The Beijing Olympics attracted not only elite athletes but also the very best acts of almost every genre. In its first year of full operation, the National Center for the Performing Arts, commonly known as the Eggshell, put on a rich palette of stage shows, with a total of almost 1,000 performances.
On the other end of the spectrum, small theater flourished and dozens of sharp, witty and insightful revivals and new productions were staged. And Shakespeare continued to be popular. Most singers who made their mark were from the world of classical music and it was a meager year for pop and rock, especially before the end of the big sporting events. And all the extravaganzas cannot conceal the little secret that performing arts are still a subsidized affair.
I. Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony(Directed by Zhang Yimou)
It was the most watched show on earth, it was the most lavish too and surprisingly, behind all the glitz and pageantry, there had great significance.
The rich tapestry of Chinese civilization was embodied in a constantly evolving and abstractly fascinating scroll painting, which was the central focus of the one-hour program that preceded the entrance of the athletes and the lighting of the torch.
Among the aspects of Chinese culture extolled, the "Four Great Inventions" of ancient China constituted one of the highlights. As 3,000 disciples of Confucius chanted: "All are brothers within the four seas", blocks, which simulated movable print type, created waves and billows, and revealed the Chinese character for harmony or peace in various stages of its evolution.
The visual effect of rising appeared throughout. To expand on the notion of harmony was a vaguely Taoist visualization of the peaceful coexistence between mankind and nature.
The theme song You and Me was delivered atop a 24-m globe, around which 58 stuntmen walked perpendicularly to the part of the Earth they happened to be, creating an illusion of weightlessness.
The performance celebrated Chinese civilization and the importance of harmony.
As a production, it was probably the biggest in Chinese history, with 15,000 people in the cast and 13 months of rehearsal time and reportedly a 4-billion-strong worldwide audience.
Runner-up: Beijing Paralympics Opening Ceremony
Though much lower in profile, the Paralympics show had its own charm. It had a more global perspective, with an emphasis on the entire universe and was more dreamy and romantic, with heart-warming moments. A mother watched her blind son playing a Four Seasons piece and a young amputee from the Sichuan earthquake realized her dream of becoming a ballerina and dancing in front of a national audience. In a sense, it aimed low but scaled high.
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