Thursday, August 30

Lift off! Paralympics bursts into life with Big Bang

Spectacular start to London Games is out of this world

opening ceremony
Amazing ... opening ceremony

LONDON 2012’s awe-inspiring Paralympic Games burst into life last night — with a Big Bang.

A glowing planet descended on to a giant umbrella in the Olympic Stadium as Britain’s greatest boffin Professor Stephen Hawking urged people everywhere to be inspired by the courage of disabled athletes.
And a huge roar filled the packed arena as the sphere detonated a massive explosion of fireworks.
Stephen Hawking
Centre stage ... Stephen Hawking
The spectacular ceremony — featuring 4,200 athletes and opened by the Queen — was watched by a BILLION viewers on TV.
The Queen, Wills and Kate, PM David Cameron and 2012 boss Lord Coe all watched the spectacular — named Enlightenment — at the Olympic Stadium in East London.
paralympics
Giant apple ... performer sits on top in wheelchair
Alpha Press
Hawking, in a rare public appearance, narrated the opening scene in his familiar synthesised voice from a moon-like stage.
He said: “However difficult life may seem, there is always something you can do and succeed at.”
paralympics ceremony
Mass apeel ... giant apple was symbol of scientific achievements from Newton onwards
He was joined by 600 dancing volunteers around a giant umbrella igniting a “big bang” as 18,000 LED lights in their own umbrellas shone brightly.
Britain’s Got Talent finalists Flawless danced to the Rihanna hit Umbrella accompanied by performers “flying” on brollies above the stadium.
Declaration of Human Rights
Reading and righting ... giant book represents Declaration of Human Rights
The opening scenes introduced the central character called Miranda played by actress Nicola Miles-Wildin who works for a power-wheelchair dance troupe.
The cast created the image of a giant blinking eye using umbrellas to form the iris and sway-pole performers 4.5 metres high as the eyelashes.
paralympic ceremony
Raining champs ... umbrella extravganza
The Queen — there without Prince Philip who is still recovering from a bladder infection — was greeted by a royal fanfare as she took her seat with International Paralympic Committee president Sir Philip Craven.
A team of nine Royal Navy, Army and Air Force personnel raised the Union Jack as a 430-strong choir sang the national anthem with 12 performers signing the words for deaf viewers.
Stephen Hawking
Genius ... Professor Stephen Hawking
Lights under the hundreds of umbrellas lit up to create a dazzling Union Jack.
The 4,200 athletes from 164 nations took their place in the arena, with our 300-strong Paralympics GB squad following tradition and entering last.
The crowd erupted in cheers as Blade Runner Oscar Pistorius carried South Africa’s flag.
The Games were then officially declared open by the Queen. Britain’s greatest Paralympian Tanni Grey-Thompson was among six athletes who FLEW into the sky above the stadium in dazzling gold wheelchairs. She recited the “Brave New World” speech from Shakespeare’s The Tempest.
flying wheelchairs
Spoketacular ... one of the flying wheelchairs
Central character Miranda landed in the middle of a maze of books to learn about Isaac Newton’s discovery of gravity.
She found an apple in the maze and bit into it — with the help of the 62,000 spectators who were each given an apple and bit into it at the same time to make one enormous crunch.
A huge golden apple dropped from the sky, accompanied by jugglers, skaters, tandem riders and wheelbarrows of helium-filled apples. A stream of red tents carried by 128 volunteers collided like atoms on the floor, then Lord of the Rings star Sir Ian McKellen spoke the words of Prospero from The Tempest.
paralympic ceremony
Air we go ... flypast gets show under way
He said: “The greatest adventure is what lies ahead.”
In a celebration of human rights protesters, 275 performers and members of a disabled theatre company danced to punk rocker Ian Dury’s Spasticus Autisticus.
The ceremony, which featured a total of 3,000 volunteer performers, was created by artistic directors Jenny Sealey and Bradley Hemmings and overseen by a team including Billy Elliot film director Stephen Daldry.
Team GB
Procession ... Team GB

PM so proud

DAVID Cameron said the Paralympic Games will make Britain “incredibly proud”.
The athletes will inspire people and change views on disability, the Prime Minister said.
He added: “The Olympic Games made us proud but I think this will make us prouder still.
“We can be very proud that more Paralympians are taking part in more sports, in more stadia, watched by more people than at any time in the past.”
He said the sell-out popularity of the Games was “a great story for our country”.
The Queen also spoke of the country’s “tremendous pride” at hosting the Paralympic Games as she praised the “uplifting spirit” of the event.
She added: “The athletes’ endeavours and triumphs will excite and inspire people wherever they live. I look forward to memorable Games that leave a lasting legacy for London, the UK and the worldwide Paralympic movement.”



- ACTRESS Nicola Miles-Wildin told of her pride after starring in the opening ceremony.
The 34-year-old took the part of Miranda from Shakespeare’s The Tempest and emerged from a blinking eye in the arena.
She said: “I was so excited to tell the story of the Paralympic opening ceremony. It celebrated the amazing athletes and the arts and showed how talented and diverse this country is. I was just proud to be a part of it.”

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