2016 Summer Olympics opening ceremony
Part of 2016 Summer Olympics | |
Date | 5 August 2016 |
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Time | 20:00 – 23:54 BRT (UTC-3) |
Venue | Maracanã Stadium |
Location | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Coordinates | 22°54′44″S 43°13′49″W / 22.91222°S 43.23028°W |
Filmed by | Olympic Broadcasting Services (OBS) |
Participants | 207 delegations +12,000 athletes + 4,000 background performers |
Footage | The ceremony on the IOC YouTube channel on YouTube |
Part of a series on |
2016 Summer Olympics |
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The opening ceremony of the 2016 Summer Olympics took place on the evening of Friday 5 August 2016 in the Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro, starting at 20:00 BRT (23:00 UTC).[1] As mandated by the Olympic Charter, the proceedings combined the formal ceremonial opening of this international sporting event (including welcoming speeches, hoisting of the flags and the parade of athletes, as well as a new feature—the presentation of the International Olympic Committee's Olympic Laurel distinction) with an artistic spectacle to showcase the host nation's culture and history. The Games were officially opened by Acting President of Brazil Michel Temer.[2]
Directed by Fernando Meirelles, Daniela Thomas and Andrucha Waddington, the ceremony featured presentations of the history and culture of Brazil, including its landscape and forests, the history of the Brazilian people dating back to the arrival of the Portuguese, music and samba, and the favelas among other aspects. Portions of the ceremony were also dedicated to the topics of environmental conservation and climate change. The ceremony was intended to have a significantly lower cost than those of other recent Olympics, with a reported budget under R$20,433,298 (US$6.5265 million).
The ceremony was praised by the international media for its vivid, diverse performances, emphasis on multiculturalism, and its appeal to the issue of climate change.
Preparations
[edit]The creative directors for the ceremony were Fernando Meirelles, Daniela Thomas and Andrucha Waddington.[3] Brazilian choreographer Deborah Colker prepared a cast of over 6000 volunteers who danced in the opening ceremony. Rehearsals started at the end of May 2016.[4] Meirelles stated that the content of the ceremony would be a vision of Brazil and what he hoped the country would become, and would try to avoid clichés (with certain exceptions, however, such as Carnival).[5]
The ceremonies would have a significantly lower budget than those of other recent Olympics, totalling only 10% of the total budget for the ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics. Meirelles explained that he would be "ashamed to waste what London spent in a country where we need sanitation; where education needs money. So I'm very glad we're not spending money like crazy. I'm happy to work with this low budget because it makes sense for Brazil." Meirelles outlined that because of the lower budget, the ceremony would eschew "high-tech" ideas such as moving stages and drones; fellow ceremonies director Leonardo Caetano went on to say that the concept of the ceremony would emphasize "originality" over "luxury", and "compensate with creativity, rhythm and emotion".[6][7] Rather than a series of expensive props that would only be used for a single sequence, a large portion of the budget was used to install 110 20,000-lumen projectors which were used to cover the floor in images throughout the ceremony.
On 15 July 2016, it was announced that Anitta, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil would perform during the opening ceremony. Gil and Veloso had also participated as creative advisors for the ceremony. Creative director Daniela Thomas explained that their involvement was meant to reflect the best in Brazilian music.[8]
Venue
[edit]For the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympics and Paralympics, a major reconstruction project was initiated for the Maracanã Stadium. The original seating bowl, with a two-tier configuration, was demolished, giving way to a new one-tier seating bowl.[9] The original stadium's roof in concrete was removed and replaced with a fiberglass tensioned membrane coated with polytetrafluoroethylene. The new roof covers 95% of the seats inside the stadium, unlike the former design, where protection was only afforded to some seats in the upper ring and those above the gate access of each sector.
As of 2023, it remains unclear why the opening ceremony could not be held at the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange (Engenhão), the venue for the Games' athletics events.
