Canadian-born
Robert Goulet forgot the lyrics when invited to sing the anthem before a
Muhammad Ali championship in the 1960s. Perhaps the most notorious rendition of the national anthem was sung by comedian
Roseanne Barr at a
San Diego Padres baseball game in July 1990. Barr screeched the lyrics out loud (claiming that there was an audio problem) as the crowd heckled her and threw objects onto the field in her direction in disgust. She also made several gestures associated with baseball players (such as adjusting one's
protective cup and spitting on the ground), which further drew widespread complaints, including those from President
George H. W. Bush. Barr has not been asked to sing again at a baseball game since. Twenty-two years later, during Barr's
Comedy Central Roast, she closed her routine by singing the lines of the anthem that were not sung during the infamous performance. In
1993, Olympic gold medalist
Carl Lewis attempted to sing "The Star-Spangled Banner" before a
New Jersey Nets game. Lewis sang the entire song off-key and at a range too high for his voice. After his voice broke on the word "glare", he stopped and said "Uh oh", then said "I'll make up for it now" near the end of the song. He was widely ridiculed for the incident.
ESPN SportsCenter anchor
Charley Steiner described Lewis' version of the national anthem as being written by "Francis Scott Off-Key". Singer
John Amirante performed a stirring rendition of the
Canadian and American national anthems before the New York Rangers' win over the
Vancouver Canucks in Game 7 of the
1994 Stanley Cup Finals. The
National Hockey League and
Major League Baseball require venues in both the U.S. and Canada to perform both "The Star-Spangled Banner" and "O Canada" (the Canadian national anthem) at games that involve teams from both countries. At
interleague baseball games between the
Toronto Blue Jays and
Montreal Expos, only the Canadian anthem was played. When hockey legend
Wayne Gretzky played his final game, Amirante changed the line of "O'er the land of the free" to "O'er the land of Wayne Gretzky" to reflect Gretzky's retirement. Pop singer
Anastacia performed the anthem before the
2002 MLB All-Star Game but sang "gave truth" instead of "gave proof". The game ended in a controversial 7–7 tie after 11 innings. Before an April 25, 2003
NBA playoff game between the
Portland Trail Blazers and the
Dallas Mavericks, 13-year-old Natalie Gilbert forgot the words "At the twilight's last gleaming", and Trail Blazers coach
Maurice Cheeks rushed over to help her and they finished it together, the entire
Rose Garden Arena crowd accompanying them. Cheeks and Gilbert received a standing ovation after the song. When performing the anthem before a game of the
2003 American League Championship Series at
Fenway Park, singer
Michael Bolton briefly forgot the lyrics and had to look at his hand, where he had apparently written them down for reference.
René Marie substituted the anthem's lyrics with those of "
Lift Every Voice and Sing" at a
Denver civic event in 2008.
Anita Baker was criticized for her performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Game 4 of the
2010 NBA Finals. At a December 5, 2010 NFL game between the
Denver Broncos and the
Kansas City Chiefs, the
Eli Young Band botched the lyrics at the beginning of the third line of the song and was met with boos. They started over, but skipped from the end of the second line to the fifth line. Despite the second error, they sang the lyrics correctly. Pop singer
Christina Aguilera sang the anthem at
Super Bowl XLV in February 2011, but changed the lyrics of the fourth line from "o'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming" to an alteration of the second line, "what so proudly we watched at the twilight's last gleaming". She later apologized, saying that "I got so lost in the moment of the song that I lost my place." After the
Supreme Court of the United States struck down the
Defense of Marriage Act,
Lady Gaga performed the anthem at
New York City's
gay pride parade on June 28, 2013, changing the last word to "gay". Before Game 5 of the
2014 World Series,
Staind lead singer
Aaron Lewis omitted the words "at the twilight's last gleaming" when singing the anthem. Singer
Fergie drew criticism for her rendition of the anthem at the
2018 NBA All-Star Game. At the 2024 MLB Home Run Derby, country artist
Ingrid Andress sang the anthem completely off-key. She later issued a statement saying that she was "drunk" and that she would be "entering a treatment program to get the help she needs". ==References==