Local Weather

Partly Cloudy

Partly Cloudy

max temp: 16°C

min temp: 9°C

Five-day forecast

A lively British history lesson formed the basis of the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games.

To send a link to this page to a friend, you must be logged in.

Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins was given a hero’s welcome as he appeared in the Stadium, dressed in a yellow jersey, to ring the bell heralding the start of the show.

Danny Boyle’s opening ceremony was a mix of high-energy dance routines, the best of British music, a history lesson and a reflection on Britain’s past, including a tribute to lost loved ones.

The green and pleasant land which opened the show soon gave way to a darker scene, as Britain’s industrial past was brought to the forefront.

Kenneth Branagh, as engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, quoted from Shakespeare’s The Tempest, as the ceremony is named from the speech in the play about Isles of Wonder.

Large chimney stacks rose up from the stage into the air, while the greenery was cleared to make way for a black floor. Union workers, suffragettes and Pearly Kings and Queens then came on stage.

Blacksmiths forged five rings from red-hot metal, which were raised into the air to form the interlocking five rings that make up the symbol of the Olympic Games.

An interlude then featured a video clip of one of Britain’s most famous fictional characters, James Bond, visiting Buckingham Palace, where he was greeted by the Queen, who accompanied the spy, played by Daniel Craig, to a helicopter.

In the clip the helicopter flew to the Stadium, and the Queen and Prince Phillip, along with International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Jacques Rogge, were then introduced.

The Union Flag was then raised and God Save the Queen was sung.

In the second section of Boyle’s ceremony - Second to the right, and straight on till morning - tribute was paid to Britain’s children’s fiction and the NHS. Patients and staff from Great Ormond Street Hospital were introduced, and performers, including young children, then took to the stage on hospital beds.

The scene started happily, but after a reading of the opening of JM Barrie’s Peter Pan by Harry Potter author JK Rowling live on stage, it soon turned dark.

Giant puppets of well-known villains from literature, including Voldemort, Captain Hook and Cruella de Vil, then burst out of hospital beds, before a series of Mary Poppins floated out of the sky to the rescue.

In another interlude the London Symphony Orchestra played Chariots of Fire, with special guest Mr Bean, played by Rowan Atkinson.

The final section of Boyle’s opening show - Frankie and June say...Thanks Tim - paid tribute to British music and to technology. It featured a young couple - Frankie and June - who met when June dropped her phone and Frankie found it.

The pair skirted around each other through nightclubs while some of Britain’s most famous music was played, from The Beatles to David Bowie to Queen.

East Londoner Dizzee Rascal, who carried the Olympic Torch in Tower Hamlets at the weekend, performed live at the end of the scene, before Frankie and June kissed in front of a backdrop of famous kisses from films.

The final scene in the section introduced Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the world wide web, to the crowd.

A montage of the Olympic Torch relay was shown before the Flame was seen coming down the River Thames in a speedboat, driven by David Beckham, on its way to the Stadium.

As a tribute, pictures of spectators’ lost loved ones including the late fathers of Boyle and Olympics chief Lord Coe, were shown on a memorial wall before Emile Sande sang the hymn Abide With Me.

Share this article

Most Read News

Mother-of-three Debbie Hawkins with George, left, Anna and Alfie.

Hackney Homes evict severely autistic boy and his family, despite medical staff pleas

A severely epileptic boy and his family were evicted from their home and split up last week due to bureaucratic rules – despite pleas from medical staff warning that the move could cause him to suffer life-threatening fits.

Read full story »

0 comments

   Local advertisers

Multimedia

Other News

Image
Click here to read the Digital Edition of the Hackney Gazette on screen
Use our Wedding site to help you plan your big day!
At WeddingSite we know how much you have to organise for your wedding day, that's why we have designed a set of FREE, simple-to-use tools to make the planning process easy & hassle-free. FIND OUT MORE
Find a date using our online dating and friend finder
You can meet new friends, find romance or simply meet up online with people sharing similar interests and hobbies. FIND OUT MORE
Find a local business using our online directory search
Need a plumber? Or a florist? Or anything else? Search our business directory to find Hackney businesses in just a few seconds. FIND OUT MORE
Family notices from the Hackney Gazette, with readers' tributes
In memoriam, birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, best wishes & special days. FIND OUT MORE

Around the Web See all

Penguin Ricky the Rockhopper being weighed at London Zoo. The birds put on weight in preparation for the summer months. Picture: ZSL

London Zoo residents expect summer even if no one else does

Whisper it, but summer could be on its way - at least according to penguins at London Zoo.

Read full story »