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7/28/2012 10:28:00 AM

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London Olympics: 2012 Games begin with whimsical opening ceremony
 Members of Britain's team wave to the crowd at Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony Friday night.
                                                (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / July 27, 2012)
 Members of Britain's team wave to the crowd at Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony Friday night.
                                                (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / July 27, 2012)

ONDON — In a city that knows how to do ceremony, from hoary rituals formalized in the Middle Ages to celebrating the Queen's Diamond Jubilee last month partly through the Twitter
 feed @BritishMonarchy, an atmosphere of whimsy and party won out over 
pomp and circumstance during an Olympic opening ceremony that allowed an
 economically beleaguered Britain to pat itself on the back.
 
 Starting from his conviction that Britain "rebooted human existence" with the Industrial Revolution, director Danny Boyle
 called the entertainment piece of the nearly four-hour ceremony Friday 
night a "celebration of the creativity, exuberance and, above all, the 
generosity of the British people."
 
          
                                        
                                        
                                        It was in the spirit of such 
generosity that the organizers chose not a single renowned Olympian to 
light the caldron that will burn until Aug. 12 but seven young athletes 
who embody the London Games' idealistic motto and hope to "inspire a 
generation."
 
 With 260 British Olympic medalists joining them, 
the seven young athletes touched torches to copper petals that rose to 
form a caldron at the center of the stadium floor. It will be moved to 
another position before the track and field events begin next Friday.

 
 Before the torch arrived inside the Olympic Stadium in the hands of 
five-time British rowing gold medalist Steven Redgrave, Boyle had 
leavened the proceedings in a variety of ways, so the ceremony took on 
the overall air of frivolity that usually prevails at the closing rather
 than the opening.
 
 The Sex Pistols' sardonic "God Save the Queen" played in the countdown to the official start of the extravaganza — well before Queen Elizabeth II arrived. Rowan Atkinson,
 a.k.a. "Mr. Bean," hammed it up with the London Symphony Orchestra for 
the "Chariots of Fire" theme and did a Rosie Ruiz turn by jumping into a
 car in a video send-up of the movie's famous beach running scene.
 
 The 86-year-old queen herself took part in a video skit with Daniel Craig, the most recent actor to portray James Bond, in which she and Bond entered the stadium by "jumping" from a helicopter.
 
 The ceremony could not have been more of a contrast from Beijing's four
 years ago, replacing Chinese militaristic precision with British 
fancifulness. Hospital beds for a scene honoring the National Health 
Service were rolling onto the stage while a children's choir sang the 
British national anthem, "God Save the Queen."
 
 A pastoral 
tableau of this "green and pleasant land," complete with sheep, cows, 
thatched roof houses (and, on cue, a couple of brief rain showers) gave 
way to belching smokestacks and pounding music announcing the Industrial
 Revolution and the advent of modernity, with its wonder and terror.
 
 As actors on the stadium floor depicted the forging of one ring, four 
others floated in like UFOs, linking into the five Olympic rings and 
setting off a blaze of fireworks. That was followed by a long, loud 
tribute to British pop (done with music and video at the dizzying pace 
of the Twitter generation), Kenneth Branagh
 as Caliban in Shakespeare's "The Tempest," JK Rowling reading "Peter 
Pan," Lord Voldemort being conquered by a pack of Mary Poppinses, and an
 appearance by Tim Berners-Lee, the English scientist who invented the World Wide Web.
 
 Part hodgepodge, part head-shaker, respectful of tradition and given to
 irreverent pokes in the eye, all this was seen live by billions of 
viewers worldwide, with the exception of the United States, where NBC 
refused to embrace modernity and held the telecast until prime time.
 
 While there were two solemn moments of remembrance, one for those 
killed in conflicts, neither made reference to the 11 Israeli athletes 
and coaches murdered by Palestinian terrorists at the 1972 Munich 
Olympics.
 
 For the first time, the parade of athletes included a
 woman in every country's team. Two of the three Muslim nations that 
finally included women, Brunei and Qatar, marked the occasion with 
female flag bearers. The third, Saudi Arabia, chose a man.
 
 The British team wore white uniforms with gold trim, a touch the 
ancient Greeks who began the Olympics would have seen as hubris.
 
 Two-time Olympic fencing champion Mariel Zagunis bore the flag for the United States team while Muhammad Ali,
 who lit the caldron at the 1996 Olympics, was among the nine people who
 carried the Olympic flag. Because Ali was too infirm to walk half the 
stadium with the flag, he waited for the others at the foot of the hill 
where it was raised.
 
 Queen Elizabeth declared open the third Summer Games to be held in London, Paul McCartney
 led the crowd in a "Hey Jude" singalong, and the world's largest 
harmonically tuned bell tolled intermittently as the 80,000-seat stadium
 emptied.  
 
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