(THIS IS USUALLY THE CLASSIEST SHOW PRESENTED ON TV AROUND
CHRISTMAS--THE JERRY HERMAN SALUTE IS PRESENTED BY THE BEST OF BROADWAY!)
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE KENNEDY CENTER HONORS RECEPTION
East Room
5:14 P.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you,
everybody. Everybody, thank you so much, please have a seat, have a
seat.
Well, what a good looking crowd. (Laughter.) Say -- we do what we can,
huh? (Laughter.) Happy holidays, everybody. And on behalf of Michelle
and myself, I want to welcome all of you to the White House.
And I want to start by giving special thanks to Speaker Pelosi and all
the other members of Congress who are here. Nobody has done more for our
country over the last couple of years than Nancy Pelosi. (Applause.)
None of this would be possible without some people who have put great
effort into this evening -- David Rubenstein, Michael Kaiser, the
Kennedy Center trustees, and all the people who have made the Kennedy
Center such a wonderful place for Americans of all ages to enjoy the
arts.
And on that note, I also want to give special thanks to Caroline
Kennedy. Where’s -- is Caroline here tonight? Hey, Caroline. (Applause.)
And all the other members of the Kennedy family who are here tonight --
it’s wonderful to see them.
And finally, I want to recognize the co-chairs of the President’s
Committee on the Arts and Humanities –- my good friend, George Stevens.
(Applause.) George and his son Michael are the brains behind the Kennedy
Center Honors, and I want to thank them all for their great creativity.
This is a season of celebration and of giving. And that’s why it’s my
great privilege as President to honor the five men and women who have
given our nation the extraordinary gift of the arts.
The arts have always had the power to challenge and the power to inspire
–- to help us celebrate in times of joy and find hope in times of
trouble. And although the honorees on this stage each possess a
staggering amount of talent, the truth is, they aren’t being recognized
tonight simply because of their careers as great lyricists or
songwriters or dancers or entertainers. Instead, they’re being honored
for their unique ability to bring us closer together and to capture
something larger about who we are –- not just as Americans, but as human
beings.
That’s what Merle Haggard has been doing for more than 40 years. Often
called the “poet of the common man,” Merle likes to say that he’s living
proof that things can go wrong in America, but also that things can go
right. (Laughter.)
In a day and age when so many country singers claim to be rambling,
gambling outlaws, Merle actually is one. (Laughter and applause.) He
hopped his first freight train at the age of 10, and was locked up some
17 times as a boy -– pulling off almost as many escapes.
Later, after becoming a bona fide country star, Merle met Johnny Cash,
and mentioned that he had seen Cash perform years earlier at San Quentin
prison. “That’s funny,” Cash said, “because I don’t remember you being
in the show.” (Laughter.) And Merle had to explain the Man in Black that
he hadn’t been in the show, he had been in the audience. (Laughter.)
That performance had inspired Merle to start writing songs, and he’s
written thousands of them since -– about three or four hundred “keepers”
in Merle’s opinion. Thirty eight of those songs have been number one on
the charts, including “Okie from Muskogee,” which he performed for
Richard Nixon right here in this room back in 1973.
Through it all, Merle’s power has always come from the truth he tells -–
about life and love and everything in between. As he says, “the best
songs feel like they’ve always been there.” So tonight we honor a man
who feels like he’s always been here -– Merle Haggard. (Applause.)
Now, growing up in New Jersey, Jerry Herman and his family used to play
Broadway tunes in the living room -– Jerry on the piano, his mother on
the accordion and his father playing the sax. He never took a music
lesson, but he always had the ability to play anything he heard by ear.
Then, when he was 14, Jerry went to see the great Ethel Merman perform
in “Annie Get Your Gun.” In his words, “I got a load of that great lady
and was gone.” (Laughter.) Jerry was determined to be a songwriter, even
though he didn’t think he could ever make a career out of doing
something that was so much fun.
But that’s exactly what he’s done -– penning songs for such iconic
musicals as “Hello, Dolly!” and “La Cage aux Folles” and drawing
audiences everywhere out of their seats and into the world of his
imagination. Those songs earned Jerry a shelf full of Tonys –- and he’s
still the only composer and lyricist to have had three shows on Broadway
at the same time. (Applause.)
Today, that same kid from Jersey City is still doing what he loves. As
Jerry says, “I never wanted to do anything but make people hum.” So
thank you, Jerry, for doing just that. Jerry Herman. (Applause.)
If Jerry Herman wanted to make people hum, Bill T. Jones wanted to open
their eyes and make them move. The youngest of 12 children, Bill’s
parents were migrant workers -– “poorer than poor” -– who made a living
picking fruits and vegetables up and down the East Coast. Early on, Bill
struggled to find his identity in a segregated world where he often
felt like he didn’t belong.
Then he began to dance. Bill likes to say that a good dancer has,
“heart, guts, strength, intelligence and personality” -– and he’s been
blessed with plenty of each. As the co-founder of the Bill T.
Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, Bill has earned widespread acclaim and
artistic success in the hyper-competitive world of modern dance -– all
while battling poverty, homophobia, and racism.
His unique performances have always been provocative –- challenging
audiences to confront important issues in a way that is at once
captivating, agitating and extremely personal. To date, he’s created
over 140 works on subjects ranging from terminal illness to Abraham
Lincoln -– securing his place as one of the most decorated and
controversial choreographers of our time.
