Olympic Games ceremony

The Olympic Flag being raised during the opening ceremony of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics by members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

Olympic Games ceremonies of the Ancient Olympic Games were an integral part of these Games; the modern Olympic games have opening, closing and medal ceremonies. Some of the elements of the modern ceremonies harken back to the Ancient Games from which the Modern Olympics draw their ancestry. An example of this is the prominence of Greece in both the opening and closing ceremonies. During the 2004 Games, the medal winners received a crown of olive branches, which was a direct reference to the Ancient Games, in which the victor's prize was an olive wreath. The various elements of the ceremonies are mandated by the Olympic Charter and cannot be changed by the host nation. Even the artistic portion of the opening and closing ceremonies must meet the approval of the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

The ceremonies have evolved over the centuries. Ancient Games incorporated ceremonies to mark the beginning and ending of each successive game. There are both similarities and differences between the ancient Olympic ceremonies and their modern counterparts. While the presentation of the Games has evolved with improvements in technology and the desire of the host nations to showcase their own artistic expression, the basic events of each ceremony have remained unchanged. The presentation of the Opening and Closing Ceremonies continue to increase in scope, scale and expense with each successive celebration of the Games, but they are still steeped in tradition.

Ancient forerunners

The Ancient Games, held in Greece from ca. 776 BC to ca. 393 AD,[1] provide the first examples of Olympic ceremonies. The victory celebration, elements of which are in evidence in the modern-day medal and closing ceremonies, often involved elaborate feasts, drinking, singing, and the recitation of poetry. The wealthier the victor the more extravagant the celebration.[2] The victors were presented with an olive wreath or crown harvested from a special tree in Olympia by a boy, specially selected for this purpose, using a golden sickle.[2] The festival would conclude with the victors making solemn vows and performing ritual sacrifices to the various gods to which they were beholden.[2]

There is evidence of dramatic changes in the format of the Ancient Games over the nearly 12 centuries that they were celebrated. Eventually, by roughly the 77th Olympiad, a standard 18-event program was established.[3] In order to open a Games in ancient Greece the organizers would hold an Inauguration Festival. This was followed by a ceremony in which athletes took an oath of sportsmanship. The first competition, an artistic competition of trumpeters and heralds, concluded the opening festivities.[3]

Opening

As per tradition, Greek athletes lead the Parade of Nations during the opening ceremony of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics
The lighting of the cauldron during the opening ceremony of the Salt Lake City 2002 Winter Olympics

The Olympic opening ceremonies represent the official commencement of an Olympic Games. In recent Olympics, athletic competition began prior to the opening ceremonies. For example, the football competitions for both men and women at the 2008 Summer Olympics began two days prior (August 6) to the opening ceremonies.[4] As mandated by the Olympic Charter, various elements frame the Opening Ceremonies of a celebration of the Olympic Games.[5][6] Most of these rituals were canonized at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium.[7]

Artistic program

The artistic program is what creates the idiosyncratic element of each ceremony.[8] Coubertin's initial vision of the Modern Olympics featured both athletic competitions and artistic achievements.[9] As the modern Olympics have evolved into a celebration of sport, it is in the opening ceremonies that one can see the most of Coubertin's ideal. The opening ceremonies are an important ritual of the Olympic games. They represent a wide variety of features such as similar qualities and messages that link together local and global issues, as well as cultural similarities at the same scopes.[10] The artistic program of the ceremonies allows the host country to showcase its past and future in a comprehensive way.[10] The ceremonies typically start with the raising of the host country's flag and a performance of its national anthem.[5][6] The host nation then presents artistic displays of music, singing, dance, and theater representative of its culture, history, and the current Olympic game motto.[7] Since the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, the artistic presentations have continued to grow in scale and complexity. The opening ceremony at the Beijing Games, for example, reportedly cost US$100 million, with much of the cost incurring in the artistic portion of the ceremony.[11]

Parade of Nations

The traditional part of the ceremonies starts with a "Parade of Nations", during which most participating athletes march into the stadium, country by country. It is not compulsory for athletes to participate in the opening ceremonies. Due to the short time interval between the ceremonies and the first events of the Games, many athletes competing in these early events elect not to participate. It is most common for swimmers to forgo the Opening Ceremony because their events are early on the first day of competition and soccer players because they play in different cities outside of the host city.

