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Eurovision Song Contest 2003

The Eurovision Song Contest 2003 was the 48th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Riga, Latvia, following the country's victory at the 2002 contest with the song "I Wanna" by Marie N. Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Latvijas Televīzija (LTV), the contest was held at the Skonto Hall on 24 May 2003. The contest was presented by last year's winner Marie N and former contestant Renārs Kaupers.[1]

Eurovision Song Contest 2003
Magical Rendez-vous
Dates
Final24 May 2003 (2003-05-24)
Host
VenueSkonto Hall
Riga, Latvia
Presenter(s)
Directed bySven Stojanović
Executive supervisorSarah Yuen
Executive producerBrigita Rozenbrika
Host broadcasterLatvian Television (LTV)
Websiteeurovision.tv/event/riga-2003
Participants
Number of entries26
Debuting countries Ukraine
Returning countries
Non-returning countries
  • Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Italy in the Eurovision Song ContestNetherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Switzerland in the Eurovision Song ContestGermany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Monaco in the Eurovision Song ContestLuxembourg in the Eurovision Song ContestSpain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Denmark in the Eurovision Song ContestFinland in the Eurovision Song ContestNorway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Portugal in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Austria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Turkey in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Morocco in the Eurovision Song ContestCyprus in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Iceland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Croatia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Slovenia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Slovakia in the Eurovision Song ContestHungary in the Eurovision Song ContestRomania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Lithuania in the Eurovision Song ContestPoland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Macedonia in the Eurovision Song ContestLatvia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003
         Competing countries     Relegated countries unable to participate     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2003
Vote
Voting systemEach country awards 1–8, 10, and 12 points to their ten favourite songs
Winning song
2002 ← Eurovision Song Contest → 2004

Twenty-six countries participated in the contest, beating the record of twenty-five first set in 1993. It saw the return of Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway and Poland after having been relegated from competing the previous year. Portugal also returned to the contest after being absent the previous year, while Ukraine participated in the contest for the first time.[2] Denmark, Finland, Lithuania, Macedonia and Switzerland were relegated due to their poor results in 2002.

The winner was Turkey with the song "Everyway That I Can", performed by Sertab Erener who wrote it with Demir Demirkan. This was Turkey's first victory in the contest after 28 years of participation. Belgium, Russia, Norway and Sweden rounded out the top five. Further down the table, the United Kingdom achieved their worst result to date, finishing twenty-sixth (last place) with no points. However, they avoided relegation due to being one of the "Big Four" countries at the time.[3] The host country Latvia placed twenty-fourth (third from last) – this was the first time since 1995 that the host entry did not place in the top 10, and it was, overall, the worst result for a host entry since 1992.

This was the last contest to take place on one evening. The EBU revealed that it would be adding a semi-final show to the competition in order to accommodate the growing number of interested countries wishing to take part in the contest.[4] This was also the last contest in which a relegation system was used to determine which countries would participate in the following year's contest. As the Belgian entry was sung in an imaginary language, this was also the first time the contest featured a song with no parts performed in English or a language native to the country.

Location edit

 
Skonto Hall, Riga – host venue of the 2003 contest.

On 22 August 2002, Latvian public broadcaster Latvijas Televīzija (LTV) announced that it had chosen the Skonto Hall in Riga as the host venue for the 2003 contest.

Latvia won the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 on 25 May 2002 in Tallinn, Estonia with the song “I Wanna” performed by Marie N. This was Latvia's first victory in the contest, which also carried the right for LTV to organise the 2003 contest. LTV initially had budgetary concerns with staging the contest. The chairman of the National Radio and Television Council Ojārs Rubenis stated that if the government presented no budget guarantees, the council, which owns shares in LTV, would vote against organising the contest. Rubenis elaborated that LTV was prepared to cover the creative side and broadcasting of the contest, but additional funds would be needed for infrastructure, hotels and other financial issues.

The Government of Latvia allotted 5.3 million for the event with a further 1.1 million being provided by the Riga City Council – covering the anticipated organisational costs for the contest.[5] A task force that included members from LTV, the National Radio and Television Council and state secretaries was formed to explicitly work on organisation of the contest and report on the estimated expenses.

Bidding phase edit

class=notpageimage|
Locations of the candidate cities: the chosen host city is marked in blue, while the eliminated cities are marked in red.

