understood that art has the power to lift our spirits, to draw us together, to speak to the deepest human yearnings for freedom and self-expression, and that indeed, art is a potent force for progress in the world. And we have seen that time and time again.

In fact, during the Cold War, the State Department asked Dave Brubeck to be an ambassador for American culture in countries teetering between democracy and communism. Jazz was so subversive. And with its improvisational energy, it represented the vitality of the American experiment. And it’s often remarked to me, as I now hold this position, how important American culture was to the last great burst of freedom with the fall of the Berlin Wall and all the Velvet Revolutions. For the next generation, it was rock ‘n’ roll that surged through the world, giving voice to young people frustrated by their lack of opportunity and by stagnating political and social systems.

When I was in Berlin last month to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, I talked with so many people who were veterans of that extraordinary, iconic, historic moment. And they remembered that in 1988, when Bruce Springsteen played before a raucous crowd of 160,000 East Berliners, the idea of freedom still seemed beyond reach. “I came to play rock ‘n’ roll for you,” he told them, “in the hope that one day all the barriers will be torn down.” And 16 months later, many of those same young people broke through concrete and concertina wire and claimed their liberty.

Now, it was not the first time that art helped to break down barriers, and it will certainly not be the last. Seventy years ago, the great Marian Anderson was turned away from the stage at Constitution Hall because of the color of her skin. Instead, in one defining moment of the Civil Rights Movement, she stood on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, just a stone’s throw from this building. Her voice, carrying across the Mall, could not be denied. And Anderson would later mentor a young singer named Grace Bumbry. She was also in the first group of artists honored by the Kennedy Center.

So in every time and every culture, artists have lit the way toward progress. They’ve helped to provide a common language, a fabric that weaves us together as human beings. And I remember walking the dust-shrouded streets of Lower Manhattan in the days after 9/11, when a city that prided itself on being the pulsating cultural heart of the entire world, was suddenly silent. We rightly honor the brave first responders who rushed to help their fellow men and women on that terrible day, and celebrate the quiet heroism of New Yorkers who set about rebuilding their lives and their families.

But not enough has been said about the important efforts of New York’s artists to bring life back to their ailing city. One enduring legacy of that movement is Robert DeNiro’s Tribeca Film Festival. Only months after the attacks, more than 150,000 people came back to Lower Manhattan to watch movies in hushed theaters and screening rooms, debating their merits over bottles of red wine in sidewalk cafes and streets and parks that had so recently stood empty. New York was alive again. It was creating again. And indeed, in the years that followed, the festival has remained a fixture of the city’s rebuilt cultural life.

Now, this kind of cultural diplomacy has a significant impact on our relations in the world. And of course, one can’t help but think of the ways that Mel Brooks has made us laugh – (laughter) – made us laugh at things that weren’t funny at all – (laughter) – but by doing so, caused us to feel that even in tragedy and horror – Springtime for Hitler, really – (laughter) – there was still that essential element of our common humanity.

So we celebrate some wonderful artists tonight, but we also celebrate this wonderful country. America’s artists have made our country a beacon of opportunity and inspiration in the world today. I don’t think we’re doing quite enough to break through the barriers that exist now. The same yearnings for human freedom and hope fill the hearts and minds of young men and women the world over, but we need a renewed commitment to reaching out to them with our values and our vitality and our belief in the future.

It may be that America doesn’t pay enough attention to our past. But if you travel as I do, that can be a blessing. You go to countries that can’t get over what happened a thousand years ago. You know you’re in trouble when you say, “Well, how are things going,” and they say, “Well, if it hadn’t been for the crusades, everything would be fine.” (Laughter.) And so – (applause) – we need our artists and we need our arts, and the Kennedy Center has been a beacon for both.

And it is now my pleasure to introduce the Chairman of the Kennedy Center, Steve Schwarzman. (Applause.)

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Secretary Clinton Hosts Gala Dinner for the 2009 Kennedy Center Honorees

The Secretary of State hosted a Gala Dinner last night at the State Department for this year's Kennedy Center Honorees. (She wore my favorite dress in the whole world! Thank you, Madame Secretary!) This year's honorees are: opera singer Grace Bumbry, jazz pianist Dave Brubeck, actor Robert de Niro, rock star Bruce Springsteen, and comedian, director, composer and producer Mel Brooks (yes, folks, Mel actually IS a producer!) No word on whether Bill Clinton also attended, but I hope he was able to spend a little time with Brubeck (and with you-know-who, who is looking hot in that blue dress).

UPDATE: I knew Bill would not miss this! Here's a nice article from Associated Press writer, Brett Zongker containing an account of Bill's contribution to last night's festivities.