For every Opening Ceremony, each host country has a theme. During the "Parade of Nations", the host country’s goal is to represent their cultural identity and to show the world their place in society. For example, in the 2008 Beijing Olympics the theme was “unity”. On May 12, 2008, a devastating earthquake erupted in Sichuan. As the host country, China wanted to remember this tragic event by having Yao Ming, a Chinese basketball legend, walk hand-in-hand with Lin Hao, a nine-year-old boy who saved some of his classmates during the earthquake.[10]

Each country's delegation is led by a sign with the name of their country and by their nation's flag.[5][6] Traditionally, Greece always enters first because of its historical status as the progenitor of the Olympics, and the host nation enters last.[7][12] In the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, the Greek flag led the parade, while the Greek team entered last, as the host nation and Saint Lucia entered first.

All other participating teams enter after Greece and before the host nation, in order according to a language selected by the organizing committee for those games, which is usually the dominant language in the area of the host city. Announcers announce each country's name in English, French and the dominant language of the area of the host city, if neither English nor French is the dominant language.

In the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, both Spanish and Catalan were official languages of the games, but due to the political sensitivity surrounding the use of Catalan, the nations entered in French alphabetical order. For unknown reasons, all three games taking place in Japan had the nations enter in English alphabetical order instead of Japanese characters. In the 2008 Summer Olympics, teams were ordered by the number of strokes in the Chinese translation of the team name.[13] In the 2010 Winter Olympics, teams entered in English alphabetical order, although the languages of the Olympics are also the languages of the host country, Canada, because English is the more dominant of the two in Vancouver and in the host province of British Columbia. In the 1980 Summer Olympics and the 2014 Winter Olympics, the countries entered in the Cyrillic alphabetical order, which is the Russian language's official script.

Traditional events

Queen Elizabeth II officially opens the 2012 London Olympic Games

After all nations have entered, the President of the Organizing Committee makes a speech, followed by the IOC president. At the end of his speech, he introduces the representative or head of state of the host country who officially declares the opening of the Games. Despite the Games having been awarded to a particular city and not to the country in general, the Olympic Charter presently requires the opener to be the host country's head of state.[14] However, there have been many cases where someone other than the host country's head of state opened the Games. The first example was at the Games of the II Olympiad in Paris in 1900, which had no opening ceremony before as part of the 1900 World's Fair. There are five examples from the United States alone in which the Games were not opened by the head of state.[15]

The Olympic Charter provides[14] that the person designated to open the Games should do so by reciting whichever of the following lines is appropriate:

Before 1936, the opening official would often make a short welcoming speech before declaring the Games open. However, since 1936, when Adolf Hitler opened both the Garmisch Partenkirchen Winter Olympics and the Berlin Summer Olympics, the openers have used the standard formula. Recent editions of the Winter Games have seen a trend of using the first version instead of the second, which happened in both the 2002 and 2010[16] Winter Games. There have been four further exceptions to the rule:

I declare open the Olympic Games of 1976, celebrating the XXI Olympiad of the modern era. [17]

Celebrating the XXIII Olympiad of the modern era, I declare open the Olympic Games of Los Angeles.[18]

On behalf of a proud, determined and grateful nation..., then the standard opening formula followed.

Next, the Olympic flag is carried horizontally (since the 1960 Summer Olympics) into the stadium and hoisted as the Olympic Hymn is played. The Olympic Charter states that the Olympic flag must "fly for the entire duration of the Olympic Games from a flagpole placed in a prominent position in the main stadium".[14] At most games, the flag has been carried into the stadium by prominent athletes of the host nation, but in 2012, it was carried by an international group of athletes and non-athletes famous for promoting Olympic values, including Muhammad Ali as a symbolic flag-bearer.

The flag bearers of all countries then circle a rostrum, where one athlete of the host nation (since the 1920 Summer Olympics), and one judge of the host nation (since the 1972 Summer Olympics) speak the Olympic Oath, declaring they will compete and judge according to the rules of their respective sport.[14] Starting with the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, and continuing with the tradition started at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics a coach from the host nation also speaks the Olympic Oath.

