61st Cannes Festival Opening Ceremony

The 61st Cannes Festival officially opened this Wednesday evening with the In-Competition screening of "Blindness," with director Fernando Meirelles present

The Wednesday evening opening ceremonies for the 61st Cannes Festival featured the In-Competition screening of Blindness, in the presence of director Fernando Meirelles and actors Danny Glover, Julianne Moore, Gael García Bernal, Yoshino Kimura and Yusuke Iseya. A number of celebrities were spotted on the red-carpeted steps to the palace, including Un Certain Regard jury president Fatih Akin, Claude Lelouch, and Faye Dunaway, Elli Medeiros, Ornella Muti, Elsa Zylberstein, Jean-Pierre Mocky, Aishwarya Rai, Eva Longoria, Rashida Brakni… For the fourth consecutive year, the Palace façade displayed a portrait of Ingrid Betancourt, who has been held hostage by Colombian FARC rebels since February 2003.

On the "Grand Theatre Lumière" stage, Master of Ceremonies Edouard Baer graciously welcomed the Jury and its President, actor-director Sean Penn. The jurors are Jeanne Balibar, Alexandra Maria Lara, Natalie Portman, Marjane Satrapi, Rachid Bouchareb, Sergio Castellitto, Alfonso Cuarón, and Apichatpong Weerasethakul. "I’m very happy to be here with you," said Sean Penn, reminding that "the Cannes Festival has always selected great films and great actors. (…) We’ll forward love letters to the distributors, who don’t get prizes for their films, to encourage them to continue supporting cinema, in all its diversity."

The audience in the Theatre Lumière was then treated to a preview featuring highlights from the films being presented in Official Selection. A tribute was then dedicated to Sean Penn with the screening of a piece of editing of his movies and a musical performance by the legendary guitarist and singer Richie Havens who gave a vibrant rendition of his song Freedom, with which he opened the Woodstock Festival in 1969. The ceremony concluded with an official declaration of the event’s opening by director Claude Lanzmann, whose feature films Elise, or Real Life, Sobibor, and Israel, Why have premiered here in Cannes. In his remarks, he paid homage to "the intelligence and talent of the Festival organizers, who have broadened the cultural scope of this unique and incomparable event on the planet of cinema."