London’s Olympic Stadium will be transformed into a rural British idyll for the Games opening ceremony on July 27, organisers said yesterday.

The ceremony’s artistic director Danny Boyle – whose film “Slumdog Millionaire” won eight Oscars – said the €33 million opening ceremony would give Britons “a picture of ourselves as a nation.”

“On entry to the stadium in East London the audience will see a scene that represents a traditional and idyllic view of the British countryside,” Games organisers LOCOG said.

“The set will be complete with meadows, fields and rivers, and featuring families taking picnics, sport being played on the village green and farmers tilling the soil while real farmyard animals graze.”

Real farmyard animals will be grazing in the country scene, with a menagerie including 30 sheep, 12 horses, three cows, two goats and 10 chickens, plus three sheepdogs.

Fresh from headlining last week’s spectacular concert at Buckingham Palace, marking Queen Elizabeth II’s diamond jubilee, ex-Beatle Paul McCartney is to close the ceremony, which will be attended by the queen.

A billion people worldwide are expected to watch the extravaganza on television, LOCOG said.

Boyle paid tribute to the cast of 10,000 volunteers, who have already held 157 rehearsals.

“I’ve been astounded by the selfless dedication of the volunteers,” he said.

“They are the pure embodiment of the Olympic spirit and represent the best of who we are as a nation.”

“The best way to tell that story is through working with real people,” added the filmmaker, who has reserved a role for staff from the state-funded National Health Service in the ceremony.

The largest bell in Europe will ring inside the stadium to open the extravaganza, which has been named “Isles in Wonder” after a speech from William Shakespeare’s play “The Tempest”.

The 27-tonne bell is inscribed with a quote from one of the play’s characters Caliban: “Be not afeard, the isle is full of noises”.

The budget for the opening and closing ceremonies was doubled to €97 million in December, reportedly after British Prime Minister David Cameron intervened.

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