Proceedings
[edit]Prologue
[edit]The opening ceremony began with aerial images of the city of Rio de Janeiro in a music video with the song "Aquele Abraço", sung by Luiz Melodia. There was a brief instrumental version of Marcos Valle's "Samba de Verão" (or "Summer Samba") during the portion with performers in silver suits with giant silver sheets. After the projection of the first images, the International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach was introduced. Singer Paulinho da Viola sang the Brazilian National Anthem on a stage inspired by the architectural forms of Oscar Niemeyer. The singer was accompanied by a string orchestra. Brazil's flag was raised and 60 flags were carried by Olympic Brazilian athletes Virna Dias, Robson da Silva, Maurren Maggi and Flávio Canto, and children.[10]
Artistic performances
[edit]The artistic performances were set into motion with an homage paid to the spirit of gambiarra,[11] defined by the organizers as "the Brazilian talent for making the most out of nothing".[12] In the initial part of the opening ceremony laminated inflatable pillows were used during the countdown sequence, Brazilian design was honored with references to Athos Bulcão, indigenous geometry, African prints and Portuguese tiles. Peace and sustainability were featured with the transformation of the peace symbol projection into a tree.
Birth of life
[edit]This part of the opening is also an homage to the Amazon rainforest, whose biggest part covers the country. This was followed by the representation of the birth of the immense forests that covered Brazil and the arrival of the Portuguese people. From the beginning of life, the ceremony illustrated the formation of the indigenous peoples, whose entrance was represented by 72 dancers of the two major associations of the Parintins Festival. The arrival of Europeans in caravels, the forced arrival of enslaved Africans and the immigration of Arab and Japanese people were represented by descendants of these ethnic groups.[13]
Metropolis
[edit]One parkour (the meme and activity originated in Rio) group crossed the stage and jumped on projections of building roofs in the ceremony that highlighted the urbanization of contemporary Brazil, concentrated in large cities. To the sound of the classic song "Construção", by Chico Buarque, acrobats scaled the façades of buildings and set up a wall, behind which a reproduction of the 14-bis plane, flown in real life 110 years earlier in the suburbs of Paris arrived with an actor playing the Brazilian inventor Santos-Dumont. The 14-bis flew from Maracanã through Rio's main sights while Antônio Carlos Jobim's Samba do Avião played until, while the plane flew over Ipanema, faded into "The Girl from Ipanema", played by Daniel Jobim, Jobim's grandson. Gisele Bündchen interpreted the role of "The Girl" and walked through Maracanã Stadium, following the curves that characterized Niemeyer's works, such as the Pampulha Church and the Cathedral of Brasília.[14][15]
Bündchen's catwalk sequence
[edit]Prior to the opening ceremony, there were reports that Bündchen was to be a victim of a robbery during the catwalk sequence, but the ceremony's director later revealed that the scene actually involved a food vendor running up to Bündchen, requesting to take a selfie with her, and that it was cut because it was "not funny".[16]
It was later revealed that another pre-planned sequence was in place for Bündchen after her catwalk, but it had to be cut because she walked too slow during the catwalk.[17]
Voices from the favela
[edit]After Ipanema, the favelas were represented to the sound of samba and funk carioca, with diva Elza Soares, who played the "Canto de Ossanha", and Ludmilla, who sang the "Rap da Felicidade". Later, rapper Marcelo D2 and singer Zeca Pagodinho simulated a duel of rhythms, with the latter sang the 2002's hit "Deixa A Vida Me Levar" (this song was also the theme of the victorious campaign of the Brazilian team in the 2002 FIFA World Cup). The new generation rappers Karol Conká and MC Sofia followed. Cultural performances that simulated conflicts as maracatu and the bumba-meu-boi shared the stage of the stadium. Actress Regina Casé appeared in the stage and mediated the conflict.This also a tribute to the tradition of Brazilian diplomacy, at the mediation of international conflicts in the second half of the 20th century, at this function, two names should be highlighted: Sérgio Vieira de Mello and Ruy Barbosa, before she and the singer Jorge Ben Jor sang the hit song "País Tropical" and turned the stadium in a big "charme" party.[13]
