OLYMPICS / News

Closing ceremony to 'dazzle' the world

Xinhua
Updated: 2008-08-18 15:15

 

Beijing - With less than one week left of the Olympics, Chinese are preparing to dazzle the world again with a glittering closing ceremony on August 24.


The opening ceremony of the 29th Olympic Games held in the National Stadium in this Aug. 8, 2008 file photo. [Xinhua] 


Unlike the opening ceremony which was repeatedly rehearsed, the closing ceremony would not feature any full dress on-site rehearsals, according to Monday's Beijing News.

The National Stadium, better known as the Bird's Nest, where the closing ceremony would be held, would also host the end of the men's marathon on the closing day, it said.

The tight schedule left only eight hours for organizers to reorganize the stadium for the closing ceremony, scheduled to start at 8 p.m, the paper said. The organizers would also allow time for the London 2012 team to rehearse an eight-minute dance show for the handover ceremony.

Small-scale rehearsals were being held in training sites outside the Bird's Nest, the organizers said without giving further details.

Though the content of the closing ceremony remained a secret, the paper said the electronic "scroll", which unfurled China's history in the opening ceremony with Chinese script and pictures, and the miniature globe carrying the two Olympic theme song singers that rose from the underground would not be deployed at the closing ceremony.

Another kungfu display, featuring 350 practitioners from a local martial art school, would be part of the show, in addition to 60 erhu, or Chinese violin, players from eastern province of Jiangsu.

Zhang Yimou, chief director of both the opening and closing ceremonies, said earlier this month that the climax of the close would come as the Olympic flame was extinguished in the main cauldron.

"We are dedicated to creating a happy atmosphere at the closing ceremony. The message is to say goodbye, and to promise to meet again in four years," he said.

The Beijing News reported the organizers had made contingency plans for emergencies that might occur during the ceremony, saying rain still posed the biggest threat.

"Organizers may have to cut or readjust part of the show should there be rain on August 24, but it should not spoil the show on the whole. The Olympic closing ceremony will present the world with a grand, ecstatic party," the paper said, quoting unidentified staff with the BOCOG (Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games).

 

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