2006 Winter Olympics closing ceremony

The Closing Ceremony of the 2006 Winter Olympics took place on 26 February 2006 beginning at 20:00 CET (UTC+1) at the Stadio Olimpico in Turin, Italy.

2006 Winter Olympics
closing ceremony
2006 Winter Olympics closing ceremony
Date26 February 2006 (2006-02-26)
Time20:00 - 0:00 CET (UTC+1)
VenueStadio Olimpico Grande Torino
LocationTurin, Italy
Coordinates45°2′30.30″N 7°39′0.05″E
Filmed byRAI and TOBO

Program

The games were formally closed by International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge calling them "magnificent" This again departed from former IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch's tradition of declaring each games "best ever" and continued Rogge's tradition of assigning each games their own identity in his comments.[1]

Medal ceremony

During the closing ceremony, in the Olympic Stadium, medals were presented for Cross country skiing at the cross-country skiing men's 50 km free event, one of the last events held at the Games. In a new practice for Winter Olympics closing ceremonies, the medals for this long race were awarded during the ceremony similar to the way the medals for the men's marathon are awarded during the closing ceremonies of Summer Olympic Games.

Giorgio Di Centa of Italy, the host nation, won the race and was presented with the gold medal. Eugeni Dementiev of Russia was awarded silver, with Austria's Mikhail Botvinov claiming the bronze. The medal presenter was former Olympian and current IOC member Manuela Di Centa, sister of the gold medalist.

Carnevale

The main theme, to coincide with Italy’s popular masked festival, was Carnevale. The show, directed by Daniele Finzi Pasca, who is known internationally for his theatre performances based on the circus world, included six of the original costumes from the film I clowns by Federico Fellini, on lease from the Italian national film museum. Life-sized Piedmontese tarot cards marching in drill formation signifying all the Luck, Fortune and Life of the Athletes performed to honor every individuals personal story in coming to Torino. The formal moments of the ceremony alternated with artistic moments inspired by the creativity of Viareggio Carnival artists, of travelling shows and of the typical Italian "feste in piazza". The original music was composed, arranged and orchestrated by Italian producer Michele Centonze in collaboration with Stefano Nanni, Giuseppe Gambino and Serenella Occhipinti (a.k.a. Sara 6).

Fiat 500s and Vespas drove through the center of the stadium to symbolize the crowded streets of the center of the Italian cities.

Wind machine

A wind machine was shown with flying acrobats performing an aerial ballet. This was a vertical wind tunnel that blew the acrobats up into mid-air.[2] The machine was custom-built by Aerodium Canada and Aerodium Latvia for use in the closing ceremony. It is very similar to machines used for indoor skydiving facilities.

Parade of the athletes

The athletes entered the arena without strict order, following a tradition started 50 years earlier at the 1956 Summer Games. They had reportedly been given light-up red clown noses to wear, but few athletes were seen wearing the noses.

Intruders

During the final speech by Valentino Castellani, chairman of the Torino Olympic Organizing Committee, a Spanish man ran onto the stage and attempted to speak into the microphone. He managed to shout "Passion lives in Torino", as well as rip off one of the two microphones on the podium, before security officials quickly wrestled him away. Castellani continued his speech with only a minor pause. The intruder's T-shirt was printed with the logo of GoldenPalace.com.[3][4][5]

A young Polish female streaker named Justine tried to perform a similar stunt, holding an Italian flag bearing the handwritten inscription "Mi consenta", and having a drawing by a Roman artist, Ettore Wallemberg III, on her skin, but security officials stopped her.[6]

Vancouver 2010

In accordance with the Olympic Charter which governs the Closing Ceremony, IOC President Jacques Rogge called on the youth of the world to assemble in Vancouver, in four years, for the next Winter Olympics.

Canadian opera star Ben Heppner, himself born in British Columbia, the host province of the next Winter Olympics, sang O Canada to begin the Canadian segment of the ceremonies and mark the beginning of the countdown to the Vancouver Olympic Games in 2010. Heppner sang a version of O Canada which is presented in a combination of Canada's two official languages, English and French, which are also the official languages of the IOC.

Then came the "Oslo Ceremony" (so called because the original Olympic flag, which was used for transfer of the Winter Games, was first used at the 1952 Winter Olympics in Oslo), which is the transfer of the Olympic Flag from the mayor of Turin, Sergio Chiamparino, to Jacques Rogge, and then to the mayor of Vancouver, Sam Sullivan. The flag was kept in the Vancouver City Hall during the next four years. With music playing, Chiamparino ran up the steps to the stage, waved the flag the symbolic eight times, handed it to Rogge, who then handed it to Sullivan. Because Sullivan is a quadriplegic who uses a wheelchair and has limited use of his arms and hands, the flag was placed in a specially-designed flag holder on his chair. Sullivan then spun his chair back and forth eight times to make the flag wave in the air. The assembled crowd roared in approval and rose to their feet in response. This culminated this part of the program. The Olympic flag was next raised again at the next Summer Olympic games in Beijing; opening ceremony there took place on 8 August 2008.