Climate change sequence
[edit]A short video on anthropogenic climate change – one of the themes of the event – was also brought to fore during the ceremony. The video, narrated by Brazilian Academy Award-nominee actress Fernanda Montenegro and British Academy Award-winning actress Judi Dench, also reading from Carlos Drummond de Andrade's poem "The Flower and the Nausea", featured Ed Hawkins' visual spiral indicating rising global temperatures, together with an animated projection of rising sea levels on places that included Amsterdam (host of the 1928 Games); Dubai; Lagos; Shanghai; Florida; and the city of Rio de Janeiro itself.[18]
Athletes Parade
[edit]After that, the delegations representing 207 teams then marched into the stadium during the Parade of Nations traditionally led by Greece, the home of the first Olympics. The crowd gave large applause for other Latin American teams as well as notably Spain, the US, Canada, Italy, Portugal, and Russia. However, the biggest applause (aside from the host nation) came when the team of Refugee Athletes marched into the stadium just ahead of the Brazilian team. They received a standing ovation from the crowd.[19] Some teams were led into the stadium by model Lea T, the first famous transgender person to participate in an Olympic opening ceremony.[20]
Opening
[edit]After the speeches by Rio 2016 Organizing Committee President Carlos Arthur Nuzman and by IOC President Thomas Bach, Kenyan runner and two-time Olympic champion Kipchoge Keino ran up to the stage to receive the first Olympic Laurel award, accompanied by children flying 200 white kites shaped like doves. Earlier, children in Kenya inscribed messages of peace on the kites. At 23:27pm BRT, Brazil's Acting President Michel Temer recited the Games' opening declaration from the stands in Brazilian Portuguese stating:
"Após este maravilhoso espetáculo, declaro abertos os Jogos Olímpicos do Rio, celebrando a XXXI Olimpíada da Era Moderna!" - "After this wonderful spectacle, I declare open the Rio Olympic Games, celebrating the XXXI Olympiad of the modern era!"
— Michel Temer, Acting President of Brazil
Contrary to usual practice, he was not introduced at the beginning of the ceremony, nor was he introduced at the end of President Bach's speech. At the culmination of his speech, Temer was booed by the spectators.[21]
After a burst of fireworks, the Olympic flag then entered the stadium, and was raised while the Olympic Anthem was sung in English by the More Project Youth Choir.
The Olympic oath on behalf of the athletes was then recited by Brazilian sailor Robert Scheidt. The corresponding oaths on behalf of the judges and coaches were taken by Martinho Nobre and Adriana Santos respectively.[22]
There was a massed parade of the 12 samba schools of the Rio Carnival's Special Group, and singers Anitta, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil performed the song "Isto Aqui, O Que É?", by Ary Barroso. The sequence was a tribute to Rio's most famous signature event; the Rio Carnival, which happens on the last four days before Ash Wednesday.
End of torch relay
[edit]Ending the Olympic torch relay at the end of the Opening Ceremony, Gustavo Kuerten brought the Olympic torch into the stadium, relayed the Olympic flame to Hortência Marcari, who relayed to Vanderlei Cordeiro de Lima, who then lit the Olympic cauldron.[23][24]
Cauldron
[edit]The cauldron was lit by Vanderlei Cordeiro de Lima,[23][24] marathon bronze medallist at the 2004 Summer Olympics[25] and recipient of Pierre de Coubertin medal who almost being attacked by an Irish priest during the last kilometers of men's marathon.[26] It had been speculated that Brazilian footballer Pelé would light the cauldron, but he was unable to attend the ceremony because of health problems.[27]
As part of the organizers' appeal to environmental protection and global warming, the Olympic cauldron took on a simpler form in comparison to past designs; it was designed to produce a smaller volume of flame and fewer emissions than previous cauldrons. To enhance the lighting of the smaller flame, it was accompanied by a kinetic sculpture by Anthony Howe, featuring spinning bars of reflective spheres and plates that are designed to evoke the "pulsing energy and reflection of light" of the sun. The sculpture is 12.2 metres (40 ft) in diameter, and has a weight of 1,815 kilograms (4,001 lb).[28][29]
