1980 Summer Olympics closing ceremony
The Closing Ceremony of the 1980 Summer Olympics was officially closing ceremony in held night at 19:00 Moscow Time (UTC+3) on 3 August 1980 at the Grand Arena of the Central Lenin Stadium. It was attended by the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, Leonid Brezhnev. IOC President Lord Killanin closed the Games for the final time and passed the position on to Juan Antonio Samaranch.
Sequence of events
- Countdown of Kremlin Clock chimes at 19:00 Moscow Time.
- Fanfare by the Herald Trumpeters: "Moscow Fanfare" by Soviet musician and composer A. Golovin
- Vertical Red flags with the emblem of the Moscow Olympics on them entered, along with marshals and linemen. The Card stunt was then showing the Moscow Olympics logo, with rays spreading from it.
- Flag bearers enter the stadium.
- Athletes enter the stadium.
- Athletes gather in the stadium, as gymnasts and performers carrying multicoloured vertical flags enter.
- Raising of the Greek national flag, to the Greek national anthem.
- Raising of the Soviet national flag, to the Soviet national anthem.
- The Los Angeles city flag, rather than the American flag, was raised and the Olympic Anthem, rather than the national anthem of the United States, was played to symbolize the next host of the Olympic Games. This was because of the U.S.-led Olympic boycott of the 1980 games.
- There was no next host city presentation of the 1984 Summer Olympics, because of the U.S.-led boycott.
- Speech by the IOC President Lord Killanin, in English. He closes the Games, and bids for "the youth of the world to assemble four years from now in Los Angeles". This was his final Olympic message as IOC President as the position was passed on to Juan Antonio Samaranch.
- Lowering of the Olympic Flag and singing of the Olympic Anthem (in Greek, rather than Russian) performed by the same musical ensemble and using the same arrangement as the opening ceremony 15 days earlier.
- Extinguishing of the Olympic Flame, following a depiction (at the card stunt) of a "fading light" sourced from the flame.
- Exit of the Olympic Flag, to the tune of Beethoven's "Ode To Joy" and amidst fireworks.
- Exit of the athletes, marshals, multicoloured flag bearers, and gymnasts. This was followed by the card stunt feature "Crying Misha" which depicts Misha crying at the same time.
- Artistic performances follow the ceremony proper.
- Performance by the Massed Military Bands of the Moscow Military District, Armed Forces of the USSR, conducted by the Senior Director of Music of the Armed Forces Bands Service, Major General Nikolai Mikhaliov
- Performance of gymnasts, acrobats and ribbon ballet dancers, eventually forming a picture frame (with the gymnasts as the frame itself, and the acrobats and dances inside it).
- Giant Matryoshka dolls entered, taking places in each side of the stadium.
- Dance performance by performers representing some of the Soviet Union's ethnic groups and peoples.
- The Grand Finale: Misha's head appeared on the card stunt. A giant effigy of Misha, mounted on balloons, then entered the stadium.
- Following this: the singing of the finale song "Farewell, Moscow" (Russian: До свиданья, Москва, tr. Do svidanya, Moskva). The song was sung by Lev Leshchenko and Tatiana Ansiferova.
- The Misha effigy was then released into the sky while in the final seconds of the song as the audience gave a loud applause.
- Performers waltz and dance in a farewell celebration. A fireworks display then happened around the Central Lenin Stadium grounds, the second such display during the ceremony. Afterwards, amidst the fireworks lighting up the night sky, all the performers exit with the song "Stadium of my Dreams" (Russian: Стадион моей мечты, tr. Stadion moyey mechti) playing in the background with a highlights video of the Olympiad playing in the scoreboard.
Anthems
- Red Army Choir – Greek national anthem
- Red Army Choir – Soviet national anthem
- Red Army Choir and the Bolshoi Theater Chorus – Olympic Hymn
Legacy
Both the opening and closing ceremonies were shown in Yuri Ozerov's 1981 film O, Sport, You - the Peace! (Russian: О спорт, ты - мир!) covering the highlights of that Olympiad.
A short clip of the 1980 Summer Olympics closing ceremony of Misha's departure was shown in the closing ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics, afterward the polar bear mascot blew out the 2014 Games Olympic torch and sheds a tear (in a nod to Misha's tears during the end of the 1980 Games).[1][2]