The show included a Vancouver-based specially-cast dance corps together with the latest concepts in boarding, skating and skiing. The Montreal-based members of the cast are multi-talented acrobatic performers drawn from Quebec’s acclaimed École nationale de cirque (National Circus School), and Les sept doigts de la main, energetically supported by the renowned Cirque du Soleil. In addition, Canadian singer Avril Lavigne performed her song, "Who Knows."

In Ottawa, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, himself from Calgary, the host city of the 1988 Winter Olympics, said in a statement that the Olympic flame had begun its journey to Vancouver.[7]

Exit of the Olympic Flag

After the Olympic flag was lowered, Piccoli Cantori di Torino sung Va, pensiero while the flag was exiting the stadium.

The Siege of Turin

After Va, pensiero was sung, there was a segment featuring the Siege of Turin to commemorate the 300th anniversary.

Musical finale

Andrea Bocelli performed his song "Because We Believe (Ama Credi E Vai)" before the flame was extinguished; on stage with Andrea appeared 500 Italian brides in white carrying lighted lilies and formed "the Dove of Peace" formation choreographed by Doug Jack and symbolically "flew" across the stage as the flame took its final breath. An international collection of pop singers closed out the ceremonies as a fireworks display ensued, which was unusual because mostly artists that originate from the host country usually performs. After Canadian Avril Lavigne who had sung during the Vancouver segment, Italian Elisa, who had already sung at the closing ceremony of the 2002 Winter Olympics, performed the song "Luce (Tramonti a nord est)", and Puerto Rican Ricky Martin performed "I Don't Care" and "The Cup of Life".

Anthems were performed by

Notable attendees

Aside from celebrities participating in the ceremonies and members of the International Olympic Committee, the following notable people were in attendance:

Television broadcast

In the United States, NBC broadcast the ceremony on tape delay, starting at 7:00 pm EST and PST/6:00 pm CST and MST, and it was one of the broadcasters that did not edit out the intruders interrupting the speeches.

In Canada, CBC and CBC Newsworld broadcasts the ceremony live, starting at 1:00 pm EST, with several replays on both networks throughout the day.

In the UK, the BBC broadcasts the ceremony live, starting at 7:00 pm GMT.

In Australia, the Seven Network broadcasts the ceremony live, starting at 5.30 am AEST.

In Spain, TVE2 broadcast the ceremony.

In Italy, RAI broadcasts the ceremony live at the same time it start started.

gollark: Interesting.
gollark: > calling anyone a gollark violates rule 1 (you fool), rule 2 (sheesh), rule 3 (you shouldn't speak that in any channel), rule 4 (as gollark, I will appeal to rule 4 regardless of relevance), rule 5 (don't call somebody that), rule 6 (clear starbait), rule 7 (lyric will ban you), rule 8 (uhhh), rule 9 (um.), rule 10 (calling someone a gollark is stealing their personal dignity, which is PII), rule 11 (uhhhh), and rule 12 (that's right)- ubq323, 2026
gollark: I was able to recover the original message text.
gollark: 🐝
gollark: Want 57 condolences from my box?

See also

References

  1. Abrahamson, Alan (1 March 2010). "'Excellent and friendly Games' come to a close". NBC. Archived from the original on 10 March 2010. Retrieved 1 March 2010.
  2. "Olympic Wind Machine 2006 Closing Ceremonies". Bodyflight Network Vertical Wind Tunnels. Archived from the original on 25 August 2006. Retrieved 2 August 2006.
  3. "Intruder interrupts closing ceremony remarks". MSNBC. Archived from the original on 23 May 2006. Retrieved 2 August 2006.
  4. "Il giovane spagnolo che ha interrotto Castellani". La Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved 2 August 2006.
  5. "Un dimostrante fa irruzione sul palco durante il discorso di Castellano". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Retrieved 2 August 2006.
  6. ""Mi consenta" di spogliarmi". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Retrieved 2 August 2006.
  7. "The Prime Minister congratulates our athletes and coaches on their performance in Turin". Web site of the Prime Minister of Canada. Archived from the original on 9 July 2006. Retrieved 2 August 2006.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.