A version of the cauldron was placed on public display in a plaza in front of the Candelária Church. The public cauldron was lit by Jorge Gomes, a 14-year-old runner who was adopted out of poverty and had participated in Rio's Vila Olímpica program – which provides access to sports training facilities to disadvantaged youth.[30][31]
Music
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2016) |
- "Aquele Abraço" – Luiz Melodia
- "Construção" – Chico Buarque
- "The Girl from Ipanema" – performed by Daniel Jobim
- "Canto de Ossanha" – Elza Soares
- "Rap da Felicidade" – Ludmilla
- "Deixa A Vida Me Levar" – Zeca Pagodinho
- "Quero Morrer no Carnaval" – performed by Paulinho da Viola
- "País Tropical" – Jorge Ben Jor and Regina Casé
- Parade of Nations background music
- "Isto Aqui, O Que É?" – performed by Anitta, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil
Anthems
[edit]- National Anthem of Brazil – performed by Paulinho da Viola[32]
- Olympic Anthem – performed by Projeto More*
Officials and guests
[edit]Early estimates indicated that at least 100 heads of state or government were planning to attend the opening ceremony. However, some foreign leaders have been slow to commit to their attendance because of the ongoing political issues and other issues affecting the Games.[33] By the time of the event, more than 50 foreign leaders have confirmed that they are attending the ceremony.[34] Notable guests included :
Dignitaries from International organizations
[edit]- Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon[33]
- Secretary General of OAS Luis Almagro
- Secretary General of UNASUR Ali Rodriguez Araque
- President of the IOC Thomas Bach
Host country dignitaries
[edit]- Brazil
- Acting President of Brazil Michel Temer
- Rio de Janeiro Governor Luiz Fernando Pezão
- Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Paes
- President of the Rio Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games Carlos Arthur Nuzman
Other countries
[edit]- Prime Minister of Andorra Antoni Marti
- President of Angola Jose Eduardo dos Santos
- President of Argentina Mauricio Macri and First Lady Juliana Awada[35]
- Governor-General of Australia General Sir Peter Cosgrove (representing Queen Elizabeth II)[36]
- Chancellor of Austria Werner Faymann
- King Philippe of Belgium[37] and Queen Mathilde
- President of Bolivia Evo Morales
- Governor General of Canada David Johnston (representing Queen Elizabeth II)[38]
- President of Chile Michelle Bachelet
- Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China Liu Yandong (representing President Xi Jinping)
- President of Colombia Juan Manuel Santos[35]
- Former President of Costa Rica Laura Chinchilla
- President of the Czech Republic Miloš Zeman[39]
- Crown Prince Frderik of Denmark[40] and Crown Princess Mary (representing Queen Margrethe II)[40]
- President of Ecuador Rafael Correa
- Prime Minister of Fiji Frank Bainimarama[41]
- President of Finland Sauli Niinistö
- President of France François Hollande[33]
- President of Gabon Ali Bongo Ondimba
- President of Georgia Giorgi Margvelashvili[42]
- President of Honduras Juan Orlando Hernandez
- Secretary for Home Affairs of Hong Kong Lau Kong-wah (representing Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying)[43]
- President of Hungary János Áder[44]
- Speaker of the Parliament of India Sumitra Mahajan (representing President Pranab Mukherjee)
- Deputy Prime Minister of Israel Moshe Kahlon
- Prime Minister of Jordan Abdullah Ensour
- Deputy Prime Minister of Ireland Leo Varadkar
- Prime Minister of Italy Matteo Renzi[35]
- Deputy Prime Minister of Japan Taro Aso
- President of Latvia Andris Berzins
- Prime Minister of Lebanon Najib Mikati
- Prime Minister of Liechtenstein Adrian Hasler
- President of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė[45]
- Grand Duke of Luxembourg Henri
- President of Marshall Islands Hilda Heine
- Secretary of the Government of Mexico Olga Sanchez Cordero (representing President Enrique Peña Nieto)
- King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands[46]
- Prime Minister of the Netherlands Mark Rutte[46] and Edith Schippers (minister)[46]
- Governor-General of New Zealand Sir Jerry Mateparae (representing Queen Elizabeth II)
- General Secretary of Workers’ Party of North Korea Choe Ryong-hae
- President of Kosovo Hashim Thaçi
- Albert II, Sovereign Prince of Monaco[47]
- President of Montenegro Filip Vujanovic
- Crown Prince Haakon of Norway (representing King Harald V)
- President of Paraguay Horacio Cartes[35]
