Inside the opulent Trump inaugural dinner designed as a glittery overture to foreign diplomats

President-elect Trump delivers remarks at the Chairman’s Global Dinner on Jan. 17, 2017. Credit: Kevin Dietsch, Getty Images

Three days before Donald Trump was inaugurated president in January 2017, he arrived at a remarkable scene inside an auditorium in downtown Washington designed in the style of a Neoclassical temple.

About 550 guests — diplomats, wealthy megadonors, members of Congress and Cabinet nominees — dined on filet mignon and black cod as they watched a performance by the country music band Alabama and a straight-from-Las Vegas musical extravaganza. Mounds of red roses were arranged on tables, and a calligrapher was on site to inscribe the names of last-minute guests on seating cards.

The gathering, which cost the inaugural committee about $8,000 per person, was one of the most opulent events of the five-day inaugural celebration — yet it was not designed to showcase the new president, who decided to attend at the last minute, according to internal documents and people familiar with the planning.

View the complete March 15 article by Michael Kranish, Rosalind S. Helderman, Mary Jordan and Tom Hamburger on The Washington Post website here.