WASHINGTON — From “Good
Vibrations” to “Goodfellas,” Brian Wilson and Martin Scorsese scored.
Steve Martin strutted as one of the “wild and crazy guys.” Diana Ross
sang to Motown stardom. Pianist Leon Fleisher surmounted a debilitating
injury.
Their contributions to American culture won
them a visit Sunday to the White House and recognition by President
Bush, followed by an evening of celebration at the John F. Kennedy
Center for the Performing Arts. For their career achievements, the five
were named in September as members of the 30th class of Kennedy Center
honorees.
The two-hour event will air Dec. 26 on CBS.
Recipients are cited for their excellence in the performing arts —
dance, music, theater, opera, motion pictures or television — and
selected by the center’s board of trustees.
For this year’s group, the center noted:
• singer and songwriter Wilson, 65, for his popular work with the Beach
Boys and his “era-defining transformation of the sound of music.”
• filmmaker Scorsese, 65, for being a “visionary” and “fearless artist.”
• comedian, actor and novelist Martin, 62, as a “renaissance comic
whose talents wipe out the boundaries between artistic disciplines.” He
hit his stride playing larger-than-life characters while hosting
“Saturday Night Live” in the 1970s.
• singer Ross, 63, for spreading “romance and joy throughout the world” with her voice.
• Fleisher, 79, for a career that is a “moving testament to the
life-affirming power of art.” Fleisher lost the use of his right hand
for much of his career because of a rare neurological disease but
fought to return to two-handed playing.
(Associated Press)