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The Hollywood president: Here are the celebs Barack Obama name-drops in his new book

President Obama and Oprah Winfrey
Former President Obama speaks warmly of friend and supporter Oprah Winfrey in his new memoir.
(Elise Amendola / Associated Press)
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When he was president, Barack Obama wasn’t known for shying away from brushes with fame — and that fact is obvious when you see how many celebrity names he casually drops in “A Promised Land.”

Obama’s new memoir covers his early political career and his first 2½ years in the White House, closing with the killing of Osama bin Laden in May 2011.

Writing in the new book about the music series he and First Lady Michelle Obama put in place at the White House, he invokes “household names like Stevie Wonder, Jennifer Lopez, and Justin Timberlake but also up-and-comers like Leon Bridges and living legends like B.B. King.”

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Remembering the 2011 White House Correspondents Dinner, he mentions “making small talk while guests like Rupert Murdoch, Sean Penn, John Boehner, and Scarlett Johansson mingled over wine and overcooked steaks.”

“A Promised Land,” out Tuesday in a worldwide release, eloquently and ruefully documents the first two and a half years of Obama’s presidency.

Nov. 16, 2020

He says he favored songs by Jay-Z and Eminem to get his head in the right place on debate days, with some audio help from Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Frank Sinatra. And Sammy Davis Jr. is mentioned when Obama recounts stories about inaugurations past. Does name-dropping the deceased even count? Let’s say it does.

Read on for glimpses into the Obamas’ star-studded life at the name-droppiest White House ever. All excerpts were penned by the former president.

Oprah Winfrey

Obama reflected on the time Winfrey spent working on his campaign for president.

“We had a few high-profile moments of our own, including a series of rallies with Oprah Winfrey, who’d become a friend and supporter, and was as wise, funny, and gracious on the trail as she was in person, attracting nearly thirty thousand people between two rallies in Iowa, another eighty-five hundred in New Hampshire, and almost thirty thousand in South Carolina. These gatherings were electric, pulling in the kind of new voters we most needed. (Many on my staff, it must be said, were starstruck around Oprah, with the predictable exception of Emily [Parcell, a campaign consultant]; the only famous person she ever expressed an interest in meeting was Tim Russert.)”

Winfrey’s success on the campaign trail contributed to a 2018 flurry of speculation about whether she would run for president in 2020. She finally told a magazine that the process “would kill me.”

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Earth, Wind & Fire

Verdine White, left, Philip Bailey and Ralph Johnson of Earth, Wind & Fire.
Verdine White, left, Philip Bailey and Ralph Johnson of Earth, Wind & Fire.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

Shortly after taking the presidential reins, in February 2009, Obama welcomed the “September” and “Boogie Wonderland” hitmakers to the White House, where they rocked the room.

“Tasked with hosting the annual Governors Ball, Michelle had shaken up tradition by arranging to have Earth, Wind & Fire provide the entertainment, their horn-blasting R&B funk generating moves on the dance floor that I’d never thought I’d see out of a bipartisan gathering of middle-aged public officials.”

Unlike the Oscars’ Governors Ball, the D.C. event hosts real governors and their spouses from all 50 states. At the time, celebrity Arnold Schwarzenegger was governor of California.

Meryl Streep

Meryl Streep at the 86th Academy Awards
Meryl Streep charmed the president and first lady at one of the Obamas’ small dinner parties.
(Robyn Beck / AFP / Getty Images)

Obama talks about how he and Michelle, in an effort to make the White House more like “the people’s house,” began hosting small dinner parties where they would invite luminaries whose paths they had crossed and whom they wanted to know better. Oscar winner Streep was among the guests.

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“Usually the dinners would last until well past midnight, full of wine-fueled conversations that inspired us (Toni Morrison at once regal and mischievous, describing her friendship with James Baldwin); instructed us (the co-chair of my Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, Dr. Eric Lander, describing the latest breakthroughs in genetic medicine); enchanted us (Meryl Streep leaning over to softly recite in Mandarin the lyrics to a song about clouds that she’d learned for a part years ago); and generally made me feel better about humanity’s prospects.”

Obama doesn’t name the song Streep recited but chances are it’s one she sings while riding in a car with costar Liu Ye in 2007’s “Dark Matter.”

Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan
Bob Dylan is among those presented with a Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Obama at the White House in May 2012.
(Charles Dharapak / Associated Press)

Obama also talked about their American Music concert series, which featured the “Blowin’ in the Wind” folk singer in February 2010.

“As for the actual concerts, they were absolutely electric. I can still picture Bob Dylan, with just a bassist, a piano player, and his guitar, tenderly reworking ‘The Times They Are a-Changin’.’ When finished, he stepped off the stage, shook my hand, gave a little grin and bow in front of me and Michelle, and vanished without a word.”

Dylan would go on to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Obama in 2012.

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Paul McCartney

Even Obama was excited to meet a Beatle.

“[T]here was the time Paul McCartney serenaded my wife with ‘Michelle.’ She laughed, a little embarrassed, as the rest of the audience applauded, and I wondered what Michelle’s parents would have said back in 1965, the year the song came out, if someone had knocked on the door of their South Side home and told them that someday the Beatle would be singing it to their daughter from a White House stage.”

That night, in June 2010, Obama awarded McCartney with the Library of Congress’ Gershwin Prize for Popular Song. Though not mentioned in the memoir, also on hand to honor the Cute Beatle were Faith Hill, Herbie Hancock, Corinne Bailey Rae, Dave Grohl, Stevie Wonder, Elvis Costello, Emmylou Harris, Jack White, Lang Lang, Jerry Seinfeld and the Jonas Brothers.

Beyoncé

Beyoncé helped the Obamas kick off both terms at the White House, starting with a performance at the first of his 2009 inaugural balls.

“Michelle and I attended a total of ten inaugural balls that evening. Michelle was a chocolate-brown vision in her flowing white gown, and at our first stop I took her in my arms and whispered silly things in her ear as we danced to a sublime rendition of ‘At Last’ sung by Beyoncé. At the Commander in Chief’s ball, we split up to dance with two charming and understandably nervous young members of our armed forces. The other eight balls I’d be hard pressed to remember.”

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Beyoncé also sang the national anthem at Obama’s second inauguration, in January 2013, and performed at Michelle’s 50th birthday celebration.

Lin-Manuel Miranda

And, yeah, there was this playwright guy, with this crazy idea, in 2009. Perhaps Obama underestimated him?

“I remember a young playwright of Puerto Rican descent named Lin-Manuel Miranda, who told us in the photo line before an evening of poetry, music, and the spoken word that he planned to debut the first song of what he hoped would be a hip-hop musical on the life of America’s first Treasury secretary, Alexander Hamilton. We were politely encouraging but secretly skeptical, until he got up onstage and started dropping beats and the audience went absolutely nuts.”

Fortunately, the Obamas gave him a standing ovation that night.

“Hamilton,” produced for $12.5 million in 2015, was still running on Broadway and in touring productions before the pandemic interrupted everything. So far it has made in the neighborhood of $650 million, and a filmed version debuted on premium streamer Disney+ in July.

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