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BBC直播北京奥运会开幕式解说词

2011-05-21 7页 doc 38KB 87阅读

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BBC直播北京奥运会开幕式解说词BBC直播北京奥运会开幕式解说词 BBC直播北京奥运会开幕式解说词 Sue Barker: Good afternoon. In case you are wondering that how important the Olympic Games are and that what it means to the athletes then those three “wise men” should know since they have been to twelve Olympic Games between them....
BBC直播北京奥运会开幕式解说词
BBC直播北京奥运会开幕式解说词 BBC直播北京奥运会开幕式解说词 Sue Barker: Good afternoon. In case you are wondering that how important the Olympic Games are and that what it means to the athletes then those three “wise men” should know since they have been to twelve Olympic Games between them. So let’s say we are here in Beijing and we are now in this magnificent ninety-one thousand seats stadium. It’s the national stadium; it’s affectionately known as “the Bird’s Nest”. We are preparing for what is promised to be, a truly spectacular opening ceremony. It won’t start though until 8 o’clock as promised, 8 o’clock local time on the 8th day of the 8th month, 2008. So you won’t miss a thing.   But now for many years have sport and politics had such an uneasy unbalance. There has been political conflict; there have been international protest and environmental fears. As well, there has been so much debate since the People’s Republic of China and Beijing were awarded the games back in 2001. Huw, the world is watching China around Beijing, can you put these games into political contexts for us please?   Huw Edwards: Well, Sue, this is quite something. This is basically China saying to the world: we arrived; we are a 21st-century super power; we can do the best Olympics ever. They spent 40 billion dollars on these games. Nothing can go wrong as far as they are concerned.   Sue Barker: Carrie, Can you tell us what the Games means to people in China?   Carrie Gracie: Well, as far as I can see, people here are really not exposed to the negative messages we have been talking about: the protest, the environment worries, the heavy-handed security. Most people are proud. They are ready to party after seven years of getting ready.   Sue Barker: There are other issues involved here, Michael. For example, President Bush is here for the Opening Ceremony tonight. For the first time the American president is on the foreign soil for opening ceremony. What has been the reaction to that back home in the United States?   Michael Johnson (4-time Olympic champion (1992-2000)): I don’t think many people are really so surprised that he decided to come here, and I think his decision is less political. I think he probably made the personal decision that he wanted to take advantage of the opportunity to come here, to see this and to be a part of the ceremony, regardless of anyone thinks back at home.   Huw Edwards: This is how the Games of the 29th Olympiad are beginning. 2008 drummers are beating the count-down in a way that has never been before. The drummers themselves are producing remarkable electrifying effect.   Sue Barker: These are the full drums calling up the ancestor 4000 years old, 2008 of them.   Huw Edwards: They are waiting for the signal, for the final count-down that Beijing has been waiting for seven years. A minute to go.   Huw Edwards: The Bird’s Nest stadium is filled by energy of these drummers with the very precise message carried.   Sue Barker: Yes. The message is from Confucius saying two and half thousand years old. “Friends come from the far. How happy we are!”   Huw Edwards: This is the bird’s-eye view across the centre of Beijing. The fireworks are creating burning footprints all the way from the Tian’anmen Square, up the central axis, to the Olympic Green and the neo National Stadium.   Sue Barker: So much resonance to the imperial China here. The Confucius, who of course was taboo during the years of the revolution, now is back in style. So are these imperial accesses right through the Forbidden City, and all the identifying marks of five thousand years of the united imperial history.   Huw Edwards: There will be twenty thousand fireworks used for doing this opening ceremony, and the dust creates the Olympic rings. Five rings represent the five continents, the symbol of Olympic unity, unity of mankind in sport.   Sue Barker: You can see the performers suspended, floating through the air and coming down from the huge wires attached to the roof of this stadium. What is worth mentioning is this is a kind of 21st-century take-on of Buddhist figures you find on the walls of caves of Dunhuang. This is the reference to China’s huge northwestern Tang Dynasty spread of the Silk Road.   Huw Edwards: The rings, which are magically made of dust, now somehow raise in this stadium, indicating the arrival of the Olympics in China.   Carrie Gracie: The genius behind this very original opening ceremony, Zhang Yimou, is very much back in now. In a way, he is the story of contemporary China. He told us the other day that he wanted this ceremony to say to the world: romance, family.   Huw Edwards: What he also says is that China is very proud of its 5000 years of civilization. It is not afraid to modernize.   (After the raising of Chinese national flag) Another spectacular display of fireworks, not just over the Olympic Stadium but over the city. The red flag flutters inside the national stadium. Is the red flag saying something about Chinese history as well, Carrie?   Carrie Gracie: Well, yes, because that’s about what all we are going to say about Chinese Communism in this opening ceremony. The five stars on the flag signify the unity of the country and the leadership of Chinese Communist Party. But we are going to say about a lot more of this kind of images, the traditional, the calligraphy, the culture, the sophistication of ancient China.   Huw Edwards: Indeed. What’s now going to happen is that we are going to enjoy different phases of Chinese history, different aspects of Chinese culture, some of them quieter, some of them on a very big scale.   Very clever is the way they led us from the little film introducing the theme of the scroll to this actual scroll, which is on the floor of this arena. It measures at least 25 meters in width and the length covers the entire length of the arena itself, so believe me, it is big. And this would be the canvas on which lot of tableaus will be painted.   Carrie Gracie: We are going to say that the wash painting developed in China during the Tang Dynasty. To begin, artist puts a few drops of water on ink stone, grinds the ink in circular motion, and then paints with a brush made of wolf hair or horse hair.   Huw Edwards: While the painting goes on, the stream of cultural icons of Chinese historical progress flows on the painting scroll itself. Very cleverly done.   Carrie Gracie: This is the Guchin, the ancient seven-stringed instrument we hear at the same time. We are going to see many of Chinese instruments during the course of this opening ceremony, and this is one of the most harmonious to Chinese ear. And the whole theme of this ceremony is harmony.   Huw Edwards: The Guchin, as Chinese say, has a history of three thousand years, and they claim it is the oldest pluck instrument in the world. I’m sure there will be other views on that, but this is the claim being made.   Carrie Gracie: These are ‘the three thousand disciples’ of Confucius, whether he really had three thousand, no matter, but certainly he does in this performance. What they chant is “All those within four seas can be considered as brothers” from The Analects, Confucius’s most famous work.   Huw Edwards: They are holding bamboo slips, a kind of books with scripts carved on the stringed bamboo slices. Again, the energy created by these men inside this stadium is remarkable.   The three thousand disciples of Confucius are celebrating learning, celebrating Chinese philosophy, and that learning of course takes the forms of books and paper, and of what we are going to see – the printed words.   Carrie Gracie: Confucius had the habit of speaking truth to the power when in and out of favor. – Here we have the example of the first movable type system, which was created here in China, out of ceramic blocks, around 1041 A.D. It was in 1450s for Europe to introduce what generally regarded as the independent invention of moveable type, and that was created by Germany’s Johannes Gutenberg.   We see here the evolution of one character, one special character which holds the clues to everything else this evening. This character is “he”, and it means harmony.   Moveable type began in the Sui Dynasty in the sixth century. Bi Sheng, in the Song Dynasty, improved the matter by making clay types and print. Every Chinese school child is told that the movable type is one of the greatest inventions of ancient Chinese civilization, along with the gun powder, the paper, and the compass. There is the modern character “he”, the one that you will see written in China today.   Huw Edwards: Peach blossoms, romantic and enjoyable, demonstrating the sweetness, peace and love in Chinese people.
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