The opening ceremony of the London Olympic Games will recreate some historical scenes and end with the Beatles' old song "Hey Jude", according to the Sunday Times. At 9: 00 p.m. on July 27, Europe's biggest bell will be struck, and the Olympic opening ceremony will begin. The clock is engraved with the sentence "Don't be afraid, the island is full of voices" from Shakespeare's famous work the Tempest. The theme of the opening ceremony quoted "Storm" and was designated as "wonderful Island". The stadium will be turned into an English countryside, and the actors will take real cattle and sheep to the green grass to show the audience a picture of pastoral songs. After that, people will revert to the scene of a group of immigrants from the West Indies who came to Britain on the Imperial Wind in 1948 to start a new life, and how women fought for the right to vote. In addition, the opening ceremony will also recreate the historical footage of more than 200 workers from the north-east of England who walked to the Houses of Parliament in London in 1936. In 1936, during the great depression of the global economy, these people protested against poverty and an unemployment rate as high as 70%. According to the Sunday Times, the director of the opening ceremony.