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Tag: Bastille Day

  • Olympic flame arrives in Paris ahead of 2024 Summer Games

    Olympic flame arrives in Paris ahead of 2024 Summer Games

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    Paris — The torch relay ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics reached the French capital for the first time on Sunday, with organizers hoping to build enthusiasm for the Games among the city’s skeptical residents. The flame was first glimpsed during the traditional military parade held every year on the July 14 national holiday, largely known outside the country as Bastille Day, and then began its tour around the city from the Champs-Elysees.

    World Cup-winning soccer great Thierry Henry was given the honor of the first leg on the capital’s most famous avenue, with the torch then heading for landmarks including the parliament and Notre-Dame cathedral

    “It’s not something you turn down, on our national day, on the Champs-Elysees, the Olympics in Paris,” Henry told reporters of his star turn. “Just extraordinary.”

    Paris Celebrates Bastille Day 2024 With Olympic Spirit
    French soccer star Thierry Henry, the first bearer of the Olympic Torch in Paris ahead of the Paris 2024 Summer Games, carries the torch as it is lit, July 14, 2024 on the Champs-Elysees in Paris, France.

    Maja Hitij/Getty


    The flame remained in the capital Monday for a second day, making a stop with some can-can dancers outside the famed Moulin Rouge cabaret show before traveling up to the hill-top Montmartre cathedral.

    The build up to the Paris Games has been marked by what chief organiser Tony Estanguet has called “Olympics-bashing,” with many Parisians the sternest critics of the event and the disruption in the city.

    Many Parisians and visitors frustrated by Olympic disruption

    In the wealthy districts, many families have already left for extended summer holidays, deliberately missing the July 26-August 11 extravaganza.

    “I’m following them putting up the equipment, the stadiums, the impact that it will have on us, not really the torch,” 22-year-old student Manon Skura told AFP at the Champs-Elysees.

    The Games have been designed to take place at locations in the heart of the City of Light, with temporary stadiums built at tourist hotspots such as the Eiffel Tower, Invalides and Place de la Concorde.

    Using the capital’s fabled streets and the river Seine as a backdrop will ensure “iconic” Olympics, organizers say, but it has also led to large parts of central Paris being closed off and left traffic in gridlock.

    First-time visitors to Paris Ian and Belinda Caulfield, from Wales, told CBS News correspondent Elaine Cobbe they were surprised at how much construction there was and how difficult it was to get around.

    “I know it’s within a certain amount of the city, but if you just want to walk down the Seine, there’s a lot of obstructions,” said Ian.

    Paris 2024 Olympic Games - Previews
    Stands for the opening ceremony are seen near river Seine ahead of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games on July 13, 2024 in Paris, France.

    Getty


    The latest change to the capital’s streets has been the appearance of around 44,000 metal barriers around the Seine river, where a spectacular opening ceremony is being planned on July 26.

    “Some residents have shared with us their amazement, as well the physical impossibility of leaving their homes,” the mayor of the upmarket river-side 7th district of Paris, Jean-Pierre Lecoq, said last week.

    Chief organizer Tony Estanguet told AFP that pushing back the pessimists had been one of his most difficult tasks.

    “My role has been to protect our vision against everyone who criticizes, those who don’t believe in it, those who would take pleasure in seeing it not go well,” he said during an interview on Thursday.

    The torch relay had been a huge success nationally, he said, with around five million people turning out to see it since May 8.

    “We’re delighted with how it has gone so far,” he explained. “It has completely met the targets we gave ourselves.”

    Paris 2024 Olympic Games - Torch Relay
    Can-can dancers perform as Julien Segui and a fellow torch bearer carry the Olympic Torch at Moulin Rouge during the second day of the Paris 2024 Olympic Torch Relay, July 15, 2024 in Paris, France.

    Maja Hitij/Getty


    Most importantly, the relay through 450 French towns and cities has taken place without any major security problems — testimony to the huge numbers of police officers deployed and careful planning.

    Around 200 members of the security forces are positioned permanently around the torch, including an anti-terror SWAT team and anti-drone operatives.

    A 26-year-old man was arrested and charged in Bordeaux in May over suspected threats to the procession as it travelled through the southwestern city.

    Although polls generally find a slim majority of French people support the Olympics, a survey on March 25 by the Viavoice group found that 57% of respondents felt “little” or “no” enthusiasm about them in Paris.

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  • Best Bets: Bastille Day, Shōgun and The Wizard of Oz

    Best Bets: Bastille Day, Shōgun and The Wizard of Oz

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    It’s been quite the week, huh?
    Post-Beryl, we hope everyone is safe and well, and we wish you all working electricity
    and Wi-Fi, air conditioning and refrigeration, and (hopefully) a well-deserved break
    from recovery efforts. If you were lucky enough to come through unscathed, or
    just need a place to go with working AC, we’ve put together a list of this
    coming week’s best bets. Keep reading for musicals, classical music, a
    non-American holiday celebration and more.

    One of the most beloved animated Disney
    films-turned-musical will open tonight, July 11, at 7:30 p.m. when Broadway at the Hobby Center presents The Lion King.
    Peter Hargrave, who’s playing the
    villainous Scar in the national tour, recently told the Houston Press that The Lion King is “one
    of those incredible stories that means something different to you in your
    childhood than it does as an adult
    ,” adding that though “the
    adversity
    ” in the show can be scare for kids, he thinks “that
    what children experience most of all is the potential of what a life can
    become.
    ” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays,
    8 p.m. Fridays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 1 and 6:30 p.m. Sundays through
    August 4. Tickets are available here for $35
    to $140.

