Trump arrives in Air Force One in 2017.
Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Donald Trump timed the takeoff of Air Force One to coincide with the crescendo of “Nessun Dorma,” a UK filmmaker said.
Alex Holder said he got to see how Trump used the “machinery and the apparatus of the presidency.”
“It’s almost like Kim Jong-un-like,” he said.
The aria “Nessun Dorma” that Donald Trump played at campaign events in 2016 was also used as Air Force One flight music, according to the British filmmaker who followed Trump at the end of his presidency.
“There’s just one hilarious story where he actually times the takeoff of Air Force One to coincide with the crescendo of ‘Nessun Dorma,’ which is just absolutely outrageous and hilarious,” said Alex Holder, who interviewed Trump for his documentary series, “Unprecedented.”
Holder was on Air Force One for an interview that ultimately was canceled, he said on “The Bulwark Podcast” in an episode released Tuesday.
But he said he and his crew got to see how Trump used the “machinery and the apparatus of the presidency to engender this image to his fans, which is pretty remarkable.”
“It’s almost like Kim Jong-un,” he said.
During his 2016 presidential campaign, Luciano Pavarotti’s widow told Trump to stop playing the signature aria from Puccini’s opera “Turandot” at campaign events.
“We remind you that the values of brotherhood and solidarity that Luciano Pavarotti upheld throughout his artistic career are incompatible with the world vision of the candidate Donald Trump,” Nicoletta Mantovani wrote then.