Tom Cruise's Olympics closing ceremony stunt took over 1 year to plan. Here’s how it came together.

Tom Cruise is lowered into the Stade de France during the Olympics closing ceremony on Aug. 11.
The Olympics closing ceremony or a Tom Cruise film? The Aug. 11 event was a little of both as the actor performed a stunt that helped hand off the Games from Paris to Los Angeles. (Natacha Pisarenko/AP) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Tom Cruise brought some movie magic to the 2024 Paris Olympics closing ceremony.

The action star, who’s currently filming Mission: Impossible 8, executed the much buzzed-about “epic stunt” on Aug. 11. It began with him rappelling from the Stade de France roof and ended, in a prerecorded portion, with him on the Hollywood sign in Los Angeles, where the 2028 Summer Olympics will take place.

 Tom Cruise rappels from the roof of the stadium during the closing ceremony.
Cruise midflight. (Tom Weller/Voight/Getty Images) (Tom Weller/VOIGT via Getty Images)

The stunt took a year and a half of planning, executive producer and creative director Ben Winston of Fulwell 73 Productions told Vogue. He said “the secrecy was tricky,” and there were multiple “leaks.” In March, video of Cruise, 62, was captured by paparazzi as he climbed the Hollywood sign to film that portion.

Tom Cruise rides a motorcycle sporting the Olympic flag out of the stadium
Cruise left the building on a motorcycle. (Ashley Landis/AP) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

The actor, who watched the Games in the stands the first week they kicked off, made his appearance as H.E.R. finished singing the U.S. national anthem.

Actor Tom Cruise jumps from the roof of the Stade de France during the closing ceremony of the Olympic Games.
Cruise lept from the top of the stadium. (Fabrizio Bensch/Getty Images, Pool) (Pool via Getty Images)

He rappelled from the roof to the ground, where he was greeted by many medal-toting athletes.

Tom Cruise is roped down into the stadium, where Olympic athletes await him, during the closing ceremony.
He was greeted by a sea of Olympic athletes. (Michael Kappeler/Picture Alliance via Getty Images) (picture alliance via Getty Images)

An awkward moment was when one woman tried to kiss him, but he’s been a movie star for decades and did his best to divert.

Cruise took the Olympic flag from Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and decorated gymnast Simone Biles.

Tom Cruise carries the IOC Flag as Simone Biles of Team United States and Karen Bass, Mayor of Los Angeles, look on during the closing ceremony.
Cruise taking the flag from gymnast Simone Biles and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass. (Carl Recine/Getty Images) (Carl Recine via Getty Images)

He brought it to his motorcycle and then cruised out of the arena, sans helmet, and a prerecorded bit began.

 Tom Cruise, without a helmet, rides a motorbike flying the IOC flag through a crowd during the closing ceremony.
Cruise cruising. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images) (Jamie Squire via Getty Images)

It showed the Top Gun star channeling Maverick while riding through Paris, including with the Eiffel Tower as a backdrop.

It was as if you were watching a Cruise film when he rolled up and boarded a plane. Cruise then folded the flag, tucked it away and jumped out of that plane.

Once in L.A., he climbed the Hollywood sign — which had a makeover in which the two O's became the five Olympic rings.

Other athletes took the flag from there — including mountain biker Kate Courtney, former sprinter Michael Johnson and skateboarder Jagger Eaton — bringing it to the beach, where there was a concert with performances by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Billie Eilish, Snoop and Dr. Dre.

Winston told Vogue he pitched the Jack Reacher star the idea in 2023 “because there’s nobody better to do an incredible stunt.” Initially, it involved the help of a stuntman, which Cruise pooh-poohed.

Tom Cruise with aides on the roof of the Stade de France during the closing ceremony.
Cruise on top of the stadium before taking the leap. (Fabrizio Bensch/Pool/AFP via Getty Images) (FABRIZIO BENSCH via Getty Images)

“‘I’m in, but I want to do the whole thing,’” Winston recalled Cruise saying.

There were a lot of elements to it, live and pretaped, including the concert, so it took a lot of work to come together. However, the hardest part was not spilling the beans.

Tom Cruise takes a selfie on the roof of the Stade de France.
He snapped a selfie, which he shared to his social media accounts. (Fabrizio Bensch/Pool/Getty Images) (Pool via Getty Images)

“The secrecy was tricky, and there were lots of leaks, so it was a lot to live with for a year and a half, but I’m feeling very excited and proud,” Winston said.

Cruise has been filming Mission: Impossible 8 in London, so he had been working around that schedule. In March, he had to fly 11 hours to Los Angeles, shoot and then get right back to set.

When it was all said and done, Cruise seemed happy with how it worked. He shared a selfie from the roof of the stadium, writing, “Thank you, Paris! Now off to L.A.”

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