Three cities were considered as host city of the contest: Riga, Ventspils and Jūrmala.[6] LTV requested proposals from the three cities concerning how they plan to organise the contest. Riga City Council offered the Mežaparks Open-air Stage, Skonto Hall and the Ķīpsala International Exhibition Centre as potential venues for hosting the contest. Ventspils bid to host the contest at the Ventspils Olympic Centre with a pledge of support from city mayor Aivars Lembergs, who added that Ventspils could also provide two cruise ferries that could be used to accommodate up to 8,000 guests.[7] Jūrmala City Council offered the Dzintari Concert Hall with plans to expand and upgrade the facility and surrounding infrastructure.[6]

LTV's organisational task force later decided to proceed with the bids from Riga and Ventspils, eliminating Jūrmala and the Mežaparks Open-air Stage in Riga. On 15 June 2002, the EBU Reference Group decided in conjunction with the organisational task force in Latvia that Riga would host the 2003 contest with the venue option between the Skonto Hall and Ķīpsala International Exhibition Centre being decided upon by LTV.[8] LTV ultimately chose the Skonto Hall as the venue to stage the contest.

Key  †   Host venue  ‡  Shortlisted

City Venue
Jūrmala Dzintari Concert Hall
Riga Mežaparks Open-air Stage
Skonto Hall
Ķīpsala International Exhibition Centre ‡
Ventspils Ventspils Olympic Center

Participating countries edit

Eurovision Song Contest 2003 – Participation summaries by country

Per the rules of the contest, twenty-six countries were allowed to participate in the event, a new record number of competing entries in a single edition.[9][10] Originally a total of twenty-five countries were scheduled to participate in the event, however Ukraine was added to the line-up shortly before the publication of the competing countries in November 2002, making its début appearance in the contest.[10][11] Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, and Portugal returned after being absent from the previous year's event, and competed alongside Ukraine, the "Big Four" largest contributing participating countries – France, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom – and the remaining fifteen highest-scoring participating countries from the 2002 contest.[12][13] Having received the lowest scores in the 2002 contest, Denmark,[14] Finland,[15] Lithuania,[16] Macedonia,[17] and Switzerland[18] were subsequently relegated and were prevented from participating in this year's event.[9]

Twenty-four countries participated in the 2002 contest in Tallinn; of these, fourteen were expected to compete in 2003. The bottom ten in Tallinn would be relegated, to allow countries to compete for the first time.[19] In reality, only five countries were relegated – nineteen countries that entered in 2002 competed in Riga.[20] Originally, Serbia and Montenegro, Albania and Belarus had planned 2003 debuts, but the EBU's late changes to the relegation procedure meant that they could not compete.[21] The countries eventually made their debuts in 2004.

The 2003 contest was one of the few editions where no lead artists had previously competed as lead artists in past contests, although Slovenian representative Karmen had previously performed as a backing singer to Vili Resnik for Slovenia at the 1998 contest.[22]

Participants of the Eurovision Song Contest 2003[23][24]
Country Broadcaster Artist Song Language Songwriter(s)
  Austria ORF Alf Poier "Weil der Mensch zählt" German[a] Alf Poier
  Belgium RTBF Urban Trad "Sanomi" Imaginary Yves Barbieux
  Bosnia and Herzegovina PBSBiH Mija Martina "Ne brini" Croatian, English
  • Arjana Kunštek
  • Ines Prajo
  Croatia HRT Claudia Beni "Više nisam tvoja" Croatian, English Andrej Babić
  Cyprus CyBC Stelios Constantas "Feeling Alive" English Stelios Constantas
  Estonia ETV Ruffus "Eighties Coming Back" English Vaiko Eplik
  France France Télévisions Louisa Baïleche "Monts et merveilles" French Hocine Hallaf
  Germany NDR[b] Lou "Let's Get Happy" English
  Greece ERT Mando "Never Let You Go" English
  Iceland RÚV Birgitta "Open Your Heart" English
  Ireland RTÉ Mickey Harte "We've Got the World" English
  • Martin Brannigan
  • Keith Molloy
  Israel IBA Lior Narkis "Words for Love" Hebrew
  • Yossi Gispan
  • Yoni Ro'eh
  Latvia LTV F.L.Y. "Hello from Mars" English
  Malta PBS Lynn Chircop "To Dream Again" English
  • Cynthia Sammut
  • Alfred Zammit
  Netherlands NOS Esther Hart "One More Night" English
  Norway NRK Jostein Hasselgård "I'm Not Afraid to Move On" English
  Poland TVP Ich Troje "Keine GrenzenŻadnych granic" German, Polish, Russian
  Portugal RTP Rita Guerra "Deixa-me sonhar" Portuguese, English Paulo Martins
  Romania TVR Nicola "Don't Break My Heart" English
  Russia C1R t.A.T.u. "Ne ver', ne boysia" (Не верь, не бойся) Russian
  Slovenia RTVSLO Karmen "Nanana" English
  Spain TVE Beth "Dime" Spanish
  • Amaya Martínez
  • Jesús María Pérez
  Sweden SVT Fame "Give Me Your Love" English
  • Calle Kindbom
  • Carl Lösnitz
  Turkey TRT Sertab Erener "Everyway That I Can" English
  Ukraine NTU Olexandr "Hasta la vista" English
  United Kingdom BBC Jemini "Cry Baby" English Martin Isherwood

