After an Inauguration, the Stars Come out to Play
Ever since George Washington danced after his inauguration, the ceremony has brought big names in the arts to the capital city
- By Katy June-Friesen
- Smithsonian.com, January 13, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
More recently, the National Symphony Orchestra performed, and radio and TV personalities hosted concerts. Actor Walter Pidgeon hosted Eisenhower’s 1953 inaugural concert, which featured tenor James Melton and soprano Jeanette MacDonald, known for her musical films. Fred Waring’s Pennsylvanians sang a special composition, “Mamie, We All Love You.” Aaron Copland was supposed to be on the program but was removed because of FBI investigations into his alleged communist associations. Copland later led the NSO in a performance for Jimmy Carter’s inauguration, along with Robert Shaw’s Atlanta Symphony and Chorus. Washington Post critic Paul Hume called it “the greatest inaugural concert in history.”
Recent concerts have tapped pop-star talent to mark the occasion, and the Lincoln Memorial has been the venue. Clinton’s 1993 “American Reunion” concert drew hundreds of thousands to the National Mall to hear Franklin, Bob Dylan, Diana Ross, Tony Bennett and LL Cool J, among others. Performers at George W. Bush’s first inauguration included Brooks & Dunn and Ricky Martin. Bush twins Jenna and Barbara hosted a youth concert in 2005 at the D.C. Armory with headliner Hilary Duff.
This year, Franklin, the Queen of Soul, will give a free concert at the Kennedy Center, Sweet Honey in the Rock will give a children’s concert and Washington music venues have booked special lineups. The big names will be as varied as the musical genres: rap star Jay-Z will perform at a theater in downtown D.C. and electronica maven Moby will deejay a midnight dance party at a night club. Other high-ticket inaugural balls will feature performers including Rihanna and Elvis Costello.
Presidents, concert organizers and musicians have had differing opinions about whether popular or classical music is appropriate for inaugural concerts. In 1961 the director of the NSO, Howard Mitchell, expressed relief that Kennedy’s concert would include only “serious classical music,” such as Tchaikovsky and Vivaldi. “I remember playing for Mr. [Franklin] Roosevelt,” Mitchell told the Washington Post. “We’d play a number and then Mickey Rooney would come out and amuse them.”
Reciting poetry at inaugurations is a relatively new addition. Robert Frost delivered the first poem in 1961 for Kennedy, though it wasn’t the poem he penned for the occasion. On Inauguration Day, the glare from the freshly fallen snow blinded him, says Jim Bendat, author of Democracy’s Big Day: The Inauguration of Our President. “I’m not having a good light,” the 86-year-old Frost said. Vice President Johnson tried to shield the poet’s eyes with his top hat, but Frost recited the poem “A Gift Outright” instead, telling the crowd he was dedicating it to John Finley, a Harvard scholar colleague of Frost’s, not John Kennedy.
Three decades later, Bill Clinton carried on the tradition, inviting poets Maya Angelou in 1993 and Miller Williams, a longtime friend from Arkansas, in 1997. Both Angelou’s “On the Pulse of Morning” and Williams’ “Of History and Hope” evoked words and images from the civil rights movement.
This year, Beyoncé will sing the National Anthem at the U.S. Capitol during Obama’s swearing-in on January 21. In 2009, she performed at the inauguration concert and sang Etta James’ “At Last” during an inaugural ball. The lineup also includes Kelly Clarkson singing “My Country ’Tis of Thee” and James Taylor singing “America the Beautiful.”
However large the crowd for these performances, the audiences this year will likely outnumber what McKinley’s writer predicted.
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Comments (1)
Where can I go to to find out what the weather was like at each Presidential Inaguration? Appreciate your help. Thank You, Cruz
Posted by Cruz Menchaca on January 21,2009 | 01:03 PM