WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sean Connery and Jason Robards, actors who<br>gained fame playing a Cold War secret agent and a Watergate<br>newspaper editor, will be saluted for lifetime achievement at this<br>year's
Tuesday, September 14th 1999, 12:00 am
By: News On 6
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sean Connery and Jason Robards, actors who gained fame playing a Cold War secret agent and a Watergate newspaper editor, will be saluted for lifetime achievement at this year's Kennedy Center Honors. They will be joined by singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder, dancer Judith Jamison and pianist-comedian Victor Borge.
The 22nd annual awards will be presented Dec. 4 at a dinner at the State Department. The next day President Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton will throw a White House reception for the recipients, followed by a gala performance at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, taped for television broadcast later in December.
Robards, 77, and Connery, 69, are being honored for a wide range of acting. Connery, a Scot, is best known for his role during three decades as James Bond, Agent 007, in films based on Ian Fleming's novels.
Robards, born in Chicago, has performed in stage dramas from Shakespeare to Harold Pinter. He has won two Academy Awards, for his portrayals of The Washington Post's Ben Bradlee in 1976's "All the President's Men" and novelist Dashiell Hammett in "Julia" in 1977.
Borge, who turned 90 last January, made his debut as Borge Rosenbaum, a soloist at 14 with the Philharmonic Orchestra of his native Copenhagen. Already celebrated in the Nordic countries for his musical humor before he was 30, he fled the Nazi advance with his American wife and was soon performing with Ed Sullivan, Rudy Vallee and Bing Crosby.
Wonder, a songwriter and singer, is "a musical genius who has been an integral part of American popular culture for the past four decades," said James A. Johnson, Kennedy Center chairman. At 49, he is the youngest of the five being honored.
Blind since birth, Wonder signed a contract at 11 in 1963 with Motown where as "Little Stevie Wonder" he began turning out hit records. He was instrumental in the movement to honor the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. with a national holiday.
Jamison, 56, is a dancer, choreographer and teacher who has led the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater since its founder died in 1989. She was his biggest star for 15 years. Ailey was honored by the Kennedy Center in 1988.
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