A Starry-Eyed Salute
For Martin, Ross, Fleisher, Scorsese and Wilson, A Career Curtain Call That's Very Much in Character
Monday, December 3, 2007;
Page C01
Diana Ross bobbed her lion mane to Vanessa Williams's serenade, Steve Martin hammed it up in response to Steve Carell's goading, Martin Scorsese furrowed his brow when Francis Ford Coppola said, " 'GoodFellas' is much better than 'The Godfather,' " Leon Fleisher graciously thanked Yo-Yo Ma for his kind words, and Brian Wilson looked a little out of it.
In other words, everyone behaved exactly as you would expect them to during last night's Kennedy Center Honors tribute.
Gallery
The Kennedy Center Honors The stars come to Washington to honor five renowned artists: Martin Scorsese, Diana Ross, Steve Martin, Brian Wilson and Leon Fleisher. Discussion Policy Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post. |
The 30-year-old gala at the Kennedy Center Opera House, which culminated a weekend of activities saluting this year's fab five, is not about flouting expectations, after all, but about celebrating the obvious, the quintessential, the archetypes of each honoree's lifetime of stardom -- nixing the negative or the PG-13.
And so it was that a gold-sequins-clad Caroline Kennedy opened the evening by praising:
A film-loving boy from the "mean streets of Little Italy" (Scorsese).
A "wild and crazy" dirty rotten scoundrel (Martin).
A Motown beauty who found no mountain "high enough" (Ross).
A "piano prodigy who . . . embraced adversity" (Fleisher).
And a "Beach Boy troubadour [who] showed that rock-and-roll is indeed fun, fun, fun" (Fleisher again. No -- just kidding! It's Brian Wilson. You expected a surprise?).
Oh, and the president and first lady were there, too.
The last acts of these things -- other events included a dinner Saturday at the State Department and a White House reception yesterday afternoon -- are always such a shebang, such a to-do, let's just start there, shall we?
Wilson got the final set of Honors, a tribute kicked off by a fuzzy-as-ever Art Garfunkel, who described hearing Wilson's music for the first time: "It was this unique, crazy creation: a mix of rock-and-roll and heartfelt prayer."



