Friday, 27 July 2012
LONDON 2012: SEVEN THINGS AT THE OPENING CEREMONY
1. Hail Britannia! The Opening
Ceremony is heavy on real-life Britain.
Nods to the industrial revolution,
nursing and other stages of British
history are supposedly included. If
there's not an inflatable
representation of fish and chips, it
would be a minor upset.
2. #savethesurprise to
#fallbythewayside -- Danny Boyle's
ambitious anti-spoiler social media
plan has worked wonders during two
dress rehearsals this week. A quick
search on Twitter reveals that
attendees, with the proper motivation,
are just as invested in keeping a
secret as they are in revealing one.
Unless you really search for them,
spoilers have been hard to find on
the Internet. That's all well and good
for the UK and other parts of the
world, who will see the Ceremony
live, but here in the States, we won't
be so lucky. By the time NBC shows
the tape-delayed torch lighting
around 11:30 p.m. ET on Friday, the
actual event will be five hours old,
long enough for anyone who wants
to know how it ends to find out.
[ Photos: Opening Ceremony
blunders ]
3. James Bond and the Queen -- It's
hardly a spoiler that James Bond
(Daniel Craig) will appear in a short
film shot at Buckingham Palace. That
was heavily reported months ago. Still
up in the air: A rumored appearance
in the movie by Queen Elizabeth II.
She was a revelation in "The Naked
Gun." Boyle discussed the possible
appearance on " Today" with Meredith
Viera. "The entry of the head of state
in our case, which is the queen, is a
key part of the show," he said. "So
yes, we had a meeting with her about
that."
4. Watching from home will feel
different -- Boyle, again: "The way
you experience it on television, will
feel, I hope, much more immediate
and visceral than you normally get.
And there'll be more close-ups, for
instance, which is a way of conveying
emotion."
5. Peter Pan, Mary Poppins and
Voldemort walk into an Olympics --
Some of the most memorable
characters in modern British literature
will appear in the Ceremony. Old
ones will too: A Shakespeare line
from "The Tempest" is expected to
begin the festivities.
[ Related: Why Michael Phelps is
skipping opening ceremony ]
6. Paul McCartney -- Even though
nobody has officially confirmed his
participation, Boyle did all but hum
the opening strains of "Yesterday" in
that "Today" interview. The most
obvious way to use McCartney: A
mass sing-along to "Hey Jude" to
close the Ceremony. Boyle throws
curveballs though, so maybe it'll be
"I've Just Seen A Face" to open. As
long as their no hologram John
Lennon, this will be lovely.
7. A surprise torch lighting -- Fourth-
Place Medal has been saying all along
that Roger Bannister, the man who
broke the four-minute mile, is the
best choice to light the torch. No
offense to David Beckham or anyone
else who was ridiculously rumored to
be in line for the honor, but they're
accomplishments pale in comparison
to the man responsible for the most
legendary athletic achievement of the
20th century. Starting Thursday
morning, there was a big push for
Bannister wagers at London
sportsbooks. His odds, 33/1 one
month ago, fell to 1/1 before most
bookies shut down the market. Could
it be a ruse? Maybe Bannister is the
second-to-last torchbearer and he
passes it along to a group of diverse
British citizens. That would keep in
line with Boyle's egalitarian spectacle,
right?
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