奥运会开幕式用的是一个小女孩的脸和另一个的声音
[align=left][align=left][b][font=宋体][size=20pt]Olympic opening uses girl’s voice, not face[/size][/font][/b][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]By CARA ANNA, Associated Press Writer [i]1 hour, 52 minutes ago[/i] [/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt][url=http://sports.yahoo.com/oly/photo;_ylt=AmRLVMctLObhxRLmlaH7jwLQ1Zl4?slug=dc070bd484fc4b2a9ef29c03c1ad3f6c.china_lip_synched_song_xin101&prov=ap][color=blue][/color][/url][/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]In this photo released by Chin… %JmghT*};^v,p3gAP - Aug 12, 5:56 am EDT[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt] [/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]BEIJING (AP)—One little girl had the looks. The other had the voice.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]So in a last-minute move demanded by one of [url=http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/chn/;_ylt=AmGEe7AthLHjEr0VE_wopIzQ1Zl4][color=blue]China[/color][/url]’s highest officials, the two were put together for the Olympic opening ceremony, with one lip-synching “Ode to the Motherland” over the other’s singing.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]The real singer, 7-year-old Yang Peiyi, with her chubby face and crooked baby teeth, wasn’t good looking enough for the ceremony, its chief music director told state-owned Beijing Radio.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]So the pigtailed Lin Miaoke, a veteran of television ads, mouthed the words with a pixie smile for a stadium of 91,000 and a worldwide TV audience. “I felt so beautiful in my red dress,” the tiny 9-year-old told the China Daily newspaper.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Peiyi later told China Central Television that just having her voice used was an honor.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]It was the latest example of the lengths the image-obsessed China is taking to create a perfect Summer Games.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]In a brief phone interview with AP Television News on Tuesday night, the music director, Chen Qigang, said he spoke about the switch with Beijing Radio “to come out with the truth.”[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“The little girl is a magnificent singer,” Chen said. “She doesn’t deserve to be hidden.” He said the ceremony’s director, film director Zhang Yimou, knew of the change. He declined to speak further about it.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]China has been eager to present a flawless Olympics face to the world, shooing thousands of migrant workers from the city and shutting down any sign of protest.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]The country’s quest for perfection apparently includes its children.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]A member of China’s Politburo asked for the last-minute change during a live rehearsal shortly before the ceremony, Chen said in the Beijing Radio interview, posted online Sunday night. He didn’t name the official.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]During the live rehearsal, the Politburo member said Miaoke’s voice “must change,” Chen said.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“We had to make that choice. It was fair both for Lin Miaoke and Yang Peiyi,” Chen told Beijing Radio. “We combined the perfect voice and the perfect performance.”[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“The audience will understand that it’s in the national interest,” Chen added.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]He said he felt a responsibility to explain to the country what happened but on Tuesday the link to the video on the Beijing Radio Web site no longer worked.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Miaoke’s performance Friday night, like the ceremony itself, was an immediate hit. “Nine-year-old Lin Miaoke becomes instant star with patriotic song,” the China Daily newspaper headline said.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Zhang, China’s most famous film director, was asked at a post-ceremony news conference about the little girl who swung on wires high above the Bird’s Nest National Stadium during the performance.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“She is a lovely girl and she sings well,” Zhang said, according to a transcript posted on the Beijing organizing committee’s web site.