Tokyo’s ‘grand human opera’: a tonic for a weary world

Despite widespread ambivalence and fear, the Olympic Games managed to bring us together and lift our spirits

The flag bearers at the closing ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
The flag bearers at the closing ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
(Image credit: Leon Neal/Getty Images)

“They were the Games that nobody really wanted,” said Robert Hardman in the Daily Mail. “The host nation was so unenthusiastic that the only crowds at the opening ceremony were the ones booing outside the stadium.” Elsewhere, people either “yawned at the prospect” of an Olympics without spectators, sneered that the event was being held a year late, or “complained that it was the height of irresponsibility to gather tens of thousands of people from all over the globe in the midst of a pandemic”. But in the event, the 2020 Games proved “just the tonic we needed” – offering a joyful celebration of our ability to triumph over adversity, a gratifying reminder of what the U in United Kingdom stands for, and the rare chance to wake up each morning and hear some good news, as members of Team GB won medal after medal.

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