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London prepares to save surprise, welcome the world

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It is inspired by Shakespeare’s The Tempest and will take us from pastoral England, with its green meadows and cricket grounds, through modern times, and then look toward the future. Its theme is officially Isles of Wonder. The show will begin at 9 p.m. local time with a James Bond character landing in the stadium via helicopter. Actor Kenneth Branagh will read excerpts from The Tempest.

The stadium’s infield will have hills, streams, cricket grounds, picnicking families, a charming cottage, and 120 farm animals, including 70 sheep, 12 horses, and three cows. There is talk there will be a fake rain cloud for effect. After five days of plentiful sunshine this week, showers are set to return to London on Friday, but they are expected to be gone in time for the show. The official forecast calls for 10 percent chance of rain at the time of the ceremonies.

The second part of the show will tackle the Industrial Revolution, with performers dressed as miners and steel workers.

Replicas of London landmarks such as Big Ben and the Tower Bridge will be used somehow. And, of course, there will be a Beatles tribute. Sir Paul McCartney is among the entertainers scheduled to perform. The cast of the show is around 12,000. Although nobody expects them to replicate the jaw-dropping precision of Beijing’s 2008 drummers, Boyle has high hopes the show will dazzle.

The march of the athletes includes 205 delegations. The U.S. contingent of 529 athletes will be in Ralph Lauren, the Italians in Giorgio Armani. Greece, as birthplace of the Games, enters first. Host Great Britain enters last. In an effort to keep the show to exactly three hours, delegations have been asked to limit the marchers to athletes and only some of the coaches and staff.

The U.S. flag bearer will be two-time Olympian fencer Mariel Zagunis of Beaverton, Ore. She was the first U.S. fencer to win a gold medal with her win as a 19-year-old in Athens eight years ago. She defended her Olympic title in Beijing and remains the top-ranked women’s saber fencer in the world.

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