Presidential good time, minus the president
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT COAST -- First things first. He didn’t show.
Together with about 3,000 others at Michigan’s inaugural ball, Resa
Hempfling would have liked to catch a glimpse of the country’s new
president on Jan. 20.
“There’s always a hope that he will stop by,” said Hempfling, a
Newport Coast resident and alto jazz singer. Her performance at this
year’s ball marked the third time in a row she had lent her voice to
celebrating a newly sworn-in president in Washington, D.C.
But while former President Clinton shook hands with Hempfling at both
of his inaugurations and hopped from dance floor to dance floor in the
Capitol, President George W. Bush called it an early night instead.
“He went to Florida[‘s inaugural ball] -- obviously,” Hempfling said
with a smile. “And Texas’ [inaugural ball] -- obviously. And from what we
were told, he was home by 11 p.m.”
Hempfling pushed the presidential absence aside and entertained her
audience along with The Shirelles and Harold Melvin and The Blue Notes on
the main stage set up inside the American History Museum.
“Being on an enormous stage and really do a show, that’s a great
thrill,” she said, adding that it was hard to say which of her three
inauguration experiences was her favorite.
“The first one, of course, was the first one,” she said of Clinton’s
1993 inauguration, where she sang for such celebrities as Dionne Warwick,
Richard Dreyfuss and Lauren Bacall.
“There were many stars that I grew up with,” she said, sitting in the
community room of the apartment complex where she’s living while awaiting
completion of her Newport Coast home in June.
“I got into singing from listening to Dionne Warwick,” she said.
The Clintonites also seemed a little livelier than Bush’s followers,
said Hempfling, who emphasized that she had no political inclinations
either way.
“I’m neither a Republican nor a Democrat,” she said. “It really
depends on the man and what he can do.”
Clinton’s “a tremendously charismatic person,” she continued. “You can
see why he was so successful and loved by so many people.”
In turn, security at the Bush inauguration seemed far more strict than
during Hempling’s previous experiences.
“I have never seen so many Secret Service people,” she said. “They try
to blend in, but they don’t.”
Not that she disagreed with the cautious approach.
“You can never have enough security,” she said, adding that last
year’s close presidential election might have raised additional concerns.
“God forbid something would happen to anybody,” Hempfling said. “There
are enough people out there who want their 15 minutes of fame.”
President or no president, Hempfling came back to California with many
inaugural mementos, including a silver cup engraved with Bush’s name. She
also took home the biggest paycheck. Ever.
“Usually it’s in the hundreds, and this one was higher,” she said,
adding that she didn’ want to disclose the exact sum.
For now, Hempfling will perform in Palm Springs and on Long Beach’s
Queen Mary in the coming months. She’s also working on setting up regular
appearances with a few Newport Beach hotels.
But should she get another call in four years to return to the East
Coast, she wouldn’t hesitate to pack her bags.
“I would love to have met President Bush,” she said, another smile
appearing on her face. “Maybe next time.”
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