Joseph Gordon-Levitt Sings Again; The Bell of the London Olympics
With London's 2012 Summer Olympic Games just six months away, opening ceremonies artistic director Danny Boyle — the cinematic auteur behind Trainspotting and Slumdog Millionaire — has peeled back the curtain. In a videotaped interview posted to the official London Olympics website, Boyle and co-producer Stephen Daldry have revealed that their epic spectacular is called "The Isles of Wonder." It's a name inspired by Caliban's line from Shakespeare's The Tempest ("Be not afeared. The isle is full of noises."), chosen because Boyle saw parallels between "the wondrous beauty of Caliban's island" and his own devotion to Great Britain. To summon those noises, Boyle has commissioned the largest bell ever cast in Europe. Installed at one end of the stadium, the giant bell will strike at precisely 9 p.m. on July 27, signaling the Games' commencement to the world (and giving Big Ben a serious case of gong envy in the process). Afterwards, it will be moved to Olympic Park, where Boyle said he hoped it would continue to ring "for hundreds of years," The Guardian reports.
Some other 2012 Olympics facts:
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Seth Abramovitch
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