- President of Portugal Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
- Emir of Qatar Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani
- Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Sergei Lavrov
- President of Rwanda Paul Kagame
- President of Serbia Tomislav Nikolić[48]
- President of Slovakia Andrej Kiska
- President of Slovenia Borut Pahor
- Vice President of South Africa Cyril Ramaphosa
- Prime Minister of South Korea Jung Hong-won
- King Felipe VI of Spain and Queen Letizia
- President of Suriname Desi Bouterse
- King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden and Queen Silvia
- President of Switzerland Johann Schneider-Ammann
- Education Minister of Taiwan Pan Wei-chung (representing President Tsai Ing-wen)
- Deputy Prime Minister of Turkey Besir Atalay
- Anne, Princess Royal of the United Kingdom (representing Queen Elizabeth II)
- United States Secretary of State John Kerry (representing President Barack Obama)
- President of Uruguay Tabare Vazquez
- President of the National Assembly of Venezuela Juan Guaido (representing President Nicolás Maduro)
Critical reception
[edit]Christine Brennan wrote for USA Today: "The Rio opening ceremony was exquisitely choreographed as a boisterous show, a poignant social statement and a bold challenge to the world. Who needs money when you have a conscience?".[49] Tom McGowan of cnn.com described the ceremony as "vibrant" and highlighted how it "saluted the country's past and pointed towards a greener future", as well as noting that the ceremony was carried out smoothly despite Meirelles describing the final rehearsal as a "disaster".[11]
Meredith Blake, a reporter from the Los Angeles Times, also praised the organizers who delivered an inspired, vibrant spectacle despite having a lower budget than in previous editions.[50]
David Rooney from The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "Director Fernando Mereilles and his team delivered a sobering call to address global warming and deforestation cloaked in a stirring multicultural celebration of tolerance". He continued: "Mereilles promised a show assembled for just a fraction of London's $42 million price tag. That meant an emphasis on low-tech performance, physical theater and emissions-conscious pyrotechnics. The result was a refreshingly analog opening defined by its rich humanity, exuberant warmth and its spirit of indefatigable resilience".[51] The Guardian's Misha Glenny wrote that Mereilles "pulled off something quite remarkable with this spectacular show, on a budget that seemed to shrink every day", which "combined his dazzling cinematic skills with some extraordinary choreography and lighting displays, and a strong narrative thread that explained Brazil’s complex history to the outside world".[52]
See also
[edit]References
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- ^ Partlow, Joshua; Phillips, Dom (2 August 2016). "Olympic organizers plan to cut a skit allegedly showing a black boy robbing model Gisele". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
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- ^ Marans, Daniel (6 August 2016). "Team Refugees Gets Standing Ovation at Olympics Opening Ceremony". Huffington Post. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
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- ^ "Best man for the job: Vanderlei de Lima lights Olympic cauldron". NBC Olympics. 6 August 2016. Archived from the original on 27 August 2017. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
- ^ de Menezes, Jack (5 August 2016). "Rio 2016: Pele to miss Olympic opening ceremony as ill health prevents football icon from attending". The Independent. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- ^ "Mystery Solved: Why Rio Olympics' cauldron is so tiny". Yahoo! Sports. 6 August 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
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- ^ "Formerly homeless boy who lit Olympic cauldron now has 'beautiful life'". CBC News. Retrieved 22 August 2016.
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- ^ "D. Grybauskaitė tikisi, kad Rio triumfuos tik garbingas sportas". Archived from the original on 15 August 2016. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
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- ^ "Olympic opening ceremony was done on the cheap – but it was heartfelt and dazzling". TheGuardian.com. 6 August 2016.
External links
[edit]Media related to 2016 Summer Olympics opening ceremony at Wikimedia Commons