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It’s not a day, it’s an Inauguration extravaganza

Amid parties and pomp, organizers seek proper tone during tough times

Image: D.C. prepares for Obama inauguration
Paul J. Richards / AFP - Getty Images
A U.S. Capitol police officer keeps an eye on the podium where Barack Obama will be sworn in as the 44th president as the National Mall and Washington Monument are seen to the rear on Monday, Jan. 12. The mall area is expected to fill beyond capacity during the inauguration on Jan. 20.
Slideshow
Image: U.S. President Obama
  Gown and country
It's not an inauguration without glamorous galas – and fabulous first lady fashions to match. Here's a look back.

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US President Elect Barak Obama and his wife Michelle at the "We Are One"  The Obama Inaugural Celebration
  Inaugural festivities begin
President-elect Barack Obama began his day with a solemn moment at Arlington cemetery before attending the festive concert kicking off the Inaugural festivities at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington.

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Video
Kennedy inauguration
NBC archive: Tim Russert and Tom Brokaw comment the excitement in America during the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy.

MSNBC

By Michael Ventre
msnbc.com contributor
updated 5:43 p.m. ET Jan. 14, 2009

The inauguration as an entertainment spectacle really began in 1961, after the swearing in of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, said presidential historian Michael Beschloss.

“There were inaugural balls going back to the beginning, but that’s different,” Beschloss said. “That was just a big room with an orchestra. In ’61, Kennedy got his good friend Frank Sinatra to organize what was called an inaugural gala. Sinatra put together a glittering guest list, with all the Rat Pack, Peter Lawford. Juliet Prowse was there I believe. Janet Leigh.

“Basically every big name in the entertainment business at that time was there. That was the first show of its kind.”

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Americans have absorbed a dizzying slide show of entertainment excess since those black-and-white images of Camelot and Hollywood royalty, not all of which are restricted to inaugurals. Whether it be the Oscars, Emmys, Golden Globes or Grammys; the Summer and Winter Olympics; or even just the Super Bowl halftime show, the American palette for pageantry has been whetted with increasingly rich visual delicacies.

The most recent example is the Beijing Olympics. The four-hour Opening Ceremonies featured more than 15,000 performers and came in at a cost of over $100 million. Estimates on the global television audience for that event vary widely, from one billion to more than four billion.

The Closing Ceremonies represented another tightly choreographed hallucinogenic dreamscape that included guitarist Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin performing “Whole Lotta Love” with singer Leona Lewis to trumpet the London Games in 2012. That also was viewed by an audience estimated at well over a billion.

But just because the bar continues to be raised on such events doesn’t mean the Obama inaugural will be the show to end all shows.

“On one side, what is arguably from the primaries through the latter part of the election through the euphoria of election night through the images of Obama depicted on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel is the sense that ratings have been broken for all coverage of the conventions and all the great speeches,” noted Robert J. Thompson, professor at the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University. “In that sense, there is a question of whether this will be the inauguration to end all inaugurations. Of course it has to compete with the Olympic opening and closing ceremonies. On one level, there’s a real call for this to be a symbolic ceremony of what is supposedly this new Utopia.

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Today show

“On the other hand, it’s happening in the middle of a sorry economic state. It’s one thing for the Olympic ceremonies or other awards shows to forget all this and to give us some escape. It’s another to have a symbol of a new government in the midst of what’s happening to many Americans and to show a lavish celebration.

“There’s really two powerful cultural forces going on here. It’s a tough call how to balance those.”

It would be difficult anyway for this inaugural to top Beijing, just because of the nature of the event. Most of the entertainment leading up to the swearing in, and during that evening, will take place at balls. Just prior to the actual solemn occasion of hand-raising and oath-taking by Obama, there will be a musical selection featuring composer John Williams, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, violinist Itzhak Perlman, pianist Gabriela Montero, and clarinet player Anthony McGill. After the oath, there will be a parade. There won’t be any opportunity for the equivalent of Chinese acrobats.

But there will be events all weekend, and it’s the totality of that entertainment experience and the magnitude of the occasion that will add up to one extravaganza in the minds of viewers and attendees.

“As you know, one of our events will be held at the Lincoln Memorial (on Sunday, Jan. 18), one of the most beautiful and majestic sites in this country,” said Linda Douglass, chief spokesperson for the Presidential Inaugural Committee 2009. “You don’t need to add to that to make it a spectacular location.”

Douglass said the entertainment will be tailored to the event. “The entertainment will not be lavish,” she said. “It will be appropriate for the times we live in and the message of the President and Vice President-elect, which is that we are all in this together with common goals and shared aspirations, and we are stronger when we are unified.

“The goal of this inauguration is to be accessible and inclusive. I would describe the tone as ‘hopeful.’”


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