Just as unforgettable was the grin that later lit up the
face of Cathy Freeman as she became the last Olympian to be
handed the torch after a tantalizing relay around the stadium,
from Raelene Boyle and Betty Cuthbert, to Dawn Fraser, Shirley
Strickland, Shane Gould and Debbie Flintoff-King. And then
an eternity it really seemed, as the flaming cauldron wobbled
above Freeman's head, stopped, then began its agonizingly
slow crawl up the 70-m waterfall. A small engineering problem
had caused "some extraordinary adrenaline rushes" among the
organizers, said master of ceremonies Ric Birch. But by evening's
end, the ring of fire was in place, and with it burned all
the promise of the 27th Olympiad.
It will take more than symbols to rekindle an Olympic spirit
dampened in recent times by dishonor and disgrace. And after
Atlanta, Sydney was anxious to produce a Games uncluttered
by commercialism or catastrophe. If the Opening Ceremony is
anything to go by, it might just succeed. As the helicopters,
47 TV cameras, 110,000 pairs of eyes in the stadium and billions
around the world zeroed in on Homebush, it was clear that
nothing had been left to chance. "Don't forget to look for
your audience leader," the crowd was told before proceedings
began, "to know when exactly to take your cues." But in the
ceremony's genuinely showstopping moments-as Meryl Tankard's
aerial ballet turned the stadium into a giant fishbowl, as
an Olympic flag unfurled from the one end of the stadium across
the athletes like the spume of surf-the only appropriate response
was awe.
In a tableau of seamless, often gorgeous image-making, it
was the wobble of that flame that made it all memorable-and
the other bursts of spontaneity that broke through the tightly
controlled script. Many of these came with the Parade of Athletes,
when not even on-field prompters could hurry the joyful gambol
of competitors claiming center stage. As the ceremony's artistic
director, David Atkins, later quipped, "You can't get Brazil
to march in straight lines." Then, as the evening moved into
overdrive, there was diva Tina Arena's deep breath, and wink
to the orchestra, before she launched into The Flame, Gould's
girlish skip and Freeman's giggle. Sydney doesn't like to
stand on ceremony, and as the flame was hoisted, the golden
girls grouped together and chatted as if at a family barbecue.
Compared with Atlanta's handover ceremony four years ago,
when inflatable kangaroos bounced on bicycles, Sydney's show
was relatively cringe-free. "It was everything we wanted and
more," said Sydneysider Heather Georgulis, speaking for many.
"It was very Australian and made you proud to be an Australian."
With 120 stockmen on horseback, 900 indigenous performers
and 100 lawnmowers variously arabesquing across the stage,
the mood called to mind a backyard corroboree. Stilt walkers
and flaming Ned Kellys added levity, and complex logistics
were made to look like child's play. "I wasn't scared," said
aerial star Nikki Webster, who flew on cables 25 m above the
stage. "I was just enjoying myself and having heaps and heaps
of fun." If the "Nature" and "Arrivals" segments sometimes
appeared like a garish fruit salad, the organizers could be
forgiven. "We're the entree," said artistic director Atkins.
Indeed, with a record 199 competing nations present, the
night's real stars were the athletes: from the lone representative
of Brunei Darussalam to the 628-strong Australian team. Relaxed
in their ocher-colored car coats, and slinging toy kangaroos
into the crowd, the Australians basked in the warmest applause.
But beyond the nationalism there was much goodwill-toward
the four athletes from East Timor, parading for the first
time since their homeland's independence, as were teams from
Eritrea, Palau and Micronesia. Even more stirring was the
standing ovation given to the North and South Korean athletes,
who, although they will compete separately, marched together
in support of reunification. After all, said a North Korean
official earlier in the week, "we are the same blood."
They weren't the only countries to be galvanized by the spirit
of the Games. Passing through 11,000 hands during the torch
relay's 100-day, 27,000-km journey, the Olympic flame has
brought Australia into closer touch with itself. The relay
"symbolizes everything that's good about the Games," former
marathon champion Robert de Castella has said. "Somehow it's
been able to capture the balance between the grassroots and
the elite side of the Olympics." In a chain of simple gestures,
the Olympic ideal was made tangible.
As fiercely as the flame burns the hope of a Games "without
doping and without drugs," as Hockeyroos star Rechelle Hawkes
said in the Olympic oath. And in choosing Cathy Freeman as
the flame's final custodian, Games officials rekindled another
hope. It was there in Freeman's eyes as the cauldron rose-a
dedication not only to individual victory but to a collective
one as well: to unity between black and white Australians.
For a moment last Friday evening, anything seemed possible.-
With reporting by Lisa Clausen/Sydney