L.A. Firm Will Create Shows for ’96 Olympics
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ATLANTA — After a 10-month international search, Don Mischer Productions of Los Angeles has been chosen to create the opening and closing ceremonies for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.
The Emmy-winning company, which previously co-produced the “Super Bowl XXVII Halftime Show” starring Michael Jackson, was picked by a 14-member search committee. David Wolper, who produced the opening and closing ceremonies for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, served as a consultant.
In a ceremony here Friday, company President Don Mischer and Executive Vice President David Goldberg, Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson and Atlanta Olympic Committee President Billy Payne placed their palms and signatures in a block of wet cement that will become part of Atlanta’s new Olympic Stadium.
The opening and closing ceremonies of the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games are expected to draw a combined worldwide audience of more than 5 billion.
Although Payne would not disclose the amount being paid to the production company, he said that $27.7 million has been budgeted for the opening and closing ceremonies, the medal ceremonies and the torch run.
Mischer said the ceremonies will be “pageantry on a grand scale” but declined to divulge any details.
“We’re hoping that the ceremonies will be exciting and emotional, that they transcend cultural boundaries, that they give the world a true feeling of the spirit of this city and its people and our country and that they celebrate a hundred years of Olympic competition as the proving ground of physical endeavor and human spirit,” Mischer said.