PBS Memorial Day concert shifts to TV
NEW YORK (AP) - The coronavirus has wiped out plans to bring tens of thousand of people to the U.S. Capitol for the annual Memorial Day weekend concert shown on PBS, but organizers are pressing ahead with a revamped event.
Performers like Trace Adkins, Cynthia Erivo, Renee Fleming and Christopher Jackson will appear on television in songs recorded remotely, in some cases from the Capitol grounds, obeying social distancing requirements.
Producers have also solicited special messages from celebrities Jennifer Garner, Jon Hamm, Dule Hill, Lisa Kudrow and Gwyneth Paltrow and others to help fill the void created by the missing crowd.
The 31st annual Memorial Day weekend celebration will be televised on May 24 from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Actors Joe Mantegna and Gary Sinise return as co-hosts. Mantegna has been a part of the event since 2002, when he was asked to read what some New York City firefighters had written about the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, with the National Symphony Orchestra playing behind him.
Celebrating Americans who died fighting for the country is the holiday that makes all other holidays possible, he said. This year’s show will be expanded to salute medical workers struggling to treat people sick with COVID-19.
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell will be making his 26th appearance on the show. U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will also deliver a message.
The show will also feature some performances recorded in previous years, including by the National Symphony Orchestra, and readings by actors like Sam Elliott and Laurence Fishburne.