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This is an archive article published on July 25, 2012

Preview out,surprise intact

Twitter hashtag savethesurprise flashed on screens during a ticketed dress rehearsal gets people to do just that

Olympic organisers trying to keep Londons opening ceremony secret have appealed to rehearsal spectators and performers not to leak details of the event that insiders describe as spectacular with a touch of quirky British humour. At a rehearsal on Monday night,Oscar-winning film-maker Danny Boyle asked some 30,000 spectators not to post details or photos on social networks of his 42 million ceremony and most honoured his plea,with few secrets buzzing online on Tuesday.

Boyle has voiced frustration at details leaking before Fridays show,particularly after he unveiled part of the set last month to sate growing curiosity.

But the explosion of social media has made secrets almost impossible to keep at this Olympics. In a move to counteract leaks,organisers emblazoned a Twitter hashtag savethesurprise on screens inside the Olympic Stadium on Monday,urging people to use that tag to build a buzz before Friday,and participants hoped this would work. The ceremony is very emotional,very British,with quirky humour. And it will have surprises,even for the critics, said Dikaia Chatziefstathiou,who researches the Olympic movement at Canterbury University and is dancing in the opening ceremony.

Chatziefstathiou said the 10,000 volunteer performers in the three-hour ceremony signed contracts stopping them from giving away details or posting photos onto social network sites,but she was allowed to say the show spanned 1896 to the present.

Organisers will be hoping that a spectacular opening will end complaints from Britons about security bungles,transport woes and the 9.3-billion-pound 14.4-billion cost of the Games,being held as Britain faces recession and unemployment of 8.1 percent.

Hundreds of people took to Twitter and Facebook after Mondays rehearsal to rave about the event,describing it as out of this world,bonkers,with some sarcastic silliness and a mind-blowing finale. Some details are already known about the ceremony that will be watched by about a billion people globally,although at Mondays rehearsal key moments were missing.

We cant show you everything, Boyle said in a brief introduction to the stunt-filled show. If you would not tweet and you would not post,especially pictures,we would really,really appreciate it.

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The ceremony,titled Isles of Wonder and inspired by William Shakespeares play The Tempest,is due to open at 2000 GMT with the ringing of the largest harmonically tuned bell in the world. Queen Elizabeth will open the Games in front of more than 100 world leaders and US first lady Michelle Obama.

Village and cricket

Boyle,who made the gritty film Trainspotting,revealed last month that he will turn the stadium into a British rural idyll complete with live sheep,horses,cows,goats,chickens,nine geese and three sheep dogs much to the disapproval of some animal rights groups. The pastoral scene will also include a game of village cricket and music festival style mosh pits filled with standing members of the public at either end of the stadium.

What the media has since leaked includes elements of the next act of the show,recreating the dark Satanic mills of William Blake,whose poem Jerusalem includes this reference to the Industrial Revolution and has become an anthem to England. Insiders said the industrial revolution was the second of three chapters in the show that then moved on to present day. This final section includes a tribute to the National Health Service and nurses,with reports that Harry Potter villain Voldemort and the magical nanny,Mary Poppins,would appear.

 

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