Olympic flame

Vanderlei de Lima lights the Olympic cauldron during the opening ceremony of the Rio 2016 Summer Olympics

Finally, the Torch is brought into the stadium, passed from athlete to athlete during the torch relay, until it reaches the last carrier; often a well-known athlete from the host nation, who lights the fire in the stadium's cauldron.[5][6] Under IOC rules, the lighting of the Olympic cauldron must be witnessed by those attending the opening ceremony, implying that it must be lit at the location where the ceremony is taking place. Another IOC rule states that the cauldron should be witnessed outside by the entire residents of the entire host city. This was made evident during the opening ceremony for the 2010 Games in Vancouver. The venue chosen as the Olympic Stadium was BC Place, which at the time was an air-supported domed stadium. Since there was no way the cauldron could be displayed outside and also be seen at the stadium, two cauldrons were used. For the first torch lighting inside the stadium the organizers chose three-time speed skating medalist Catriona Le May Doan, Canadian Senator Nancy Greene, who won two medals for Canada at the 1968 Games, NBA star Steve Nash, a native of nearby Victoria, and hockey legend Wayne Gretzky, to each light one of four arms of the torch. Notably, Le May Doan's arm refused to light; this was later rectified during the closing ceremony when she got a second chance to light her part of the torch and succeeded.

After the official conclusion of the Opening Ceremony, Gretzky was whisked away to a waiting car which took him to the secondary cauldron. Once there, he lit it to correspond with the tradition of Olympics past.

During the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, the cauldron located inside Olympic Stadium (London) was not visible from outside of the stadium. The image of the lit cauldron was projected on the stadiums rooftop screens during the first week of competition,[20] and live footage was available to all broadcast right holders.[21] See List of 2012 Summer Olympics broadcasters.

Doves

Dove performance from the 2014 ceremony

Beginning at the post–World War I 1920 Summer Olympics, the lighting of the Olympic Flame was followed by the release of doves, symbolizing peace.[22] (Experienced athletes brought newspapers to cover themselves because of the birds' droppings.[23]) The release was discontinued after several doves perched themselves at the cauldron's rim and were burned alive in the Olympic Flame during the opening ceremony of the 1988 Summer Olympics.[22] It was later replaced with a symbolic release of doves after the flame has been lit.[5][6]

In the 2000 ceremony, a dove image was projected on an enormous white cloth held by the athletes on the stadium floor. In 2004, an LED screen was used. In 2006, acrobats formed the shape of a dove. The 2008 ceremony had fireworks representing doves. In 2010, dove figures were projected on the stage floor. The 2012 ceremony had bicyclists with dove-wings, lit by LEDs. In the 2014 ceremony several dancers, holding strands of blue LED lights, danced on the shape of a dove projected on the stadium floor. In the 2016 ceremony, children with dove shaped kites were seen running with the first Olympic Laurel winner, Kipchoge Keino.

Medal presentation

The medal ceremony for the men's team pursuit at the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics

After each Olympic event is completed, a medal ceremony is held. The Summer Games would usually conduct the ceremonies immediately after the event at the respective venues, whereas the Winter editions would present the medals at a nightly victory ceremony held at a medal plaza, excluding the most of indoor events. A three–tiered rostrum is used for the three medal winners, with the gold medal winner ascending to the highest platform, in the centre, with the silver and bronze medalists flanking. The medals are awarded by a member of the IOC.[24] The IOC member is usually accompanied by a person from sports federation governing the sport (such as IAAF in athletics or FINA in swimming), who presents each athlete with a small bouquet of flowers. When the Games were held in Athens in 2004, the medal winners also received olive wreaths in honor of the tradition at the Ancient Olympics. For the Rio Games in 2016, the flowers were replaced by a small 3D model of the Games' logo. After medals are distributed, the flags of the nations of the three medalists are raised. The flag of the gold medalist's country is in the centre and raised the highest while the flag of the silver medalist's country is on the left facing the flags and the flag of the bronze medalist's country is on the right, both at lower elevations than the gold medalist's country's flag. The flags are raised while the national anthem of the gold medalist's country plays.[25] Citizens of the host country also act as hosts during the medal ceremonies. They aid the officials who present the medals and act as flag bearers.[26]

Strict rules govern the conduct of athletes during the medal ceremony. For example, they are required to wear only pre-approved outfits that are standard for the athlete's national Olympic team. They are not allowed to display any political affiliation or make a political statement while on the medal stand.[14] The most famous violation of this rule was the Black Power salute of Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. For their actions, IOC president Avery Brundage demanded their expulsion from the Olympics.[27] If the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) did not comply, then Brundage demanded the removal of the entire track and field team of the United States. The USOC complied with his demands and Smith and Carlos were expelled.[28]

As is customary, the men's marathon medals (at the Summer Olympics) or the men's 50 km and woman´s 30 km cross-country skiing medals (at the Winter Olympics) are presented as part of the Closing Ceremony, which take place on the penultimate and the last days, in the Olympic Stadium, and are thus the last medal presentation of the Games.

