WASHINGTON: Prior to Sunday’s ceremony awarding the 20th Mark Twain Prize for American Humour to David Letterman, the red-carpet question on everyone’s minds had to be: to Trump or not to Trump?
Each of the funny famous folks making their way down the red carpet at the Kennedy Centre before the big show had all been tasked with a tough job: roasting the 70-year-old king of late night at a time when the comedic landscape seems riddled with political punchlines packed with names like Trump and Harvey Weinstein.
Would the night get serious or stay silly? It depended on who you asked.
And it just so happened that the first big name to pose in front of the step-and-repeat was none other than Jimmy Kimmel, the late-night host whose sharp, politically minded monologues criticising the Cassidy-Graham health-care bill had one attendee branding him a ‘hero’.
“I don’t know that I am making a difference,” Kimmel said, “but I am going to try. I think if everybody adopts that philosophy we will actually make a difference.”
Kimmel, a self-described Letterman “stalker” (he had the birthday cake and vanity number plate to prove it), kept his material for the night close to the vest but remained characteristically candid about the state of the country.
“I feel hopeful but not necessarily optimistic,” said Kimmel, who planned to hightail it out of Washington after the show. So no quick sit-down with President Trump then?
“Oh, I have a million questions for Donald Trump,” Kimmel said. “I’d need like three hours with him.”
The next few hours, though, could very well be a Trump-free zone.
“No politics tonight,” Martin Short said definitively. OK then.
Comedian Jimmie Walker, who hired Letterman as a writer when the future late-night host first moved to Los Angeles, said the two don’t ever talk politics.