CELEBRITY
BREAKING: Trump Posts ANGRY Five-Word Response and Makes UNREASONABLE Demand for DAMAGES From Artists After Trump–Kennedy Center Performances Are Cancelled, As Cancellations Keep Growing Over His Name Being Placed Above History, Culture, and What the Institution Truly Stands For
BREAKING: Trump Posts ANGRY Five-Word Response and Makes UNREASONABLE Demand for DAMAGES From Artists After Trump–Kennedy Center Performances Are Cancelled, As Cancellations Keep Growing Over His Name Being Placed Above History, Culture, and What the Institution Truly Stands For
Artists Cancelling Include Chuck Redd, While Jazz Saxophonist Billy Harper Cancels His Planned New Year’s Eve Performance at the Kennedy Center, Saying, “I Would Never Even Consider Performing in a Venue Bearing a Name That Represents Overt Ra.cis.m”
A Dance Company Scheduled for Two Kennedy Center Performances in April, Celebrating Its 40th Anniversary, Also Cancels — Losing $40,000.
With MANY More Artists Following, As Critics Say At This Rate the Only Person Left to Perform at the Kennedy Center Will Be Erika Kirk
Beyond Trump’s Response, What Sparked the Greatest Outrage Was Trump Sharing a Clip Calling for the Removal of the Kennedy Name From the Kennedy Center, Claiming Kennedy Had Been “Elevated to Obscene Levels”…
A growing wave of artist cancellations has hit the Kennedy Center following reports that Donald Trump’s name was placed prominently above the institution’s historical and cultural mission, sparking outrage across the arts community. Musicians, dancers, and performers have withdrawn from scheduled appearances, saying the move undermines what the Kennedy Center has long represented.
Among those cancelling is Washington jazz vibraphonist Chuck Redd. Renowned jazz saxophonist Billy Harper also cancelled his planned New Year’s Eve performance, stating he could not perform in a venue associated with what he described as overt racism. A dance company set to celebrate its 40th anniversary with two performances at the Kennedy Center in April also pulled out, a decision that reportedly cost the company $40,000 in lost revenue.
As cancellations continue to mount, critics have mocked the situation, suggesting that at this pace the only remaining performer may be Trump ally Erika Kirk.
Trump responded online with an angry five-word post and made what critics called an unreasonable demand for damages from artists who cancelled. However, the strongest backlash came after he shared a clip calling for the removal of President John F. Kennedy’s name from the Kennedy Center, claiming Kennedy had been “elevated to obscene levels.”
For many in the arts world, that moment crystallized the dispute. What began as frustration over branding quickly escalated into a broader cultural clash over history, values, and whether a national arts institution should be tied to contemporary political figures at all.