India’s
mystery gatecrasher unmasked
Madhura Nagendra.
The mystery woman who crashed India's athletes' parade has
been identified as Madhura Nagendra, a postgraduate student from Bangalore.
Nagendra,
who is studying for an MBA in London, came through an audition to earn a place
as a dancer in the spectacular opening ceremony for London 2012.
But
after taking her place among the thousands of other volunteer performers, she
then decided to prolong her moment in the spotlight. She snuck in among the
Indian athletes as they began their parade around the Olympic stadium on Friday
night, taking a prominent place at the front of the group next to Beijing
bronze medallist Sushil Kumar, who was the flag-bearer.
Millions
of people across the world wondered who the woman in a red top and blue
trousers was, with the Indian Olympic contingent outraged that their moment in
the spotlight had been hijacked by what was then an unidentified mystery woman.
But
back in India, her friends and family recognised her instantly.
"We
knew she had been selected for the cultural programme after an audition. But we
did not expect to see her with the contingent!" a former colleague of
Nagendra's told The Hindu, before adding that he was not surprised that she had
been involved in the ceremony.
"She
was a fun-loving person and was very excited about having been selected to
perform in the Olympics. Madhura had also shared her happiness on
Facebook, where she said she felt it was a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity."
A
college friend from London also recognised her, and told the Deccan Chronicle
that she was "baffled seeing her with the Indian contingent".
Games
chief Sebastian Coe explained that Nagendra had "got over-excited",
prompting her audacious decision to join in the parade, cheekily adding that
the security concerns are something that, "we will be looking at next time
we have an opening ceremony".
Madhura's
father K Nagendra apologised on behalf of his daughter - who has yet to speak
publicly about her high-profile gatecrashing - and said that he thought she may
have been asked to help out.
"From
whatever I learnt and presume that she being an Indian, the London Olympics
Organising Committee might also have selected her to 'take' the team inside the
stadium. This might have hurt our team's feelings. I feel very sorry for
that," Mr Nagendra told the Times of India.
Source: uk.eurosport.yahoo.com
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