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]The switch became a hot topic among Chinese and raced across the country’s blogosphere.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“The organizers really messed up on this one,” Luo Shaoyang, 34, a retail worker in Beijing, said Tuesday. “This is like a voiceover for a cartoon character. Why couldn’t they pick a kid who is both cute and a good singer? This damages the reputation of both kids for their future, especially the one lip-synching. Now everyone knows she’s a fraud, who cares if she’s cute?”[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Others disagreed.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“They want the best-looking people to represent the face of China. I don’t blame the organizers for picking a prettier-looking kid over the not-so-pretty one,” said Xia Xiaotao, 30, an engineer.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“It’s the unfortunate reality that these sort of things turn political,” said marketing worker Zhang Xinyi, 22.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]It was not the first time an Olympics opening ceremony involved lip-synching.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]At the 2006 Winter Games in Turin, Luciano Pavarotti’s performance was prerecorded. The maestro who conducted the aria, Leone Magiera, said this year that the bitter cold made a live performance impossible for Pavarotti, who was in severe pain months before his cancer diagnosis. Pavarotti died in 2007 at age 71.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Also Tuesday, Beijing organizers confirmed that some of the opening ceremony’s fireworks display—29 gigantic footprints shown “walking” toward the National Stadium—featured prerecorded footage. The footage was provided to broadcasters “for convenience and theatrical effects,” said Wang Wei, vice president of the Beijing Olympic organizing committee.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt](NBC also has augmented its Olympic coverage in the past to set the right mood. That fire in the studio fireplace during the 2002 Salt Lake Games? It was just a video.)[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Neither of the two little girls involved could be reached by The Associated Press on Tuesday, and it was not clear how the ceremony—or the controversy— might change their lives.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Peiyi is a first-grader at the Primary School affiliated to Peking University. Her tutor, Wang Liping, wrote in her blog that Peiyi is both cute and well-behaved, with a love for Peking opera.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]“She doesn’t like to show off. She’s easygoing,” Wang wrote. She and other school officials couldn’t be reached Tuesday.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Miaoke, however, was a minor celebrity even before the opening ceremony. The third-grader appeared in a TV ad last year with China’s biggest gold medal hope, hurdling champion [url=http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/chn/xiang+liu/236181/;_ylt=ApV3kTV7_5B95T8ezzL75xrQ1Zl4][color=blue]Liu Xiang[/color][/url], and she was in an Olympics ad earlier this year, China Daily reported.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Her father, Lin Hui, told China Daily he learned Miaoke would be “singing” only 15 minutes before the opening ceremony began.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Lin “still cannot believe his daughter has become an international singing sensation,” the report said.[/size][/font][/align][/align][align=left][align=left][font=宋体][size=12pt]Chi-Chi Zhang and Isolda Morillo in Beijing contributed to this report.[/size][/font][/align][/align][font=Times New Roman] [/font] Olympic Ceremony fake-out
Two girls — one cute, one deemed less so — were part of a plan that fooled Olympic viewers. ...这个还不如不爆出来这个新闻::z8 觉得这个事可轻可重Z3l'`.Ap${
就看怎么看了 这在中国难道还少见么?tgy5a'P W)l
A2D:Y-wg
老外也不过多条茶余饭后的谈资罢了…… 照片。::11 ::11 (WdTD&Qj,U}"L{
[img]http://e.taisha.org/attachments/month_0808/20080812_a36ca34959517ab86e3atmRfVPrlDVAZ.jpg[/img] 其实看得出来的p__d`i6O
那个红裙子的口型总觉得怪 我是觉得红裙子很难看。.~1gY+AI F._
1高丽棒子的高腰造型。*D#w)Qt6cL'[
2象大肚子孕妇。 [quote]原帖由 [i]布鲁克林[/i] 于 2008-8-13 04:41 发表 [url=http://bbs.taisha.org/redirect.php?goto=findpost&pid=12458706&ptid=1113433][img]http://bbs.taisha.org/images/common/back.gif[/img][/url]*q[Q d^foi
...这个还不如不爆出来这个新闻::z8 [/quote]
)?Q3QkB e oRf7?
为什么不爆? 虽然不是好新闻, 可应该爆出来. 爆的好。。::z8 ::z8 这是真的 审美观 偶看着口型也不对,还以为是提前录好的呢::z8 听说过这事。。。哎。。 小孩子对嘴型的功力还是不太够.
而且笑成那样怎么能发出好听的声音来? 这样有什么不好么?
