Kennedy Center Honors 2022: Julia Roberts salutes George Clooney, Eddie Vedder channels U2

Kennedy Center Honors 2022: Julia Roberts salutes George Clooney, Eddie Vedder channels U2

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WASHINGTON –  For the tender-hearted Amy Grant, it was about the “shared joy” of the experience.

Gladys Knight beamed and said receiving a renowned cultural honor from President Joe Biden resonated with her most deeply because, “I feel like he’s my brother, I’ve been knowing him so long.”

And George Clooney, arm tight around the waist of wife Amal, laughed when asked if being inducted at the Kennedy Center Honors made him reconsider a future in politics.

“We have a nice life,” he said, an apparent – and diplomatic – “no.”

The trio, along with the rock legends in U2 and Pulitzer Prize-winning classical composer/conductor Tania León, were feted Sunday night at the 45th Kennedy Center Honors in Washington, D.C.

Biden, along with first lady Jill Biden, took their customary place in the presidential box inside the grand Kennedy Center Opera House, alongside Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Douglas Emhoff. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi joined them with husband Paul, who wore a black hat and black glove on his left hand as he continues to recover from the October attack in their San Francisco home.

The typically bipartisan guest list – including senators Mitt Romney, Mike Lee, Joe Manchin and Patrick Leahy as well as Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg – also encompassed a slew of entertainment luminaries enlisted to pay homage to the honorees.

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Julia Roberts, Matt Damon, Garth Brooks, Sean Penn, Eddie Vedder, Sheryl Crow, Brandi Carlile and Mickey Guyton headed the lineup of musical and spoken tributes, along with a couple of unconventional guests: Big Bird – who lumbered onstage to tweak Clooney – and Borat (Sacha Baron Cohen), whose goofy rendition of U2’s “With or Without You” was prefaced with a rare political detour: “Kanye [West] tried to move to Kazakhstan [Borat’s home country] and we said no. He’s too antisemitic, even for us.”

The three-hour-plus taping will be edited to air Dec. 28 on CBS (8 p.m. EST/PST) and livestream on Paramount +.

Here are some key moments from the event.

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Gladys Knight

The Empress of Soul “illuminates everything and everyone in her orbit,” according to LL Cool J, who joyfully introduced the diverse spate of musicians to honor Knight.

Brooks, cowboy hat firmly in place as he patted his chest, squeezed his eyes shut and dug out his falsetto, imbued “Midnight Train to Georgia” with his usual heartfelt energy before Guyton, resplendent in a gold gown, slayed Knight’s soaring psalm of resilience, “Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me,” her voice gliding up the scale at song’s end.

Ariana DeBose added a slinky touch and a little Broadway verve to “I Heard It Through the Grapevine” as she twirled around the stage with three current-day Pips. But it was the arrival of Patti LaBelle that prompted a standing ovation before the R&B dynamo said a word.

“You’re my sister friend, my everything, for six decades,” she said, tearing up as she addressed Knight. The performance culminated – fittingly – with “That’s What Friends are For,” with Brooks, Guyton and DeBose trying to stay out of LaBelle’s way as she ad-libbed roof-raising vocal runs.

George Clooney

In a video clip showing the honorees at the earlier White House reception where they received their medals, Clooney joked that no matter where he goes in the world, everyone agrees: “I sucked as Batman.”

His easygoing sense of humor was challenged immediately when longtime pal Julia Roberts emerged to flash a trademark grin and joke, “I’m here for Gladys Knight. Can’t you tell?”

But it was Clooney as Renaissance Man that was celebrated, with Roberts calling him “the best combination of gentleman and playmate,” powerhouse jazz singer Dianne Reeves belting “How High the Moon” (as she did in the Clooney-directed “Good Night, and Good Luck”) and Don Cheadle highlighting Clooney’s dedication to humanitarianism.

The stage setting – a dimly lit bar – allowed for the surprises to land easily as the spotlight roamed. Clooney’s father, Nick, 88, his TV anchorman voice still resonant, shared his pride in his son. “He has never stopped surprising me, never stopped learning…George’s best and most important work is still ahead of him.”

Richard Kind, a friend of Clooney’s since the pair starred in a failed sitcom pilot 30 years ago, jested that, “There is not one bottle of Casamigos on this set” – referencing the tequila line co-founded by Clooney in 2013.

Following a Brad Pitt-narrated video overview of Clooney’s accomplishments, Damon further teased “everyone’s sixth favorite Batman” and shared one of the infamous prankster’s greatest hits: Stealing President Bill Clinton’s stationary and writing fake notes to actors saying how much he loved their work.

Amy Grant

As the first contemporary Christian artist to receive a Kennedy Center Honor, Grant is already a trailblazer. But the extent of her reach – from gospel to pop, sacred to secular – was heralded to significant effect.

Both Broadway legend Chita Rivera and news personality Katie Couric canvassed Grant’s 40-plus-year career, with Couric calling her music, “the perfect elixir for troubled times and troubled souls.”

Crow, who bopped through “Baby Baby,” Grant’s massive crossover hit from the early ‘90s that hasn’t lost a step of its giddy bounce, shared that Grant’s emergence during Crow’s college years taught her that “it was possible to be funny, irreverent and Christian at the same time.”

Singer Natalie Hemby extolled Grant’s kindness before being joined by her fellow singers in The Highwomen – Carlile, Maren Morris and Amanda Shires – to harmonize gloriously on “Somewhere Down the Road.”

But it was the combination of “Sing Your Praise to the Lord” and “El Shaddai” that exemplified the touchstones of a career balanced in pop and Christianity as BeBe and CeCe Winans, backed by Grant’s lifetime musical partner, Michael W. Smith, on piano and the Howard University Gospel Choir, alternately skyrocketed and calmed.

Tania León

The backstory of the Cuban-born conductor, composer and classical music aficionado is one of triumph, and as shared during the ceremony, also a love story with her piano.

León, who left Cuba for New York City in 1967 and co-founded the Dance Theatre of Harlem has become a “teacher, a mentor and a guru” who has “crafted moments in time inspired by art, history and nature,” according to vocalist Alicia Hall Moran, who celebrated León with “Oh Yemanja” with husband Jason Moran on piano and Sterling Elliott on cello.

A rhythmic piano piece composed by León – “Tumbao” – was presented by Chloe Flower, accompanied by five young, female dancers form the Dance Theatre of Harlem, but it was León’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “Stride,” performed by the Kennedy Center Honors Orchestra and members of the Sphinx Organization that most captivated with intermittent trombone bleat and timpanis turning it into an ominous march.

U2

Of the 244 musicians acknowledged by the Kennedy Center Honors, the “four scrappy Dublin punks” in U2, as they were christened by Penn, are only the fifth band to receive the distinction.

A subdued but focused Penn praised their “sonic landscapes” and called them “the most consistently relevant band in history.”

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