Warning: Spoilers Ahead
For those who watched the Tokyo2020 Olympic Games live on Friday morning (many countries, including the United States, will re-air the event on taped delay in local primetime), there were a number of highlights. Even with some awkward moments in the fan-less Japan National Stadium, which had graduated placards placed around to give some appearance of an audience, there were still a number of highlight moments at the event.
One mystery was cleared up after Americans woke up to the news on Friday morning that tennis star Naomi Osaka would have her opening match of the Olympic Games moved to Sunday from its originally-scheduled Saturday at the request of the organizing committee.
Ultimately, we learned that this was because Osaka was due to light the Olympic cauldron – one of the highest honors an organizing committee can bestow upon an athlete at the Olympic Games. There was some rumor that retired swimmer Kosuke Kitajima might be the final torch-bearer, but instead it was Osaka who lit the cauldron that will burn for the next two weeks over the Games.
Pianist On Fire🔥🔥🔥
For those wondering who the pianist was that played a long set during the Kobuki performance on stage during the opening ceremony, her name is Hiromi Uehara, who is known by the monomymous moniker “Hiromi.”
Hiromi caught many eyes on social media for her frantic and energetic playing style that included using her elbow at moments.
Hiromi, a jazz composer who weaves a number of influences into her music, is a 42-year old from Hamamtsu, Japan. She began playing piano at age 6, and by 14 had a gig playing with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra.
After spending time as a jingle writer, she enrolled at the famed Berklee College of Music in the United States.
While her performance hasn’t yet been posted officially online, you can see many of her performances on YouTube.
Drone Formations in the Sky
Drones have become a regular part of Olympic opening ceremonies in recent years, but Tokyo might have perfected it. Organizers used drones to create a floating sphere in the sky that ultimately morphed into the moon and planet earth.
Drone shows in the near future might replace fireworks as massive skyward public displays after Tokyo showed that drones can be used not only for capture, but for display as well.
Over 1,800 drones were used in the display, with photos and videos from around Tokyo appearing online.
whatever your opinion on the #Olympics and #Tokyo2020 going ahead, this 1800 drone display is cool as f…. pic.twitter.com/0xqkFue86X
— Aurora Intel (@AuroraIntel) July 23, 2021
Drone light show in the sky.
Theme of #olympic opening ceremony is “United by emotion” pic.twitter.com/a9VXldQpyv— Selina Wang (@selinawangtv) July 23, 2021
That's no moon…it's a #Tokyo2020 drone display! 😲#Olympics | #UnitedByEmotion | #StrongerTogether | #OpeningCeremony pic.twitter.com/bIGD4UonPO
— #Tokyo2020 (@Tokyo2020) July 23, 2021
🚨 Drone appreciation post! 🚨
1,824 drones light up the sky above the Olympic Stadium as the #Tokyo2020 emblem seamlessly becomes a revolving globe. 😍🌏#StrongerTogether #OpeningCeremony pic.twitter.com/mcGteqdJ7n
— The Olympic Games (@Olympics) July 23, 2021
https://twitter.com/TwitterMoments/status/1418584331476422656
Pictograms Come to Life
This was an Olympic moment that will live in lore forever. The story was told about how the Olympic Pictograms, those icon images representing different sports, were invented for the Tokyo 1964 Olympics, the first in Asia, as a way to overcome the language barrier.
The pictograms were all animated and, eventually, performed by a troupe of actors in the opening ceremony in a delightful few minutes of television that served as a main event of the ceremony.
In opening ceremonies that are often filled with nebulous symbolism (the one-world anthem Imagine was on the setlist again for Tokyo), this was a really fun way to tie the Games back to the history of Tokyo’s hosting and offered a different sort of show.
A taste of the animated pictograms was posted in February 2020, which you can see below. We’ll post the full video when available (which won’t likely be until after NBC re-airs its coverage in prime time on Friday evening).
Pita Was Back
For the 3rd straight Olympics (Rio, Sochi, and now Tokyo), Tonga’s delegation was led out by a topless oiled man named Pita Taufatofua. Known globally as “Pita,” the man, born in Australia but raised in Tonga, has become an Olympic icon without ever coming close an Olympic medal.
In 2016, he competed in Taekwondo, losing 16-1 in his first bout. By Sochi, he had picked up cross-country skiing, ultimately becoming the second Tongan to ever compete at the Winter Olympics. He went topless again, in spite of the weather. He finished 114th out of 119 skiiers in the men’s 15km race.
Now in 2020, after a failed attempt to qualify in canoeing, he will be back competing in Taekwondo again.
"The hot, shirtless Tongan flagbearer from Rio is BACK!"
Pita Taufatofua became an overnight sensation five years ago when he marched shirtless and in a traditional Tongan outfit at the opening ceremonies in 2016 and 2018. He is back for #Tokyo2020. https://t.co/lSzzr8Lsf4 pic.twitter.com/bT2HlMoKhO
— The New York Times (@nytimes) July 23, 2021
Irritated with her fist beating the piano, that is not talent, this is just plain odd
You are hysterical, it’s all about the ways in which you can play an instrument and that was nothing short of stunning. The piano is, after all, basically a percussion instrument Donna. Having taken jazz as a teen from a prominent Mexican concert pianist, Orlando Otey, I was enthralled. I will be buying her new album, Spectrum.