Kennedy Center announces 2013-14 season

The Kennedy Center with a colorful backdrop that looks like the aurora borealis on the outside walls. Currently at the Kennedy Center are the Nordic Cool 2013 exhibitions.

When named alongside Patti LuPone, Mandy Patinkin and Renee Fleming, the Queensbridge rapper Nas stands out as a this-is-not-like-the-others musical talent. Indeed, the presence of an at-once pioneering and controversial rapper at the top of the Kennedy Center’s 2013-14 season announcement signals that the center is welcoming popular genres it sometimes ignores.

On Tuesday, the Kennedy Center highlighted its jazz, dance, theater and international festivals for the 2013-14 season, as well as the programming for the National Symphony Orchestra and the Washington National Opera. Although the programming included many of the usual suspects — violinist Joshua Bell, perennial runs of the Mariinsky Ballet — a week-long salute to hip-hop, an international theater festival and a tribute to Cuban jazz legend Arturo Sandoval indicate that the center is continuing its push to bring diverse audiences to its marble-encased halls.

(Ilya S. Savenok/GETTY IMAGES FOR HEINEKEN) - Nas performs at Heineken Red Star Access Philadelphia featuring Nas, Wale and Q-Tip at The Electric Factory on Oct. 13, 2012 in Philadelphia, Penn.

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

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“We’ve always felt the need to address the interests of a wide range of people,” said Michael Kaiser, president of the Kennedy Center. “Hip-hop will certainly draw in a younger audience. We’ve had hip-hop here before, but never as our own festival.”

Washington Post pop music critic Chris Richards weighed in on “One Mic: Hip-Hop Culture Worldwide,” one of the most surprising elements of the announcement.

“It’s encouraging to see the Kennedy Center shining its light on the genre. The expected highlight [will be] two performances by Nas, who will celebrate the almost-20-year anniversary of his 1994 debut album, ‘Illmatic,’ with the help of the NSO Pops,” Richards said.

Nas and the NSO Pops: It’s certainly an unusual partnership, but it illustrates a broader theme in the season that runs through the dance, theater and classical programming. The center seems set on merging disciplines in its concert hall. It has even named one of the National Symphony Orchestra’s latest commissions “New Moves: Symphony + Dance.” But for a season of musical fusion and boundary pushing, there are still relatively tame showings of “The Lion King” to appease traditionalists.

In all things, moderation.

The International Theater Festival is another first. The theater-specific festival brings directors together from across the globe to highlight what Kaiser calls “innovative theater.”

The “showcase in March 2014 of theater from around the world — including productions by Peter Brook and Robert Wilson — is perhaps the most wide-ranging example of international theater programming at the center in more than a decade,” said Peter Marks, The Post’s theater critic.

But the centerpiece of the theater season is the Kennedy Center’s revival of “Side Show,” the first major run of the Broadway show since its opening in 1997. After an impressive $7.3 million staging of “Follies” last year, “Side Show” is arguably a riskier endeavor.

“Tackling an unusual subject — the lives of Siamese twins Daisy and Violet Hilton, who became circus stars — the critically well-received musical failed to catch on with audiences and closed after just 91 performances,” Marks said. “That the new production is being shepherded by Bill Condon, who wrote the screenplay for the Oscar-winning ‘Chicago’ and directed the film adaptation of ‘Dreamgirls,’ has boosted expectations for the revival.”

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