Billy Crystal and Barry Gibb among Kennedy Centre Honours recipients

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Billy Crystal And Barry Gibb Among Kennedy Centre Honours Recipients
The others selected for the lifetime artistic achievement award are rapper and actor Queen Latifah, opera singer Renee Fleming and Dionne Warwick. Photo: PA Images
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Ashraf Khalil, Associated Press

Actor Billy Crystal and music star Barry Gibb are among the five artists selected for this year’s Kennedy Centre Honours.

The others selected for the lifetime artistic achievement award are rapper and actor Queen Latifah, opera singer Renee Fleming and prolific hitmaker Dionne Warwick.

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All will be honoured with the traditional gala celebration at Washington’s Kennedy Centre for the Performing Arts on December 3rd.

Kennedy Centre president Deborah F Rutter called this year’s crop of inductees “an extraordinary mix of individuals who have redefined their art forms”.

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Crystal (75) came to prominence in the 1970s playing Jodie Dallas, one of the first openly gay characters on American network television, on the sitcom Soap.

He went on to a brief but memorable one-year stint on Saturday Night Live (SNL) before starring in a string of films, including massive hits such as When Harry Met Sally…, The Princess Bride and City Slickers.

But the character he says seems to most resonate with fans is SNL talk show host Fernando Lamas.

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“After all these years, I still get ‘You look marvellous’ the most,” Crystal told The Associated Press (AP), citing the character’s catchphrase.

“I sat next to Henry Kissinger on a plane one time, and even he said it to me.”

Crystal, who also received the Kennedy Centre’s Mark Twain prize for lifetime achievement in comedy in 2007, joins an elite group of comedians to earn both the Twain prize and the Kennedy Centre Honour: David Letterman, Steve Martin, Lorne Michaels, Lily Tomlin, Carol Burnett and Neil Simon.

Bill Cosby also received both honours, but they were rescinded in 2018 following his sexual assault conviction, which was later overturned.

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Warwick shot to stardom in the 1960s as the muse for the superstar songwriting team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David.

Dionne Warwick
Dionne Warwick (Chris Pizzello/AP)

She said her pride at receiving the honour will be mixed with “a bit of sadness because Burt and Hal won’t be there”.

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Bacharach died in February, and David died in 2012.

Warwick’s discography includes a multidecade string of hits, both with and without Bacharach, that includes I Say A Little Prayer, I’ll Never Love This Way Again and That’s What Friends Are For.

Aged 82, Warwick also cheerfully disregards a bit of Kennedy Centre tradition: acting humble and shocked at receiving the honour.

In an interview with the AP, Warwick said she absolutely deserved it and had wondered at times what was taking so long.

“As my son said the other day, ‘Congratulations, and it’s about time’,” Warwick said.

“I told him everything happens when it’s supposed to happen.”

Fleming (64) is one of the prominent sopranos of her generation, with a string of accolades that includes a National Medal of Arts bestowed by then-US president Barack Obama, a Cross of the Order of Merit from the German government and honorary membership in England’s Royal Academy of Music.

Renee Fleming
Renee Fleming (Markus Schreiber/AP)

Kennedy Centre Honours recipients receive personalised tributes and performances from their peers, and Fleming has performed at previous ceremonies honouring jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter and pianist Van Cliburn.

“There’s nothing else like this in the US,” she said of the Kennedy Centre Honour.

“I really was hoping one day to get one.”

Fleming is also part of an obscure bit of Kennedy Centre Honours trivia, having performed along with fellow 2023 honoree Queen Latifah at the 2014 Super Bowl.

Fleming sang the national anthem while Latifah performed America The Beautiful.

Queen Latifah
Queen Latifah (Ted Shaffrey/AP)

Latifah has been a star since the age of 19 when her debut album and hit single Ladies First made her the first female crossover rap star.

She has gone on to a diverse career that has included seven studio albums, starring roles in multiple television shows and movies and an Oscar nomination for best supporting actress for her role in the musical film Chicago.

She also became an iconic presence for gay women of colour, despite refusing to publicly comment on her sexuality or personal life for decades.

But in 2021, while accepting a lifetime achievement award at the BET Awards, she acknowledged her partner, Eboni Nichols, and their son, Rebel, and ended her speech with the declaration: “Happy Pride!”

Latifah (53) received the news of her honour while on the set of her TV show The Equaliser and said she appreciates the Kennedy Centre’s efforts to embrace hip-hop.

The cultural centre has established its own division of hip-hop culture and made LL Cool J a Kennedy Centre Honours recipient in 2017.

“It’s important because hip-hop is a uniquely American art form,” she said, “just like jazz, just like blues, just like rock and roll.”

Barry Gibb
Barry Gibb (Grant Pollard/Invision/AP)

Gibb (76) shot to global fame as part of one of the most successful bands in the history of modern music: The Bee Gees.

Along with his late brothers Robin and Maurice, the trio launched a nearly unmatched string of hits that defined a generation of music.

“I’ve thought about it from time to time,” Gibb said of the Kennedy Centre Honour.

“But it would have been arrogance to expect it. … I do wish my brothers were here for this, too.”

Somewhat obscured at the time by the hairy chests and falsettos of their disco peak was the enduring brilliance of Gibb’s songwriting.

He said he is deeply gratified to find his songs living on in multiple covers by modern artists including Alison Krauss, Keith Urban and Jason Isbell.

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