Trump and Melania photo sparks social media stir

Trump’s night at the Kennedy Center: boos, cheers, and a lot of discourse

On June 11, President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump attended “Les Misérables” at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts—his first return to the venue since reshaping its leadership and programming. The reception inside the theater mirrored the show’s themes of power and protest: a loud blend of applause, chants, and boos as the couple appeared in the presidential box.

“I’ve seen it many times, it’s one of my favorites,”
— Donald Trump, on Les Misérables.

A mixed welcome—and pointed interruptions

As the lights rose at intermission, the atmosphere turned combative. Shouts—some profane, some supportive—ricocheted around the hall. Chants of “U.S.A.” answered a wave of boos; Trump responded with a three-pump fist, a gesture his supporters know well. Multiple outlets characterized the overall crowd reaction as a mix of cheers and jeers, reflecting the polarized views surrounding both the production and the presidency.

Cast opt-outs, drag seats, and culture-war subplots

In the run-up to the performance, reports indicated that some members of the Les Mis company chose to sit out the evening—an option the production reportedly allowed—citing concerns or objections to the presidential attendance. The theater also drew attention for the presence of drag performers in donated seats from critical ticket-holders, a pointed counter-image given Trump’s earlier vows to purge what he called “woke” fare from the Center’s slate.

“NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA,”
— Trump’s earlier pledge about the Kennedy Center’s programming.

Policy headlines shadow the play’s plot

The optics were hard to miss: a musical about the downtrodden rising against state power on the very week the administration deployed federal forces to tamp down protests in Los Angeles. Commentators and politicians seized on the juxtaposition, calling it “wildly ironic” that Les Mis—with its street barricades and songs of resistance—was the show of choice amid those headlines.

The Kennedy Center’s upheaval and the fundraising frame

Trump’s appearance doubled as a fundraising flex. After engineering a conservative overhaul of the institution’s leadership earlier this year—moves that critics say chilled bookings and subscriptions—Trump told reporters the evening raised more than $10 million. Kennedy Center officials, meanwhile, pushed back on select comparisons about subscription declines, saying the renewal campaign timeline shifted and new options were only just rolling out.

U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump depart the White House on June 11, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump is scheduled to attend a performance of Les Misérables at the Kennedy Center this evening. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

“We’re going to make it incredible… We raised a lot tonight,”
— Trump on the Center’s future.

The viral “thumb-hold” and the social-media aftershow

Outside the policy and programming debates, social media fixated on an image of Trump and Melania leaving the venue: his hand appeared to clasp only her thumb. The frame joined a long list of micro-moments from the couple that fuel endless online readings of their body language—amplified by past, similarly viral clips. The meme-ification didn’t change the night’s substance, but it underlined a broader reality: with the Trumps, even small gestures spark big narratives.

Takeaway

The evening at the Kennedy Center became a Rorschach test. Supporters saw a president reclaiming a marquee cultural space and raising millions for it; critics saw a jarring echo between a stage revolution and real-world crackdowns. Either way, the event accomplished what live theater often does: it provoked, in real time, far beyond the footlights.

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