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Salon
Salon
Lifestyle
Kelly McClure

Headless Marie Antoinette opens Olympics

In an interview with British Vogue ramping up to the Paris Olympics opening ceremony on Friday, artistic director Thomas Jolly spoke of the Olympic ceremonies as being "a celebration of being alive,” but he managed to pull off a delightfully morbid — and extremely metal — production that paid bloody tribute to a historically famous dead lady, Marie Antoinette. A headless Marie Antoinette, to be more specific.

Aiming to “play with” but also “challenge” French cliché in the opening, he nailed the landing there, shocking some and delighting many others with what Vulture aptly describes in their coverage as "a full musical, metal–opera–Cameron Mackintosh mash-up tribute to … the guillotine," featuring "decapitated faces painted clown-white [singing] the French revolutionary song “Ça ira” alongside the heavy-metal band Gojira" — the first metal band to ever play at the Olympic Games — during the “Liberté” portion of the ceremony. 

The headless figures depicting the 18th century Queen Marie Antoinette performing along the Seine river embankment outside the Conciergerie, where the queen was held captive during the French Revolution, inspired CNN's Jake Tapper to do a funny little tweet in the key of Charli XCX, writing, "Headless Marie Antoinette is brat" in a widely shared post to social media.

Tough for even Celine Dion to beat in her ceremony performance, I'd say. 

Clips of the performance are being rapidly yanked off of X and YouTube, due to copyright, but you can see snippets of headless Marie Antoinette on TikTok and via small edits, like the one below:

https://twitter.com/gothmess/status/1817220218810155120 

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