In 2010, Paul McCartney brought one of his most familiar concert finales into a setting that rarely feels like an ordinary music venue: the White House. What began as a polished tribute evening soon became something warmer and less formal when McCartney invited the room into “Hey Jude.” The cameras caught President Barack Obama, Michelle Obama and their family smiling from the audience as the performance gathered momentum.
McCartney was being honored with the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, and the celebration drew performers from several generations. Yet the closing number did not feel like a ceremonial obligation. His piano-led performance opened into a room-wide singalong, with the audience responding to the easy sense of connection he created. The Obama family’s reaction helped turn a prestigious event into a genuinely joyful musical moment.
Then the evening changed again. Obama moved through the crowd and joined McCartney onstage for the finale, with Michelle and the family following as other guests gathered around them. The surprise was not a rehearsed political gesture; it played like a spontaneous response to a song that had already brought everyone together. McCartney remained at the center, but the growing group onstage made the closing minutes feel shared by the entire room.