Actor
Nomura to orchestrate Tokyo 2020 ceremonies
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[July 30, 2018]
By Jack Tarrant
FUKUSHIMA PREFECTURE, Japan (Reuters) -
Japanese actor Mansai Nomura will orchestrate the opening and
closing ceremonies for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games,
it was announced on Monday.
Following a Tokyo 2020 executive board meeting in Fukushima
Prefecture, Nomura was named as the chief executive creative
director overseeing all four ceremonies.
Nomura is best known in Japan for his performances as an actor
featuring in kyogen, a traditional form of comedic theater. The
52-year-old won the prize for the best actor at the prestigious Blue
Ribbon Awards in 2001.
"He is the person who is to carry out the image and the message of
Tokyo 2020," said Tokyo 2020 Honorary President Fujio Mitarai.
"That person has the role of implementing our spirit and vision of
the Tokyo 2020 Games at all four ceremonies.
"Mansai Nomura is a renowned figure, both domestically and
internationally and he is knowledgeable in both traditional Japanese
art and modern theatrical art."
The board meeting was held at the recently re-opened J-Village
complex in Fukushima Prefecture. The facility, which previously
played host to the Argentine soccer team during the 2002 World Cup,
was used as a base for rescue teams working in the wake of the 2011
earthquake.
The earthquake killed approximately 18,000 people and also severely
damaged the Fukushima nuclear plant rendering much of the area near
the J-Village a no-go zone.
The re-opening of the J-Village last week is a symbol of the
reconstruction that Tokyo 2020 hopes to encourage in the region.
"We wanted a source of hope for the nation and now our dreams are
coming true and we are seeing a gradual revival of the disaster-hit
areas," said Tokyo 2020 President Yoshiro Mori.
"We are able to show to the world what we have been able to
accomplish so far and where we are headed in terms of the
reconstruction efforts since the disaster."
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Fujio Mitarai, Honorary Chairman of the Tokyo 2020 Organising
Committee and head of Rugby World Cup 2019 organizing committee
attends a news conference after the Execitive Board Meeting of the
Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games at
J-Village, a national soccer training complex that used to served as
an operation base for battling Japan's nuclear disaster, in Naraha
Town, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan July 30, 2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato
The Games torch relay will start in Miyagi Prefecture, also damaged
by the earthquake, before passing through nearby Fukushima and Iwate
Prefectures in a symbolic tour.
During the meeting Mori, a former Japan prime minister, also
proposed to introduce daylight saving time in Japan before the
Olympics.
Japan currently does not switch its timezone during the summer
months, when the sun rises very early bringing with it the heat and
humidity which was behind the recent record-breaking heatwave in the
country.
Mori believes switching to daylight saving time before the Olympics
would reduce temperatures for morning events such as the marathon
and he had spoken to Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the issue.
"Japan happens to be the only country amongst the major developed
nations that do not implement daylight saving time so we do need
some kind of an occasion or opportunity to get started on this,"
said Mori.
"Before we run out of time, the government needs to take this issue
seriously to consider daylight savings time."
(Reporting by Jack Tarrant; editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
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