The mega-hit Broadway musical Hamilton is pulling out of plans to perform at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington next year, citing Donald Trump’s shakeup of the art institution’s leadership.
“Our show simply cannot, in good conscience, participate and be a part of this new culture that is being imposed on the Kennedy Center,” producer Jeffrey Seller said in a statement on Wednesday.
Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hip-hop-flavored biography about the first US treasury secretary, Alexander Hamilton, won the best new musical Tony award, the Pulitzer prize for drama, a Grammy and the Edward M Kennedy Prize for Drama Inspired by American History. It also earned Miranda a MacArthur Foundation “genius” grant.
The show played the Kennedy Center in 2018 during Trump’s first administration and again in 2022 when Joe Biden was president. It was scheduled again from 3 March to 26 April next year. Those plans are now off. Tickets had yet to go on sale.
“We are not acting against his administration, but against the partisan policies of the Kennedy Center as a result of his recent takeover,” said Seller. “These actions bring a new spirit of partisanship to the national treasure that is the Kennedy Center.”
The Kennedy Center has been in upheaval since Trump forced out the center’s leadership and took over as chair of the board of trustees. His decision to do so is part of his broad campaign against “woke” culture.
Actor Issa Rae, singer-musician Rhiannon Giddens, author Louise Penny and the rock band Low Cut Connie also have canceled scheduled Kennedy Center events. Singer-songwriter Victoria Clark went ahead with her 15 February show, but on stage wore a T-shirt reading “ANTI TRUMP AF”.
This is not the first time Hamilton has taken a political stance. In 2016, the cast delivered a curtain call appeal to Mike Pence, then the vice-president-elect, who was in the Broadway audience, asking that the Trump administration “uphold our American values” and “work on behalf of all of us”.
The Kennedy Center, supported by government money and private donations, attracts millions of visitors each year to a complex that features a concert hall, an opera house and a theater, along with a lecture hall, meeting spaces and a “millennium stage” that has been the site for free shows.
Source: www.theguardian.com