The Kennedy Center’s chandeliers were barely aglow on June 11 when the boos started. President Donald Trump had swept into the opera house he now chairs—thanks to a February board overhaul that installed him as boss of the nation’s most famous arts venue—and half the crowd let him know how they felt.
That icy welcome was more than a reflexive protest. It was a pointed reminder that the evening’s offering, Les Misérables, is a hymn to resistance. Set amid bread-line poverty and a failed 1832 uprising, the musical asks audiences to choose a side: the brittle law-and-order of Inspector Javert or the radical empathy of ex-convict Jean Valjean. Trump, apparently unfazed, later told reporters he wasn’t sure which man he resembles.
Trump’s hostile takeover of the Kennedy Center was pitched as a purge of “woke” programming. Predictably, dozens of artists canceled appearances; others quietly rebooked elsewhere. This summer opener was, in effect, a stress test: Could the president enjoy a story that venerates the very people his administration has lately met with tear gas and troop deployments?
In Hugo’s novel, Valjean steals bread to keep a child alive; in today’s Washington, asylum-seekers wait in makeshift camps for the chance to do the same. Trump’s decision to send Marines onto Los Angeles streets to “restore order” after an ICE raid gone wrong brought comparisons to the monarchy’s crackdown that Les Mis famously condemns.
Even the song the president loves—“Do You Hear the People Sing?”—is an anthem of defiance. At rallies, it thunders from loudspeakers as if it were a fight song for strongmen, not students. The irony has never been thicker: Broadway’s ultimate protest number has become background music for a commander-in-chief who, in the same week, denounced campus demonstrators as “anarchists.”
Tomorrow’s Flag Day military parade—tanks, flyovers, the full pageant—will unfold against more than 1,500 “No Kings Day” rallies nationwide. Organizers picked the slogan precisely because Trump’s power flex feels monarchical. It is as if every street corner is asking the same question Valjean poses on the barricade: Will you stand up and take your place?
You don’t have to like musicals to grasp their political voltage. Les Misérables is a parable of compassion overpowering cruelty. Valjean’s arc is one of moral enlargement; Javert’s is a cautionary tale of rigidity so absolute it breaks the man. For Trump to flirt with either role is to confess he hasn’t listened to the lyrics—or noticed which uniform the villain wears.
Perhaps that is the secret fear of every autocrat who dabbles in culture: the show cannot help but speak back. Stage lights turn spectators into subjects. And the moral math of Les Mis is unforgiving: you either extend a hand to the vulnerable or you crush them beneath your badge.
Inside the Kennedy Center, the orchestra swells and the cast sings, “When tomorrow comes…” Outside, protesters rehearse the same refrain. The president may own the building, but he cannot edit the score. Art keeps its receipts. And somewhere between Valjean’s mercy and Javert’s mercilessness lies a choice no chairman’s gavel can postpone.
Tomorrow the tanks will roll, the “No Kings” banners will wave and the long American debate over power and empathy will continue—set, for one defiant night, to a very familiar tune.
Photo Credit: DepositPhotos.com
Producers Darren Bell and Cuffe & Taylor for Live Nation are delighted to welcome the…
Following critically acclaimed international seasons, Bungandidj and Ngarrindjeri choreographer Lewis Major’s work Triptych makes its…
Taking an electrolyte supplement is not equivalent to changing your nutritional intake, hydrating yourself properly,…
Producers have just released the final week of performances for Melbourne’s feel-good musical of the…
STRANGER THINGS: THE FIRST SHADOW will take its final bows in London and New York…
Brisbane Festival has today unveiled its 2026 program – the inaugural vision of new Artistic…