The White House Correspondents’ Dinner: Red Carpet Arrivals

The White House Correspondents’ Association dinner in Washington had fewer big-name celebrity guests than it did during the Biden presidency, when Scarlett Johansson, Jon Hamm and Sean Penn mixed with journalists and politicians. But on Saturday a red carpet was rolled out nonetheless.

President Trump, who skipped the annual black tie dinner during his first term, made no plan to attend the gathering before leaving Washington to attend the funeral of Pope Francis in Rome.

An appearance by the comedian Amber Ruffin, who had been booked as the host, was scrapped last month “to ensure the focus is not on the politics of division,” as the association’s president, Eugene Daniels, put it in a letter to members.

Here’s how the people who attended the event — known as “nerd prom” in the capital — looked when they arrived at the Washington Hilton Hotel.

A man dressed all in black stands on the red carpet with his hands in his pockets.
The actor Jason Isaacs.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
The CNN host Abby Phillip.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
The designer Neri Oxman and the financier Bill Ackman.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
The actor Dean Norris.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
Eugene Daniels, left, the president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, with his husband, Nate Stephens.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
The CNN host Kaitlan Collins.Paul Morigi/Getty Images
Dasha Burns, White House bureau chief for Politico.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
Lynda Carter, the actress and singer.Paul Morigi/Getty Images
The CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
Mary Bruce, the ABC News White House correspondent.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
Jacob Soboroff, a correspondent for NBC News.Paul Morigi/Getty Images
The political commentator Kennedy.Paul Morigi/Getty Images
The CNN host Jake Tapper.Paul Morigi/Getty Images
The actress and comedian Alex Borstein.Paul Morigi/Getty Images
The physician and medical journalist Alok Patel.Ken Cedeno/Reuters
Representative Nicole Malliotakis, Republican of New York.Ken Cedeno/Reuters