Acclaimed Composer Stephen Schwartz Scraps Kennedy Center Appearance Amid Trump-Named Renaming Row
The Kennedy Center, an esteemed cultural institution in Washington D.C., has become embroiled in controversy once again, this time over its recent name change to the Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. The move has sparked widespread outrage among artists, who are now canceling their scheduled appearances at the center.
Stephen Schwartz, Oscar-winning composer behind hit musicals such as Wicked, is the latest high-profile figure to pull out of a Kennedy Center event in protest of the name change. In an email sent to Newsday, Schwartz expressed his disappointment and disillusionment with the institution's new direction. "The Kennedy Center no longer represents the apolitical place for free artistic expression it was founded to be," he stated. "There's no way I would set foot in it now."
However, a spokesperson from the Kennedy Center has pushed back on Schwartz's claims, suggesting that he was never actually booked for the event. The center's vice president of public relations, Roma Daravi, disputed this notion, stating that Schwartz had assumed the gala was off due to lack of communication.
This incident is not an isolated one; many artists have canceled their shows at the Kennedy Center over the past year in response to President Trump's changes to the institution. Initially, the backlash stemmed from Trump's efforts to gut the center's board and install himself as chairman. More recently, however, artists were outraged by the decision to rename the center after Trump and JFK.
The repercussions of this name change have been far-reaching, with several high-profile shows and events being canceled or scrapped altogether. Chuck Redd, a musician who had led the Kennedy Center's annual Christmas Eve Jazz Jam since 2006, cited the name change as the reason for his decision to cancel the event. He has since received a threatening letter from the center's interim executive director, Richard Grenell, demanding $1 million in damages.
Grenell also issued a statement, claiming that artists who canceled their shows were booked by the previous "far-left leadership" and were motivated by politics rather than artistic expression. However, many observers see this as a thinly veiled attempt to discredit those who have spoken out against Trump's involvement with the Kennedy Center. As one critic noted, "Boycotting the Arts to show you support the Arts is a form of derangement syndrome." The real question is: what will be the long-term impact of this controversy on the very institution that was meant to bring people together through art and culture?
The Kennedy Center, an esteemed cultural institution in Washington D.C., has become embroiled in controversy once again, this time over its recent name change to the Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. The move has sparked widespread outrage among artists, who are now canceling their scheduled appearances at the center.
Stephen Schwartz, Oscar-winning composer behind hit musicals such as Wicked, is the latest high-profile figure to pull out of a Kennedy Center event in protest of the name change. In an email sent to Newsday, Schwartz expressed his disappointment and disillusionment with the institution's new direction. "The Kennedy Center no longer represents the apolitical place for free artistic expression it was founded to be," he stated. "There's no way I would set foot in it now."
However, a spokesperson from the Kennedy Center has pushed back on Schwartz's claims, suggesting that he was never actually booked for the event. The center's vice president of public relations, Roma Daravi, disputed this notion, stating that Schwartz had assumed the gala was off due to lack of communication.
This incident is not an isolated one; many artists have canceled their shows at the Kennedy Center over the past year in response to President Trump's changes to the institution. Initially, the backlash stemmed from Trump's efforts to gut the center's board and install himself as chairman. More recently, however, artists were outraged by the decision to rename the center after Trump and JFK.
The repercussions of this name change have been far-reaching, with several high-profile shows and events being canceled or scrapped altogether. Chuck Redd, a musician who had led the Kennedy Center's annual Christmas Eve Jazz Jam since 2006, cited the name change as the reason for his decision to cancel the event. He has since received a threatening letter from the center's interim executive director, Richard Grenell, demanding $1 million in damages.
Grenell also issued a statement, claiming that artists who canceled their shows were booked by the previous "far-left leadership" and were motivated by politics rather than artistic expression. However, many observers see this as a thinly veiled attempt to discredit those who have spoken out against Trump's involvement with the Kennedy Center. As one critic noted, "Boycotting the Arts to show you support the Arts is a form of derangement syndrome." The real question is: what will be the long-term impact of this controversy on the very institution that was meant to bring people together through art and culture?