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Why Olympics opening ceremony artistic director takes reference from TV’s Emily in Paris

  • Thomas Jolly says the Paris Olympics opening ceremony will ‘play with’ stereotypes about the city seen in TV shows like Emily in Paris

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Dancers rehearse in June  2024 for the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. Its artistic director is tight-lipped about what the world will see, but says it will subvert stereotypes of the French capital seen in shows such as Emily in Paris on Netflix. Photo: AFP

In a luxurious hotel room on the 16th floor, overlooking the heart of Paris and the River Seine, Thomas Jolly prepares for the grand spectacle that will inaugurate the Paris 2024 Olympics.

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“I was overwhelmed at first. I wondered how I could create a show where everyone can feel represented as part of this great union,” says Jolly, the actor and stage director who was tapped two years ago to helm the artistic direction of the opening and closing ceremonies. “This responsibility was ambitious, complex, but magnificent for an artist.”

More than a billion people are expected to watch the July 26 opening ceremony. But Jolly, 42, is no stranger to outsize projects in France, producing a 24-hour Shakespearean tetralogy in 2022 and reviving the musical Starmania.

He has won three Molière prizes, France’s highest theatre award. Now, he is tasked with sharing France with the rest of the world in a parade that is expected to last nearly four hours.

Artistic director Thomas Jolly watches a rehearsal. Photo: Xinhua
Artistic director Thomas Jolly watches a rehearsal. Photo: Xinhua

“France is a story that never stops being constructed, deconstructed and reconstructed. It’s alive, it remains alive,” Jolly said in an interview on Friday. This dynamism, he believes, fuels the country’s reputation for protests and strikes – manifestations of France’s constant re-examination of its identity and values.

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