Potpourri of Indian culture at Games opening ceremony
September 28th, 2010 - 7:31 pm ICT by IANSBy Radhika Bhirani
New Delhi, Sep 28 (IANS) Dances, drums, music, yoga, textiles…The sights, sounds and colours of India, encapsulating 5,000 years of the country’s culture, are set to mesmerise at the Commonwealth Games (CWG) opening ceremony Oct 3 and the creative team behind it says they are ready and waiting!
“Everything is going fine. The rehearsals are on in full swing, everything is ready - the stage, the sound and lightsâ¦everything is installed and we are ready. The ceremony will be a grand cultural display of Indian culture and will not give anyone a chance to complain,” Viraf Sarkari, director of Wizcraft International Entertainment, told IANS over phone from Mumbai.
The opening ceremony of the Oct 3-14 will have a total of 7,000 men, women and children putting up as many as six different performances.
The ceremony has been divided into six segments - Rhythm of India, Swagatam, Tree of Knowledge, Yoga, Great Indian Journey and A.R. Rahman’s rendition of the CWG anthem, informed Bharat Bala, who is among the creative team for the event.
Rhythm of India will be a blend of different drums from India and will involve around 1,000 drummers creating a symphony.
Popular singer Hariharan will then sing a welcome song, which will be a cocktail of Hindustani, classical, Carnatic and folk music, and around a 1,000 schoolchildren from the capital will perform on it.
Following this would be the Tree of Knowledge, “based on the tradition of the “guru-shishya”, says Bharat Bala.
“There will be 1,000 Indian classical dancers performing bharatanatyam, kathak, mohiniyattam, manipuri, kathakali and the likes with stalwarts like Sonal Mansingh and Bharti Shivaji, Pandit Birju Maharaj and Raja and Radha Reddy. It will be a perfect depiction of Indian classical tradition,” he added.
Next will be a “unique segment” featuring over 1,000 yoga performers, followed by the Great Indian Journey, which will give a glimpse of rural India with the help of 1,500 performers.
Popular set designer Omung Kumar said: “A train has been made with bamboos. It is almost 600 ft long. It is like a complete Indian bazaar and will show people from all walks of lifeâ¦It is not a swanky train, it is very Indian, very rural,” Kumar told IANS.
The first 10 minutes of the Games opening ceremony will exhibit the rich textiles and traditional crafts of India. To be shown in the first segment, it will showcase the rich heritage, art and craft of handloom weavers and artisans of India.
The crescendo to the grand, two-and-a-half hour ceremony will be brought by Oscar winning composer A.R. Rahman. He will be singing the Games anthem “Jiyo Utho Badho Jeeto”, and will also render his award winning number “Jai Ho” and his most popular number “Maa Tujhe Salaam”.
Bharat Bala says there is elaborate choreography for the last segment that would involve a huge number of performers.
“I hope ultimately everything comes out well thanks to the 10,000 people who have worked day in and day out to make this event a success,” he said.
To project India’s secular culture, azaan, will be a part of the background score at the opening and closing ceremonies of the Commonwealth Games. A qawwali soundtrack, props on the celebration of Eid and Mughal monuments will also be shown.
There will be other attractions at the event too, including the Rs.40 crore aerostat that will be multipurpose, with video content being projected on it. The projections will include animation and graphics.
The costumes for the event have been designed and arranged by Anna Singh, Serath Narendra and Delhi-based designer duo Ashima-Leena.
Organising committee chief Suresh Kalmadi had said: “CWG will be better than Beijing Olympics”.
But Sarkari says he doesn’t want to compare the two events.
“We would not like to compare our ceremony with the opening of the Beijing Olympics. India is so full of colour and culture. The event in Beijing was very technicalâ¦here we will show the human sideâ¦we will show what India stands for. The CWG opening ceremony will show a potpourri of Indian culture in one night.”
- Games opening ceremony tickets yet to be sold - Oct 02, 2010
- 'CWG opener was a miracle waiting to happen' - Oct 04, 2010
- With laser show, song and dance, CWG closing to be 'different' - Oct 11, 2010
- Wholesome praise for CWG, Chidambaram reviews security (Evening Lead) - Sep 28, 2010
- CWG closing ceremony reveals India at its dynamic best - Oct 14, 2010
- Let the Games begin, says India (CWG Curtainraiser) - Oct 02, 2010
- Delhi sweeps aside fuss, gets set to launch CWG - Oct 02, 2010
- Gala Commonwealth Games opening at 7 p.m. - Oct 02, 2010
- Twitterati go ga-ga over the Games opening ceremony - Oct 04, 2010
- Delhi all set for Commonwealth Games Sunday (Night Lead Games) - Oct 02, 2010
- 19th Commonwealth Games begin, marking the India moment (Roundup) - Oct 04, 2010
- All set for Commonwealth Games Sunday (Evening Lead Games) - Oct 02, 2010
- India makes a statement as Games draw to memorable close (Roundup) - Oct 15, 2010
- Athletes thrilled with 'magnificent' CWG opener - Oct 04, 2010
- Prince Charles to read Queen's message, President Patil to deliver address to signal opening of CWG - Oct 02, 2010
Tags: bharti, carnatic, classical tradition, commonwealth games, creative team, cwg, full swing, guru shishya, indian classical dancers, indian culture, international entertainment, kathak, kathakali, pandit birju maharaj, radhika, shivaji, sonal mansingh, tree of knowledge, welcome song, wizcraft