Closing

Athletes gather in the stadium during the closing ceremony of the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics
The Parade of Flags during the closing ceremony of the Rio 2016 Summer Olympics
The Olympic Flame slowly going out during the London 2012 Summer Olympics

In contrast to the opening ceremonies, many elements of the Olympic closing ceremonies gradually developed more by tradition than official mandate.[29]

Like the opening ceremonies, the closing ceremonies begins with the raising of the host country's flag and a performance of its national anthem.[29] The traditional part of the closing ceremonies starts with the "Parade of Flags",[29] where flag bearers from each participating country enter the stadium in single file. Behind them march all of the athletes without any distinction or grouping by nationality. This "Parade of Athletes",[29] the blending of all the athletes, is a tradition that began during the 1956 Summer Olympics at the suggestion of Melbourne schoolboy John Ian Wing, who thought it would be a way of bringing the athletes of the world together as "one nation." Prior to the 1956 Games, no Olympic Team had ever marched in the closing ceremony of the Modern or the Ancient Games. It was the very first International Peace March ever to be staged.[30][31] (In 2006, the athletes marched in with their countrymen, then dispersed and mingled as the ceremonies went on.)

After all the athletes enter the stadium, the final medals ceremony of the Games is held. The organizing committee of the respective host city, after consulting with the IOC, determines which event will have its medals presented.[29] During the Summer Olympics, this is usually the men's marathon.[29] Traditionally, the men's marathon is held in the last hours of competition on the last day of the Olympics, and the race is won just before the start of the closing ceremony. However, recent Summer Olympiads in Atlanta, Beijing, and London staged the marathon in the early morning due to heat problems in the host city. Since the 2006 Winter Olympics, the medals for the men's 50 km cross-country skiing event were presented at the closing ceremony. The medallist's national flags are then hoisted and the national anthem of the gold medallist's country is played.

Next, two other national flags are hoisted on flagpoles one at a time while the corresponding national anthems are played: the flag of Greece to honor the birthplace of the Olympic Games, and the flag of the country hosting the next Summer or Winter Olympic Games.[29] In Moscow during the 1980 Summer Olympics boycott, the flag raised to represent the next games host was that of the City of Los Angeles instead of the flag of the boycotting-United States.[32] In Sydney and Athens, two Greek flags were raised because Greece was the next games host (in 2000) and in 2004, because Greece was hosting the games. Then, while the Olympic Hymn is played, the Olympic Flag that was hoisted during the opening ceremonies is lowered from the flagpole and carried from the stadium.[29]

In what is known as the Antwerp Ceremony (because the tradition began at the Antwerp Games), the mayor of the city that organized the Games transfers a special Olympic Flag to the president of the IOC, who then passes it on to the mayor of the city hosting the next Olympic Games.[14] The receiving mayor then waves the flag eight times. There are four such flags:

This tradition posed a particular challenge at the 2006 Winter Games in Turin, Italy. The flag was passed from Sergio Chiamparino, the mayor of Turin, to Sam Sullivan, the mayor of Vancouver, Canada. Mayor Sullivan, who is a quadriplegic, waved the flag by holding it in one hand and swinging his motorized wheelchair back and forth eight times.[33]

The next host nation then introduces itself with artistic displays of dance and theater representative of that country or city. This tradition began with the 1976 Games.

Afterwards, the president of the Organizing Committee makes a speech. The IOC president then makes a speech before closing the Olympics by saying:

And now, I declare the Games of the [ordinal number of Summer Olympics] Olympiad/[ordinal number of Winter Olympics] Olympic Winter Games closed. In accordance with tradition, I call upon the youth of the world to assemble four years from now in [name of next host city] to celebrate the Games of the [subsequent ordinal number of Summer Olympics] Olympiad/[subsequent ordinal number of Winter Olympics] Olympic Winter Games.[34][35][36][37]

Finally, the Olympic Flame is extinguished, marking the end of the Games.[29]

