Funnily enough I actually wrote multiple research papers and presentations on this exact subject in college!
Short answer: probably not. Like everyone else is saying here, the very idea of cetaceans in captivity is currently highly unpopular and most zoos/aquaria are focused on optics. They want to get their animals out of their facilities and into semi-in situ homes (National Aquarium) or just not get any new ones and keep going with it quietly (Georgia). This sort of project would take obscene amounts of money as well so it would likely be avoided in favor of less controversial options.
My personal wish/a longer form answer: I think someone should try again! I genuinely believe that a good way of preserving these beautiful species would be to at least attempt a captive breeding program, so that there could be some captive ambassadors and also - potentially - to repopulate them in the wild. As crazy as it sounds, the Chinese government has actually successfully taken in some Yangtze finless porpoises in the last few decades and has managed to breed them successfully. They also claim to have maintained enough of a “wild” environment (raising them with formerly wild pod mates, reducing human interaction) that the captive-bred animals retained some degree of wild instincts, and were able to be released into a nature preserve upriver on the Yangtze. Allegedly (and keep in mind, there’s not much independent info on this, so we’re taking a Chinese government program at its word for the most part) the couple of captive-bred porpoises that were released have survived in the wild. We do know that Amazon river dolphins are capable of breeding in captivity, and I believe with technological and husbandry care advancements we could do it again. The question is, do we have the ideological and scientific drive to attempt it? I believe the habitat loss currently being suffered by all river dolphin species is more than enough reason to bring together an international coalition to attempt what the Chinese government is engaging in. We as a species failed to save the Yangtze River dolphin/baiji, but we could at least try to save these other species if we combine a breeding and release effort with vigorous habitat protection and restoration efforts in situ.
Will it happen? I doubt it. Do I think it would be a good thing if the international zoo and aquarium community came together to proactively aid these species like we did with the California condor? Absolutely.