Los Angeles turns the lights back on after a rather somber closing show

JO-2024: Los Angeles turns the lights back on after a rather dark closing show

Organizers of the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles have enlivened a previously somber closing ceremony for the Paris Games by handing the Olympic flag over to movie superstar Tom Cruise, who abseiled from the roof of the Stade de France.

>> Dior and new designers at the 2024 Olympics ceremony

>> JO-2024: before the closing, a big obstacle on the road for the basketball players

>> Althéa Laurin wins gold, first Olympic title for French taekwondo

>> JO-2024: a closing with the air of a Hollywood show at the Stade de France

American actor Tom Cruise rappels from the roof of the Stade de France during the closing ceremony of the Olympic Games on August 11.Photo : AFP/VNA/CVN

At the star of “Mission: Impossible” and of “Top Gun” then escaped on a motorbike, before a video was released of him carrying the flag to the giant letters “Hollywood” in Los Angeles, the next host city of the Summer Games. All to a song by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, purveyors of Californian rock for four decades, to mark the passage of the night from Paris to the sun of the Pacific beaches.

The group then appeared on video for a mini-concert filmed from California, before giving way to another local megastar, singer Billie Eilish, then Snoop Dogg, a special correspondent for NBC television who became a viral icon on the networks outside of Paris, and finally rap legend Dr Dre.

Los Angeles was expected to line up stars of this caliber, as the opening ceremony of the Paris Games, relocated to the Seine, had set the bar at a stratospheric height, with performances by Lady Gaga, Aya Nakamura and the final comeback of Céline Dion on the Eiffel Tower.

The artistic list on Sunday, for the closing at the Stade de France, was more modest, even if the flagship electro-rock group Phoenix, very popular in the United States, provided the musical part with its guests.

During the closing ceremony of the Olympic Games, August 11 at the Stade de France.Photo : AFP/VNA/CVN

Stadium security had to contain the enthusiasm of some athletes who wanted to remain on stage during the concert. “There was a real moment of panic from the organisation (but) we were in our element”two of its members, Thomas Mars and Laurent Brancowitz, told AFP after the show.

Alongside them, the Belgian Angèle came to perform “Nightcall” by Kavinsky (BO of “Drive”), and Air, the long-time companions of French Touch, offered a version of their hit “Playground Love” (“The Virgin Suicides”).

As a link between France and the United States, Yseult concluded the show in style with a performance of “My Way”a Frank Sinatra classic adapted from a Claude François hit, “As per usual”, while another strong voice, that of the American HER, had earlier intoned the American anthem.

Interstellar traveler

Far from the ultra-pop and queer spirit of the opening, relocated along the Seine, the closing show focused on the aerial journey of a golden traveler (Golden Voyageur), straight out of science fiction, arriving by air in a Stade de France plunged into darkness.

French swimmer Léon Marchand arrives with the Olympic flame at the Stade de France on August 11.Photo : AFP/VNA/CVN

Under the golden costume, French breakdancer Arthur Cadre, plays an interstellar traveler who discovers the remains of the Olympic Games, in a distant future where they will have disappeared, and will undertake to rebuild them.

The idea of ​​this show, conceived by the same artistic team led by Thomas Jolly as the opening, was to celebrate the ancient heritage of the Games, the values ​​of sport, and to evoke the future.

On a 2,400 m2 stage: more than a hundred performers, acrobats, dancers and circus artists for a sometimes lugubrious show, mixing dance, contortion, gesture theatre and the influence of street arts. In the most monumental scene, giant Olympic rings rose into the sky.

Nothing that could a priori cause controversy, two weeks after an opening that celebrated diversity in all its forms. It was widely welcomed but also irritated conservative leaders and standard-bearers of the extreme right.

On Sunday, August 11, it was a timeless classic that launched the closing festivities, “Under the Parisian sky”sung at the Tuileries for the extinction of the cauldron by one of the most prominent French singers of the moment, Zaho de Sagazan. Enough to accompany the extinction of the Olympic cauldron and the departure of the flame, in the hands of quadruple gold medalist swimmer Léon Marchand, for the Stade de France.

AFP/VNA/CVN

Share:

Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
LinkedIn

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.