    The
    Wizard of Oz
    is an American classic, and many have tried to explain why, including
    Salman Rushdie, who noted that the
    1939 MGM film “is
    that great rarity, a film that improves on the good book from which it came.

    On Friday, July 12, at 7:30 p.m. you can see a reimagining of L. Frank Baum’s “optimistic
    American fable about one group of friends’ path toward happiness
    ” when Queensbury Theatre opens their
    main stage production of The Wizard of Oz.
    And of course, it will include the music you love from the MGM film.
    Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, 2 p.m. and 7:30
    p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays through July 28. Tickets can be purchased here for $30 to $65.

    click to enlarge

    Get an early start on Halloween at Insomnia Gallery’s Summer Slashers – Horror Art Show + Night Market at Hardy & Nance Studios.

    Photo by Natalie de la Garza

    We are officially 112 days from
    Halloween, so there’s no better time to celebrate all things horror, which you
    can do on Friday, July 12, from 8 p.m. to midnight when Insomnia Gallery presents their
    annual Summer
    Slashers – Horror Art Show + Night Market
    at Hardy & Nance Studios. The art
    show will showcase the works of local artists, all putting their unique spins
    on different scary movies and TV shows, while the horror-themed night market
    will feature vendors that specialize in spooky. Of course, you can also expect complimentary
    drinks from City Orchard, Equal Parts Brewing, Bad Astronaut Brewing Co. and Eureka Heights Brewery as well as
    food from Boom Box Tacos. The show is
    free and there’s no ticket required for entry.

    In 1938, Aaron Copland halted his work
    on Billy the Kid to compose a piece
    of music for a high school orchestra
    , and the result, An Outdoor Overture, will open the program of the first of four Summer
    Symphony Nights
    over the next two weekends at Miller Outdoor Theatre on
    Friday, July 12, at 8:30 p.m. when the Houston
    Symphony
    returns to Miller to present American
    Masterworks
    . Guest conductor Kellen
    Gray
    will lead the Symphony in the all-American program which, in addition
    to Copland, will also include George Gershwin’s
    Catfish Row, a concert suite from Porgy and Bess, and Florence Price’s Symphony No. 3 in C
    minor. Tickets for the free show can be reserved here starting
    today, July 11, at 10 a.m., though you can always sit on the no-ticket-required
    Hill
    instead.

    click to enlarge

    Ian Lewis and Danny Hayes in Main Street Theater’s production of The Woman in Black.

    Photo by Andrew Ruthven

    There’s nothing better than a ghost
    story in the summer, and Main Street
    Theater
    has one for you: The Woman in Black,
    opening on Saturday, July 13, at 7:30 p.m. The play, adapted by Stephen
    Mallatratt from a novel by Susan Hill, is about a man named Arthur Kipps, who’s
    sure his family is cursed. Danny Hayes, who plays the actor Mr. Kipps hires to
    help tell his story, told the Houston Press the play is “really
    unsettling
    ,” but that it is “not
    just scary for scary’s sake or trying to be scary with silly jump scares
    ,” noting
    that the characters “are
    very human
    ” and the play is “so
    well crafted.
    ” Performances are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through
    Saturdays and Sundays at 3 p.m. through August 11. Tickets are available here for $39 to $59.

    For the second of four Summer
    Symphony Nights
    at Miller
    Outdoor Theatre
    , the Houston
    Symphony
    , under the baton of conductor Gonzalo Farias, will turn to a
    double bill of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky on Saturday, July 13, at 8:30 p.m.
    during Tchaikovsky’s
    Symphony No. 5
    . William
    Grant Still
    ’s “Summerland” and Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto in D major,
    Opus 35 (featuring violinist Blake Pouliot)
    will set the stage for the concert’s finale: Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony
    which, though “not explicitly
    nationalistic
    ,” has “a distinctively
    Russian flavor
    ” and “stands
    as one of [the composer’s] most loved large-scale creations.
    ” You can
    reserve free tickets in the covered seating area here beginning on
    Friday, July 12, at 10 a.m. or you can plan to sit on the no-ticket-required Hill.


    Shōgun, “FX’s
    most watched
    show ever (based on global hours streamed)
    ,” is “one
    of the year’s most outstanding shows
    ” and has been described as “rollicking,
    violent, transcendently silly, often incisive, and most importantly, totally
    legible.
    ” We’ll know within a week whether or not the show, based on a
    novel by James Clavell, will nab an Emmy nod for Best Drama Series (an award it
    could easily win), but on Sunday, July 14, at 2 p.m. the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, will welcome
    local filmmaker Emmanuel Osei-Kuffour, who directed the eighth episode of the
    series, during Shōgun: A Director’s Perspective. Osei-Kuffour
    will introduce the episode, titled “The Abyss of Life,” which will be screened
    and then followed by a Q&A. Admission is free and you can get your ticket here.

    The 14th of July is Bastille Day, a public
    holiday in France that commemorates the day Parisians stormed the Bastille – a
    prison that at one time held Voltaire (as well as the Marquis de Sade) – and
    kicked off the French Revolution. You can find a little “liberté, egalité, fraternité”
    right here in the Bayou City on Sunday, July 14, at 5 p.m. when the Consulate General of France
    in Houston
    hosts Celebrate
    Bastille Day
    at Rice University Stadium.
    Francophiles can enjoy a showcase of sports (remember, the Olympics are in Paris this year),
    music, space and cuisine during the festivities. We’ll also go out on a limb
    and bet you’ll hear at least one rendition of “La Marseillaise.” Admission is
    free, but registration here
    is mandatory.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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