V%Igsp/t
算一种欺诈么? 鱼和熊掌嘛Q s5}z(P-fF}k
外表和声音不可兼得 不就是假唱么,标题写这么复杂 日本KBS电视台记者:我听说在开幕式上的演唱有一部分是对口型的,您知道这件事吗?如果有这样的情况,您有什么看法?2j lti _9`]
y!h o"SX2t
孙伟德:昨天,我们和开幕式导演组核对了这个情况。在开幕式上,孩子唱的歌是录播的,这是与电视转播商协调后,由导演作出的决定。根据我的理解,这也是转播商的要求。在这之前有好许多人都试唱过这首歌,最后导演选择了声音质量最好的杨沛宜和表演最好的林妙可合作完成。E,B-mZ_0lW
美联社记者:我想问费利先生一个问题。您认为他是否符合这样一个原则,即应该由同一个人来表演节目,而不是由2个不同的人来表演节目,您认为这是对全世界的青少年传递的正确的信息吗? IgWjp
\o j1n%R1I-NTo:hC
Gilbert FELLI:我想向大家解释的是开幕式组织工作非常庞大,而且很多人有自己的观点,比如转播商有自己的观点。我们要确保发挥最好的水平,最后制作方做出了技术上的决定,做出了这样的处理。开幕式上有15000人参加表演,而且他们要在不同的节目时段中不断改变角色。实际上,每场演出都会有这样的安排,有人认为这样做不对,但是大部分人会认为这样做非常好、非常精彩。Tn:gp H|Y
外国媒体:如果你是那个唱歌小女孩的父亲,到最后一分钟,要告诉她,其实不是由你来唱,你会怎么跟她解释?
Gilbert FELLI:这要放在具体情景中看。比如说赛艇比赛的时候,我们只有四个赛手,他们都有参加奥运会的资格,最后教练会替换最后一个赛艇选手的人选,这是一样的情况,希望能够理解。当然大家的观点是不一样的,比如说一个足球队,教练会做这样的决定,最后可能会换掉一两个球员,这是完全正常的。Q2S+d^&sU v9`tR
Te qP&hw\
美联社:9岁的小女孩在开幕式唱歌的这个情况难道和一场比赛是一样的吗?0_'VGy:y$M%z4m
~z z hKX nM:cH
Gilbert FELLI:我前面讲过了,大家会有不同的观点,但是运动就是这样的道理。小女孩通过了预选阶段,到最后这个阶段决定不由你唱,就像球赛一样,我们应该接受这样的决定,这不是个人问题。我刚才已经谈到了,很多小女孩受过训练,他们一个人表演,而用另一个人的声音,这是很正常的 外国媒体:费利先生、王先生,还是关于演员的问题,你把他与划艇运动的运动员轮换来比喻,但是我从来没有听过这样的情况,你不觉得这有些不妥吗?Dg#Kp} {4]
6h"n4`s Y%??
Gilbert FELLI:我认为当然应该向大家报告真实的情况。
王伟:我认为这是一个共同的决定,是指挥的人和转播商商量之后,想要得到最有戏剧性的效果,让整个表演更加成功,才采取的做法。这没有什么不妥,我想只要有关方面都同意就可以了 原来不是假唱是双簧 这个,一贯作风嘛~::z8 生活在中国,就要习惯这样的事情发生. 唉---_3e&h Z:v\
今天有个美国的朋友Email我问道这个问题,问我是怎么看的,我都不知道怎么回答::18 老外都是事儿B [quote]原帖由 [i]lfyz[/i] 于 2008-8-13 19:31 发表 [url=http://bbs.taisha.org/redirect.php?goto=findpost&pid=12469604&ptid=1113433][img]http://bbs.taisha.org/images/common/back.gif[/img][/url]O/I8? CP;CS&FK5Y
老外都是事儿B [/quote]::z8::z8::z8::z2::z2::z2 觉得有点恶心。
当然,孩子没错。y`Jq&Js|
4XZ}([RUW H P/XF*J
觉得很像“下一站天后”的情节 如果用的是原唱的小朋友,恐怕也会有一大堆说辞吧 纽约时报也报这个事了
就中方媒体没报。。。3z&u;E JaBK5Z
又一个故意隐瞒。。。 态度决定一切。%w0poIupO%kot
大大方方说出来反而没什么。m&Sj"{6?;o/vX[-y
遮遮掩掩的,反而让人觉得就是有鬼。 :funk:
这种事又发生在中国了,真没意思
页:
[1]