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Springsteen, Bono, Stevie Wonder, Eddie Vedder Headline Obama Presidential Center Opening

Singer Stevie Wonder
Singer Stevie Wonder (via Dreamstime, ID 126747398)

The $850 million Chicago campus opens June 19 to the public; Thursday's ceremony streams globally at noon ET.

Former President Barack Obama has assembled one of the more remarkable one-night lineups in recent memory to mark the grand opening of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago's Jackson Park. The June 18 ceremony features performances and appearances from Bruce Springsteen, U2's Bono and The Edge, Stevie Wonder, Eddie Vedder, Jennifer Hudson, John Legend, Christina Aguilera, Tems, Common and The Roots, with the event livestreaming globally at noon ET.

A South Side Celebration With Global Reach

The grand opening ceremony on Thursday, June 18 serves as the official dedication of the center on Chicago's South Side. Beyond the musical performances, the event will include speeches from Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama, as well as appearances by the nonprofit arts-based youth development organization Guitars Over Guns, the Illinois Army National Guard and Uniting Voices Chicago.

According to a statement from the center, the livestream brings together ‘global leaders, artists, changemakers, and citizens for an inspiring celebration of the values that shaped the Obama presidency and continues to inspire people everywhere to believe in their power to create change.' The public opening follows on Friday, June 19, which is Juneteenth, with a series of celebrations and events planned throughout the weekend.

The Full Performer Lineup

The announced performers and participants for the June 18 ceremony:

  • Bruce Springsteen
  • Bono (U2)
  • The Edge (U2)
  • Stevie Wonder
  • Eddie Vedder (Pearl Jam)
  • Jennifer Hudson
  • John Legend
  • Christina Aguilera
  • Tems
  • Common
  • The Roots
  • Guitars Over Guns
  • Illinois Army National Guard
  • Uniting Voices Chicago

How the Lineup Was Announced

The Obama Presidential Center revealed the roster through a social post built around an animated group chat, showing the artists' responses to their invitations. Springsteen's reaction read, ‘Is this really happening [mind blown emoji].' The Roots replied, ‘Beyond honored. Can't wait to celebrate with you.' Jennifer Hudson, a Chicago native, wrote, ‘Wouldn't miss it for the world.'

The format of the announcement itself reflected the informal, personal tone the Obamas have long cultivated in their public communications, leaning on the artists' own voices rather than a standard press release.

The Center: Scale, Cost and Location

The Obama Presidential Center is a $850 million project financed entirely through private donations. It sits on a 19.3-acre campus in Jackson Park on Chicago's South Side. The center officially opens to the public on June 19, the federal Juneteenth holiday, a date that carries obvious symbolic weight given Obama's place in American history.

The scale of the campus and the private funding model set it apart from traditional presidential libraries, which are typically administered in partnership with the National Archives. The Jackson Park location has been the subject of years of community debate and legal challenges, making the opening a significant milestone beyond the ceremonial.

What we know

  • The grand opening ceremony takes place Thursday, June 18, and livestreams globally at noon ET (11 a.m. CT).
  • Performers and participants include Bruce Springsteen, Bono, The Edge, Stevie Wonder, Eddie Vedder, Jennifer Hudson, John Legend, Christina Aguilera, Tems, Common and The Roots.
  • Barack Obama and Michelle Obama will deliver speeches at the ceremony.
  • The Obama Presidential Center cost $850 million, financed through private donations, and sits on a 19.3-acre campus in Jackson Park.
  • The center opens to the public on Friday, June 19, Juneteenth, with events planned throughout the weekend.
  • Guitars Over Guns, the Illinois Army National Guard and Uniting Voices Chicago will also appear at the ceremony.

The take

Lineups like this don't happen by accident. Springsteen, Bono and Stevie Wonder are three of the most politically engaged performers in rock and soul history, each with decades of benefit concerts, advocacy work and direct relationships with Democratic leadership behind them. Springsteen performed at Obama campaign events as far back as 2008. Bono has been a fixture at global summits and presidential gatherings for thirty years. Wonder's connection to progressive causes stretches back to his work making Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday a federal holiday in the 1980s. Eddie Vedder, meanwhile, has been one of rock's most consistent voices on social issues since Pearl Jam's early years. The presence of Tems and Common alongside that legacy cohort signals a deliberate effort to frame the center as a multigenerational institution rather than a nostalgia project. Jennifer Hudson's Chicago roots add a local dimension that matters in a city where the center's South Side location has carried real political significance throughout its development. For classic rock fans, the pairing of Springsteen with Bono and The Edge is a reunion of sorts: these are artists who have shared stages at Live Aid, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and countless benefit events. Seeing them together for a civic dedication rather than a commercial tour fits the tradition of rock's biggest names showing up when the occasion calls for it.

Why it matters

For classic rock and legacy artists, events like this represent one of the few remaining contexts where a Springsteen, a Bono and a Stevie Wonder appear on the same bill without a ticket price attached. The global livestream means the audience extends well beyond Chicago, giving the performances a reach that rivals major broadcast events. It also reinforces the long-standing connection between the classic rock generation and civic engagement, a thread that runs from Live Aid through the Vote for Change tour to this moment on the South Side.

What's next

The Obama Presidential Center opens to the public on Friday, June 19, Juneteenth, with celebrations and events scheduled throughout the weekend. Thursday's ceremony streams globally at noon ET for those unable to attend in person.

Frequently asked questions

When is the Obama Presidential Center grand opening ceremony?

The grand opening ceremony takes place Thursday, June 18, and livestreams globally at noon ET (11 a.m. CT).

Who is performing at the Obama Presidential Center opening?

Performers include Bruce Springsteen, Bono, The Edge, Stevie Wonder, Eddie Vedder, Jennifer Hudson, John Legend, Christina Aguilera, Tems, Common and The Roots.

Where is the Obama Presidential Center located?

The center is located on a 19.3-acre campus in Jackson Park on Chicago's South Side.

How much did the Obama Presidential Center cost to build?

The center cost $850 million and was financed entirely through private donations.

When does the Obama Presidential Center open to the public?

The center opens to the public on Friday, June 19, Juneteenth, with a series of celebrations and events planned throughout the weekend.

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