Notes

  1. "Ancient Olympic Games". The Olympic Movement. Retrieved 2010-02-15.
  2. 1 2 3 Swaddling, Judith (1999). The Ancient Olympic Games. University of Texas Press. pp. 90–93. ISBN 0-292-77751-5.
  3. 1 2 Howell, Maxwell L. (1975). "The Ancient Olympic Games:A Reconstruction of the Program". San Diego State University.
  4. "Complete Olympic Schedule". USA Today. 2008-08-10. Retrieved 2008-12-30.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Fact sheet: Opening Ceremony of the Summer Olympic Games" (PDF). International Olympic Committee. October 2014. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 "Fact sheet: Opening Ceremony of the Winter Olympic Games" (PDF). International Olympic Committee. October 2014. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  7. 1 2 3 "The development of the Games – Between festival and tradition" (PDF). The Modern Olympic Games (PDF). International Olympic Committee. 2009-09-12. p. 5. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  8. Arning, Chris (2013), "Soft Power, Ideology and Symbolic Manipulation in Summer Olympic Games Opening Ceremonies: A Semiotic Analysis", Social Semiotics, 23 (4): 523–544, doi:10.1080/10350330.2013.799008
  9. de Coubertin, Pierre (1997). Olympic Memoirs. International Olympic Committee. ISBN 92-9149-015-6.
  10. 1 2 3 Chen, Chwen Chwen; Colapinto, Cinzia; Luo, Qing, "The 2008 Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony: Visual Insights into China's Soft Power", Visual Studies, 27 (2): 188–195, doi:10.1080/1472586x.2012.677252
  11. "Beijing Dazzles: Chinese History, on Parade as Olympics Begin". Canadian Broadcasting Centre. 2008-08-08. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  12. Athletes Parade-Opening Ceremony London 2012 Olympics on YouTube
  13. Walker, Peter (2008-08-08). "Beijing Olympics open with spectacular ceremony". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Olympic Charter" (PDF). The International Olympic Committee. 2011. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  15. The first case was the St. Louis Games at which David Francis, President of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, performed the ceremony; nobody had thought of inviting President Theodore Roosevelt. In 1932, the then-Governor of New York Franklin D. Roosevelt, opened the III Olympic Winter Games in Lake Placid. Later that year the Vice President of the United States, Charles Curtis, opened the Games of the X Olympiad in Los Angeles, California, stating, however, that he was doing so on behalf of President Herbert Hoover. In 1960, Vice President Richard Nixon was sent by President Dwight Eisenhower to open the VIII Olympic Winter Games in Squaw Valley, California, and finally, in 1980, Vice President Walter Mondale stood in for President Jimmy Carter to open the XIII Olympic Winter Games, also in Lake Placid.
  16. "Opening Ceremony: 2010 Winter Games declared open". Vancouver 2010. 12 February 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-19.
  17. Montreal 1976 Olympics Opening on YouTube
  18. 1984 LA Opening Ceremonies – Lighting of the Cauldron on YouTube
  19. Queen Elizabeth Opened London Olympic Games 2012 on YouTube
  20. http://www.london2012.com/news/articles/cauldron-moved-into-position-olympic-stadium.html
  21. http://www.london2012.com/media-centre/article=london-2012-olympic-cauldron-moved-into-position-ready-for-athletics-competition.html
  22. 1 2 "When messengers of peace were burnt alive". Deccan Herald. 2004-08-13. Archived from the original on 2004-08-29. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  23. Fraioli, Mario (2010-11-29). "The Best Ever: Exclusive Interview With Jim Ryun". Competitor.com. Retrieved 17 March 2014.
  24. "Olympic Games – the Medal Ceremonies". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  25. "Symbols and Traditions". USA Today. 1999-07-12. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  26. "Medal Ceremony Hostess Outfits Revealed". China Daily. 2008-07-18. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  27. "1968 Black Athletes make silent protest". BBC. 1968-10-17. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  28. "Mexico 1968". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  29. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Closing Ceremony Factsheet" (PDF). The International Olympic Committee. 2014-09-01. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  30. http://www.johnwing.co.uk
  31. "Melbourne (Equestrian – Stockholm) 1956". British Olympic Association. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  32. "Moscow 1980 — Closing Ceremony — Los Angeles and Moscow's flags in the stadium.". Olympic.org. August 3, 1980. Retrieved February 24, 2014.
  33. Thomas, Andrew (2008-04-18). "Vancouver Mayor Achieves his Dreams with a Big Heart and Mechanical Help". Disabled World. Retrieved 2009-02-15.
  34. "Rogge: Torino Games 'truly magnificent'". USA Today. Associated Press. 2006-02-26. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  35. "Speech by Jacques Rogge at the Closing Ceremony". Beijing 2008. 2008-08-24. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  36. "Vancouver Winter Olympics lowers curtain with joy and sorrow". Xinhuanet. 2010-03-01. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  37. "London 2012: Jacques Rogge praises 'happy and glorious' games". The Daily Telegraph. 2012-08-13. Retrieved 2012-08-13.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.