September 21, 2024

Ben Platt wears ‘Choice’ button to sing national anthem at MLB All-Star Game

Ben Platt #BenPlatt

Ben Platt anthem

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JULY 19: Ben Platt performs the national anthem before the 92nd MLB All-Star Game presented by Mastercard at Dodger Stadium on July 19, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

Ben Platt, the star of Broadway-hit “Dear Evan Hansen” and its 2021 film adaptation — and a proud product of Los Angeles Jewish education — sang the national anthem at Dodger Stadium before Major League Baseball’s All-Star game on Tuesday. 

Platt delivered his one-minute, thirty-nine second rendition wearing a pink button-down shirt and a button that read “Choice,” while players from both teams — including two Jewish all-stars — watched on the field. 

“Hey thanks Ben Platt for standing up for reproductive rights,” tweeted one of the many users who praised the performance in real time online. 

Platt, 28, attended Sinai Temple and its related school, Sinai Akiba, in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles, as well as Camp Ramah in Ojai, California, and has credited his Jewish upbringing with keeping him calm in big moments on stage. His parents are Marc Platt, a lawyer and producer of theater and film — “Wicked,” “La La Land,” “Legally Blonde” — and Julie Platt, who was recently named chairwoman of the Jewish Federations of North America.

Ben, one of their five children, burst onto the scene in 2015 as the lead in “Dear Evan Hansen,” a musical about a high school student with social anxiety. . The New York Times said his performance was “not likely to be bettered on Broadway this season;” indeed, the show won six Tony Awards, including Best Actor for Platt.

Platt’s anthem performance was also received well online by fans, though a few offered some snark.

The game included two Jewish players — Max Fried, a pitcher for the Atlanta Braves, and Joc Pederson, a San Francisco Giants outfield — for the first time since 2015, when Pederson and Ryan Braun of the Milwaukee Brewers both made the cut.

Fried, 28, who grew up in Santa Monica, wore No. 32 in high school to honor that other Jewish southpaw, Sandy Koufax. Pederson, who is descended from a charter member of Temple Emanuel of San Francisco, grew up in Palo Alto and, like Fried, has played for Team Israel in international competition.

The most Jewish players ever appear in the same All-Star game is three, which has happened twice: Mike Lieberthal, Brad Ausmus and Shawn Green in 1999, and Braun, Kevin Youkilis and Ian Kinsler in 2008.

Platt, for his part, has also done this before — in 2015, he sang the national anthem before a July Fourth game at Nationals Park in Washington, where he was introduced as “the breakout star of “Pitch Perfect” and wore a “Dear Evan Hansen” T-shirt. But no button.

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