More than 300,000 spectators lined the banks of the river, in the first time the opening ceremony had been staged outside the main stadium, making it the biggest-ever launch for an Olympic event.
This was the first time an opening ceremony took place outside of a stadium. Source: EPA / Martin Divisek
Paris 2024 organiser Tony Estanguet had said the opening ceremony needed to “push the limits as far as possible”, showing from the start France’s ambition for the Games.
Here are some of the highlights of the ceremony:
Uninvited rain
Opening ceremony mastermind Thomas Jolly, a renowned French theatre director, had carefully choreographed every minute of the festival along the banks of the River Seine.
Spectators, VIPs, and athletes alike found themselves drenched or huddling in transparent ponchos.
Rain did not dampen the spirits of the people attending the ceremony. Source: SIPA USA / Belga / Jasper Jacobs
Some spectators refused to let the downpour get them down. “I’ve got such an adrenaline rush. It’s very exciting,” said Selene Martinez, 42, who had travelled from Mexico for the ceremony.
“It’s a great idea. The performances are awesome. I just wish it wasn’t raining,” said Pauline Brett, 69, who had come from Chicago with her family.
Zidane delivers the flame
French soccer legend Zinedine Zidane kicked off the opening ceremony with the Olympic flame in his hands.
The Olympic cauldron was lifted by a hot-air balloon. Source: SIPA USA / Алеев Егор
In a pre-recorded video, he ran through a Parisian traffic jam before delivering the flame to a group of children on the metro who then made their way through the Catacombs and to a boat, at which point the broadcast switched to a real-time view of the Seine River.
Olympic legends unite for final torch relay
Other notable Olympians who played an influential role included Tony Parker and Amelie Mauresmo.
Celine Dion’s great comeback
Last month, Dion, who has been battling a debilitating rare neurological condition, had vowed she would fight her way back from the disease that has kept her off-stage.
In a social media post on X, Dion said she was “honoured” to perform at the opening ceremony and “full of joy” to be back in Paris.
A floating parade down the Seine
Led out by Greece through jets of water cascading from a bridge, accompanied by an accordion player, around 7,000 athletes cruised down a 6km stretch of the Seine to the Eiffel Tower on 85 boats.
Delegations were transported in 85 boats down a crowd-lined River Seine. Source: SIPA USA / Pasquale Golia/IPA Sport
Braving the heavy rain, some 300,000 people lined the river banks to cheer on the armada carrying competitors past the city’s iconic sights: the Eiffel Tower bearing the five Olympic rings, the Louvre and Notre Dame Cathedral.
A total of 85 boats carried the team delegations on a four-mile journey through the centre of Paris, with more than 300,000 spectators watching from the riverside and bridges.
Snoop Dogg and a mystery torchbearer
His identity is yet to be revealed.
Gojira shine and Lady Gaga sings in French
“This song was sung by Zizi Jeanmaire, born in Paris a French ballerina, she famously sang Mon Truc en Plumes in 1961”, Gaga said.
Lady Gaga rented pom poms from the Le Lido archive — a French cabaret theatre — and collaborated with Dior to create the costumes. Source: AAP / John Walton/PA
She also studied French choreography to put a “modern twist on a French classic”.
There was a nod to Louis Vuitton, a riverside Moulin Rouge can-can, a fashion runway, rap, ballet, a jet flyover and a beheaded Marie Antionette.
But perhaps the biggest cheer came for the French metal band Gojira who appeared on platforms high on the Conciergerie, an iconic building in the French Revolution, the first time a metal band had appeared at an Olympic opening ceremony.
A massive security operation
The unprecedented ceremony sparked a colossal security operation in a city where memories of the November 2015 Islamist attacks are still raw.
A massive security operation was deployed to keep the event safe. Source: SIPA USA / Bildbyran/Maxim Thore
Around 45,000 police and paramilitary officers were on duty to protect the ceremony, along with 10,000 soldiers and 22,000 private security guards.
Snipers, specialist frogmen, and AI-augmented cameras were deployed, with airspace closed and the area around the Seine virtually locked down.
Source Agencies