WASHINGTON — Five months after they were postponed because of the coronavirus, the annual Kennedy Center Honors are coming back in May, possibly in a series of small events, organizers announced Wednesday.
This year’s recipients of the lifetime artistic achievement awards are country music legend Garth Brooks, dancer and actress Debbie Allen, violin virtuoso Midori, folk music icon Joan Baez and actor Dick Van Dyke.
The centerpiece event for Washington’s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts normally happens in December, but it was postponed last year amid the pandemic. Now the
Planners envision “multiple events for physically distant audiences” across the
The awards program typically
“We’re clearly not going to have 2,000 people in an enclosed space for three hours,” she said. “But I think we’ve come up with some really great ideas.”
The official announcement leaves plenty of room for improvising and last-minute adjustments. It simply states that “the viability of additional in-person events will be considered as COVID-19 safety protocols evolve over the upcoming months.”
For this year’s honorees, it’s a chance to be part of a historically unique ceremony, and some hoped it would prove therapeutic to participants and viewers. The event will be televised on CBS on June 6.
“I think it will feel like a return to something — not total normality, but something,” Allen told The Associated Press. “It’s normally such a festive event, and I’m sure that will come across.”
Brooks is no stranger to the Kennedy Center
“Just getting the call was such a thrill,” Brooks said in an interview with AP. “Whatever it is, it’s going to be cool.”
Midori said she’s “truly curious” to see what programmers come up with and hopes the event “represents a step toward normality.”
Van Dyke joked that the Kennedy Center “just made it” by granting him the
“I’d certainly love to go in person,” he told the AP. “I ain’t leaving without that medal.”
Baez said she hopes circumstances allow for “a gathering of actual people” and that this will be the first ceremony in four years that includes participation from the president.
The election of Donald Trump threw the event into turmoil, with multiple honorees threatening to boycott in 2017 if Trump were involved. Trump and first lady Melania Trump generally stayed away from Kennedy Center events, but Rutter hopes to get President-elect Joe Biden involved this year.
Baez said this year’s ceremony could represent the closing of two dark historical chapters. “Not just the virus, we’ll be coming out of the political dark ages,” she said.
Ashraf Khalil, The Associated Press