And through it all, Bill has never compromised his sense of purpose, or
lost his ability to inspire others to greater heights. “I’m not afraid
to stand up,” Bill once said. “I’m not afraid to be looked at -- making
my art is a way of saying to people –- gay people, HIV-positive people
-– that life is worth it.” And for that, we are forever grateful. Bill
T. Jones. (Applause.)
Now, there’s not a lot that I can tell you about our next honoree that
you don’t already know. I can tell you he’s become something of a
regular here at the White House. We decided we would just give him all
possible awards this year. (Laughter.)
So this summer, Paul McCartney was here to accept the Gershwin Prize for
popular song. It was a thrill of a lifetime to hear him sing “Michelle”
to Michelle. Although apparently Paul joked afterwards that he was
worried he might become the “first guy ever to get punched out by the
President.” (Laughter.)
I will say he was a little emotive during the song. (Laughter and
applause.) I can’t afford another one. (Laughter.) You have nothing to
worry about. I just recovered from my last tussle on the basketball
court. (Laughter.)
And so tonight I am pleased once again to honor a man widely considered
to be among the greatest songwriters in history. Paul first picked up a
guitar at age 14, and soon it never left his side. Homework went undone
-- my understanding is. Comics went unread. He would play it in the
bathroom.
It wasn’t long before he gravitated towards other young musicians who
shared his passion -– including a young man named John Lennon. But when
Paul and his bandmates played their first set in a hole-in-the-wall jazz
club in England, expectations were still low: they thought they’d be
pretty big in Liverpool.
That band went on to change the way the world thought about music. Their
songs were the soundtrack for an era of immense creativity and change.
And when Paul continued his musical journey alone after the Beatles
broke up, he would become one of the few performers inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice -– as a Beatle and as a solo artist.
(Applause.)
Now, Paul admits that the only possible explanation is supernatural. He
says, “The most important ingredient to making a song work is magic.
You’ve got a melody, you’ve got words, but on the most successful songs,
there’s a sort of magic glow that just makes the songs sort of roll
out.”
We may not understand it, Paul, but for the last five decades, you’ve
taken millions of fans on a pretty magical ride. And I should point out
that includes a whole new generation. When Malia and Sasha were here --
remember, Michelle, we went upstairs and she said, “that song ‘Penny
Lane,’ that's a really neat song.” (Laughter.) And she started trying to
play it on our piano upstairs. And so you continue to inspire, all
those years since Liverpool. Thank you. Paul McCartney. (Applause.)
And what can I say about our final honoree? Michelle and I love Oprah
Winfrey. (Laughter.) Personally love this woman. And the more you know
Oprah, the more spectacular you realize her character and her soul are,
and the more you appreciate what a wonderful, gifted person she is.
It’s easy to forget sometimes that Oprah was once a girl with a funny
name in a little town down South. Back then, nobody would have ever
dreamed that she would become someone who moves an entire nation each
and every day. But the signs were there.
After two days of kindergarten, Oprah wrote a note to her teacher that
read: “I don’t think I belong here because I know a lot of big words.”
(Laughter.) Her teacher agreed, and she moved on to first grade.
And while she was working as a reporter in Baltimore, Oprah was told she
was “too engaged” and “too emotional” about her stories, so the station
put her on a talk show to run out her contract. That worked well.
(Laughter.) How’s payback? (Laughter.) That planted the seed for what
would become the highest-rated talk show in American television history.
Oprah’s gift -– as a host, as a producer, as an Oscar-nominated actress
–- has always been her ability to relate to her audience –- to laugh
with us, to cry with us, to draw us in and connect our most fervent
hopes and deepest fears to her own. The reason we share ourselves with
Oprah is because she shares herself with us. Her childhood of abuse. Her
personal battles. Her life as a woman, as an African American, as
someone who is determined to confront both great injustices of the world
and the private struggles of everyday life.
She has taught us to find strength in overcoming; to take a stand for
ourselves and what we know is right. And she has shown millions of
people around the world –- people she probably will never meet -– what
it means to believe in “the dream of your own life.” Oprah Winfrey.
(Applause.)
So Merle Haggard, Jerry Herman, Bill T. Jones, Paul McCartney, -- what’s
your name again? (Laughter.) Paul McCartney. Oprah Winfrey. Their lives
and their stories are as -- (sound of telephone ringing.) Who is
calling? (Laughter.) -- are as diverse as any you can imagine. Yet in
their own way, each of these honorees help us understand the human
experience -– to illuminate our past, to help us understand our present,
and to give us the courage to face our future.
Being here with tonight’s honorees, reflecting on their contributions,
I’m reminded of a Supreme Court opinion by the great Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes. In a case argued before the Court in 1926, the majority
ruled that the state of New York couldn’t regulate the price of theater
tickets, because, in the opinion of the majority, the theater was not a
public necessity. They argued, in effect, that the experience of
attending the theater was superfluous. And this is what Justice Holmes
had to say. “To many people -- he wrote in his dissent -- ”the -- let me
start that over. “To many people, the superfluous -- it’s this lip
that's -- (Laughter.) It’s hard to say. (Laughter.) You try it when
you’ve had 12 stitches. (Laughter.) “The superfluous” -- thank you.
(Applause.) All right. “To many people the superfluous is necessary.”
The theater is necessary. Dance is necessary. Song is necessary. The
arts are necessary -- they are a necessary part of our lives.
The men and women here tonight embody that idea. Their work has enriched
our lives. It has inspired us to greatness. And tonight, it is my honor
to offer them the appreciation of a grateful nation.
Thank you very much, all five of you. God bless you. Thank you.