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News + PoliticsOpinionWhat's on next at the Trump Center for the...

What’s on next at the Trump Center for the Performing Arts (besides more booing)?

Buckle up for wrestling matches, rare earth mineral mining, and an extrajudicial spin on 'Mack the Knife'

Editor’s Note: Among the many changes taking place in Washington, DC, few are less predictable than the future of government support for the arts.  While the President of the United States has taken charge of the leading arts center in Washington, the schedule of performances there keeps changing, as some artists withdraw their work to protest Trump’s self-appointment and his other activities. At performances that have taken place, the Vice President and his wife, who is now on the board of the organization, have met with resounding vocalizations of disapproval.

Previously, we offered an advance schedule of plays that might be performed at the Trump (formerly Kennedy) Center for the Performing Arts this year, but that list appears to have been withdrawn and replaced by other selections. We cannot guarantee that the plays discussed here are final choices; apparently the President is waiting to receive large, illustrated synopses of them from his advisors before consenting to their production.  Unable to wait that long, we pass along a few that have been proposed. The chances that these plays will tour the country, and appear in San Francisco, are just as good as the chances they will be staged in Washington, according to our source, who once taught theatre at San Francisco State.


What’s On at the Trump Center for the Performing Arts? 

According to our sources,  the Chairman of the Trump Center for the Performing Arts will soon announce plans to have three sensational, very huge new plays and a wrestling competition staged at his Washington, D.C.  arts showcase, formerly known as the Kennedy Center. Later the plays are expected to tour the country,  with all expenses except high ticket prices paid by fawning corporate sponsors.

Following the withdrawal of the musical Hamilton from the season schedule due to its diversity, equity and inclusion policies, Chairman Donald Trump is expected to happily replace that musical with the world premiere of McKinley. “This spectacular new musical,”  according to an unpublished White House press release, “is based on the daring acts of a great American President sadly assassinated but not before he imposed tariffs on trade, setting a fine example for the nation’s current leadership. The author of play’s book and the music is the great writer AI.” 

Trump, who now spends much of his time conferring with AI and actresses about their new plays, and driving balls across a golf course, also serves as President of the United States every Tuesday. “Most of McKinley’s songs,”  says the same White House press office release,  “will be sung from the top of a mountain (Mount McKinley, of course), built especially for this production. We’re literally going to raise the roof with this fantastic scenery.”

The same mountain will be featured four weeks later in a new, “approximating” production of Samuel Beckett’s classic Happy Days. Inspired by Beckett, AI’s play will begin with a woman named Winnie buried up to her waist in scorched earth. This part of the story actually can be found in Beckett’s original script. “I’ve been auditioning many talented actresses for the role,” Trump is expected to write on his Social Truth site.

His assistant director (who showed us a dramaturgy degree from the Geffen, formerly Yale, School of Drama) said Beckett’s storyline has been improved by AI’s writing based on Trump’s suggestions. The mountain on which Winnie rests now contains rare earth minerals sought by many nations, and in Act Two, which departs from Beckett’s story to follow Trump’s own plot, a tremendous deal is struck to send Winnie and her husband (who lives on the other side of her mountain)  to the new Gaza Riviera, all expenses paid, while the minerals under her are mined for Tesla and for a new communications breakthrough, Muskphones, which transmit all conversations to a government eavesdropper at no additional cost to the customer. 

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The entire cast (all two of them) sings “Happy Days Are Here Again” before the curtain falls.

Samuel Beckett, perplexed beyond the grave. Photo by Roger Pic via Wickimedia Commons

“We had some problems with the Beckett estate after they heard about our production,” a Trump Center lawyer admitted, “they objected to all the changes in his script. The song is not by Beckett, either. But we pointed out that the author never answered our questionnaire asking for five of his recent accomplishments and whether he promotes climate justice, DEI or terrorism. In fact, one could argue that his original play with its mound of scorched grass and desolate landscape was a kind of protest against climate change. 

“No longer so. In fact, I’m not supposed to use those ‘c’ words, forget I said them. So far no charges have been filed against the playwright.” (The fact that Beckett died in 1989 seems to have been missed by the surveyors.) 

No copyright problems arise in the third production planned for the Trump Center’s inaugural season. The Threepenny Opera (1928) is now in the public domain, and the Center plans to take full advantage of playwright Bertolt Brecht’s absence. In the play, Mack the Knife—a notorious criminal prone to song—complains that his gang’s burglaries and other small crimes can’t compete with the large banks and corporations that legally make a killing. He wants to become a banker. No longer is Mack a criminal. In the new drama, he is pardoned by the Queen of England in Scene One, and a high court grants him immunity from all future prosecution. “With a criminal record and bank account like his, the man could be our next President,” observes Chairman Trump’s lawyer, “in fact, he is.”

The first season will close with a fabulous wrestling match in which the President’s strongest defenders in his cabinet and congress—even the wife of the man who started the WWE itself, who is now the Secretary of Education—will lube themselves up in “wonderful American oil drilled from our finest National Monuments” and compete for crumbs of attention.

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