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Rice Briefs President on Piano Skills

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From Associated Press

National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, more accustomed to briefing President Bush on world crises, gave him instead a flawless performance of Brahms at Monday’s presentation of the National Medals of Arts and National Humanities Medals.

In a long black ball gown, the accomplished pianist accompanied cellist Yo-Yo Ma in the slow movement of Brahms’ violin sonata in D minor. An approving Ma insisted afterward that Rice, who began playing the piano at age 3 1/2, take several bows to a standing ovation and then he led her across the Constitution Hall stage for a congratulatory kiss from the president.

Spokeswoman Anna Perez said that Rice had earlier in the day squeezed in rehearsal time with Ma between national security meetings.

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Rice’s unusual duet with Ma was, in First Lady Laura Bush’s words, a “prayer for peace.”

They performed at the close of a ceremony in which the Bushes awarded national medals to Ma and 15 other artists and writers: Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation; Latino writer Rudolfo Anaya; country music legend Johnny Cash; actor and director Kirk Douglas; pioneer “color field” painter Helen Frankenthaler; modern dance educator Judith Jamison; comedy director Mike Nichols; Jose Cisneros, illustrator of America’s Southwest; psychiatrist Robert Coles; literacy advocate Sharon Darling; historian and writer William Manchester; the National Trust for Historic Preservation; Richard Peck, novelist for young readers; musicologist Eileen Jackson Southern, and novelist Tom Wolfe.

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