Trump to close Kennedy Center for renovations amid backlash from performers
United States President Donald Trump has announced plans to close the John F Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts for two years for renovations starting in July.
Trump’s announcement on Sunday follows a wave of cancellations by leading performers, musicians and groups since the president ousted the previous leadership and added his name to the building.
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Trump made no mention in his post of the recent cancellations.
“I have determined that the fastest way to bring The Trump Kennedy Center to the highest level of Success, Beauty, and Grandeur, is to cease Entertainment Operations for an approximately two year period of time,” he said in a post on his Truth Social platform.
“The temporary closure will produce a much faster and higher quality result!”
The closure will start on July 4, to coincide with the 250th Independence Day celebration.
The decision, Trump said, will be subject to approval of the board, which he handpicked upon taking over as chairman.
The president added that the facility’s various entertainment events – concerts, operas, musicals, ballet performances, and interactive arts – would impede and slow the construction and renovation operations, and that a full temporary closure would be necessary.
“The Trump Kennedy Center, if temporarily closed for Construction, Revitalization, and Complete Rebuilding, can be, without question, the finest Performing Arts Facility of its kind, anywhere in the World,” he said.
“America will be very proud of its new and beautiful Landmark for many generations to come.”
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There was no immediate comment from the Kennedy Center.
The complex began as a national cultural centre, but was renamed by Congress as a “living memorial” to former President John F Kennedy in 1964, in the aftermath of his assassination.
Opened in 1971, it operates year-round as a public showcase for the arts, including the National Symphony Orchestra.
After Trump took over as chairman of the centre’s board, several entertainers and performers withdrew their performances in protest of the president’s policies.
Among them were the producers of the award-winning musical Hamilton, and international operatic soprano Renee Fleming.
The Washington National Opera recently announced that it would leave the Kennedy Center, its home since the centre’s opening.
Renowned composer Philip Glass also announced on Wednesday the withdrawal of a symphony orchestra performance for Abraham Lincoln, saying that “the values” of the centre “today” are in “direct conflict” with the message of his piece.
Trump had criticised some of the programmes of the once non-partisan centre as too “woke”.
In recent days, the Kennedy Center hosted the premiere of First Lady Melania Trump’s documentary, which saw a record weekend at the box office, but drew mostly negative reviews from film critics.
The extent of the “complete rebuilding” mentioned by Trump is unclear, but he has described the structure as dilapidated and needing a facelift.
In a post on X, Maria Kennedy Shriver, a niece of the slain former president, criticised Trump’s decision without naming him. She suggested that the closure and renovation were made to distract Americans, as “no one wants to perform there any longer”.
Trump’s rebuilding plans for the centre follow a series of measures to reshape US historical and cultural institutions.
He demolished the East Wing of the White House and launched a massive $400m ballroom project, is actively pursuing the building of a triumphal arch on the other side Arlington Bridge from the Lincoln Memorial, and has plans for the Washington Dulles international airport.
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