The heart of the world beats in Athens!

Published: 14 August 2004 y., Saturday
Exactly at 20:45, the Opening Ceremony signalled the start of the ATHENS 2004 Olympic Games. 72.000 people inside the Olympic Stadium and four billion more across the globe watched the moment the Games returned to the country where they were born and the city where they revived. The spectators inside the Olympic Stadium watched a live pre-show, hosted by the well known journalist and broadcaster Nikos Aliagas and “High-Priestess” Thalia Prokopiou, who lit the Olympic Torch during the Lighting Ceremony in Ancient Olympia. The two hosts warmed up the audience for the show and introduced them to the various ways of their participation in the Ceremony, since spectators will play an active part in it. Connecting symbolically the Ancient Olympia Stadium with the Athens Olympic Stadium, the beginning of the Opening Ceremony bridged 3,000 years of Olympic Games history. 400 percussionists played to the rhythm of the Greek dance “zeimbeiko” and then to the heartbeat, as the Olympic circles appeared flaming through the water that covered the Olympic Stadium’s field of play. Then the Stadium entered the ATHENS 2004 President, Ms Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, the IOC President, Dr. Jaques Rogge, and the President of the Hellenic Republic, Mr. Konstantinos Stefanopoulos, and the Greek flag was raised. Next, a giant Cycladic head (2,700 b.C.) slowly emerged from the centre of the Stadium. Following the course of Greek art, it then broke apart to reveal to the astonished audience the figure of a “Kouros” statue and then to a classical statue. At the perimeter of the field of play the history of Greek civilisation was depicted, starting from the Minoan age to the present day, through works of art. The 202 National Delegations paraded in the Olympic Stadium in alphabetical order (according to the Greek alphabet), accompanied by music played by the famous DJ Tiesto. After the speeches of the ATHENS 2004 and the IOC Presidents, the President of the Hellenic Democracy proclaimed the ATHENS 2004 Olympic Games open.
Šaltinis: athens2004.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

AB Bank SNORAS will be sponsoring the Lithuanian Olympic team for three years

On 29 April, AB Bank SNORAS, managing the most expansive customer service network in the country, and the Lithuanian National Olympic Committee signed an agreement according to which Bank SNORAS will be sponsoring for three years the preparation and participation of the Lithuanian representatives in the jubilee game of XXX Olympic Games. more »

Puzzle over death of 21 polo horses

Tragedy casts a shadow over the US Open Polo Championships in Florida. more »

World's coolest marathon

38 runners from 14 countries battle it out at sub-zero temperatures in a North Pole marathon. more »

Former cycling champion found dead

The 27-year-old Jobie Dajka, a former world champion cyclist was found dead in his rented Adelaide in Australia. more »

New Yankee Stadium has retro look

The new Yankee Stadium echoes the classic touches of the original house that Ruth built. More than 20,000 fans came to see the $1.5 billion home of baseball's most storied franchise. more »

Deadly Ivorian soccer stampede

Lucky to be alive - injured soccer fans are led to safety after a deadly stampede at a World Cup qualifying match in the Ivory Coast. more »

Last chance for France in qualifiers

The French soccer team train in Clairefontaine ahead of the first of two back-to-back World Cup qualifiers against Lithuania. more »

Gearing up for F1 car racing season

There are just days to go until the new Formula One season begins with the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne. more »

Bird's Nest may be white elephant?

Beijing's iconic Bird's Nest stadium has lost a little of its Olympic sparkle, as the 500 million dollar national stadium now hosts more tourists than sport. more »

Stanford's troubles turn to cricket

Allen Stanford, was slapped with U.S. civil fraud charges and the England and Wales Cricket Board severed ties with Stanford, and The West Indies Cricket Board terminated his contracts. more »