Format edit

The EBU released the rules for the 2003 contest in November 2002, which detailed that twenty-six countries would participate, making it the largest number of participants to take part in the contest up to this point.[9] The rules also modified the eligibility criteria for entries, changing the date of release cut-off point for songs from 1 January 2003 to 1 October 2002. There was also a change in the tie-break rule, which would now resolve such a case in favour of the nation that received points from a higher number of countries rather than taking into account the number of top scores (12 points) received. The draw for running order was held on 29 November 2002 in Riga, hosted by Marie N and Renārs Kaupers, with the results being revealed during a delayed broadcast of the proceedings later that day.[26][27]

The official sponsors for the contest were Latvian mobile telecom provider Latvijas Mobilais Telefons and Latvian bank company Parex Banka.[28] LTV selected Latvia Tours as its official partner to provide lodging, travel and recreation for the contest delegations and other guests.[29] Riga City Council was also responsible for offering promotion and activities during the week preceding the contest.[30]

Full preparations for the 2003 contest began on 18 May 2003 at the Skonto Hall. There were rehearsals, press conferences and participants were also involved in an internet chat.[31] Two dress rehearsals were held on 23 May, in front of an estimated 12,000 people. The organisers of the contest held a press conference; one of the issues complained about was the lack of invitations for the after-party. The final dress rehearsal was held on 24 May, the day of the contest. A simulation of the voting procedure was also held, in which the presenters linked up with all twenty-six countries by satellite for the first time.[31]

On the day of the contest, bookmaker William Hill's odds placed Russia as joint favourites to win the contest with Spain. Ireland, Slovenia, Estonia, Norway and Iceland were behind in third, fourth and joint fifth respectively.[32] At the conclusion of the contest, favourites Russia placed third and Spain placed eighth, while outsiders Turkey (20-1) and Belgium (50-1) claimed the first and second places, respectively. Austria, at 100–1, were favourites to finish last, however, they scored their best result since 1989, placing sixth.[32]

An official compilation album, featuring all twenty-six competing entries from the contest, was released for the first time on the EMI/CMC label.[33]

Graphic design edit

The design of the contest was built around the theme "Magical rendez-vous", which represented the meeting of the various European nations coming to Latvia and encountering Latvia's versatile landscapes.[34][11] LTV launched a competition in order to find the logo for the contest. At the close of the competition, high interest from the public translated into 204 logo submissions, which were ultimately judged by a jury panel consisting of Uldis-Ivars Grava (general director of LTV), Arvīds Babris (then executive producer of the contest), Ugis Brikmanis (director), Laimonis Šteinbergs (artist), Ingūna Rībena (architect), Arta Giga (LTV representative) and Juhan Paadam (EBU representative).[35] On 16 November 2002, LTV and the EBU presented the logo for the contest which was designed by the director of the Computer Graphics Department of LTV, Maris Kalve with further elaboration by LTV's chief artist Kristaps Skulte.[36] The logo was named upes, the Latvian word for rivers, and carried the slogan "All rivers flow toward the sea, all songs flow toward the Eurovision Song Contest".

The postcards shown between the entries were directed by Ugis Brikmanis and featured the artists competing at the contest interacting with Latvia's various landscapes: forests, rivers, lakes and towns. The postcards were recorded during the preceding week of the contest and ran behind schedule, leading to some postcards featuring only footage from the rehearsals and press conferences.[37]

The stage design was created by Aigars Ozoliņš and based on the concept called Planet Latvia.[38][39] The stage used several light and video effects and included an innovation new to the contest – a video screen stage floor that could be used to give each entry a unique look.[39] The green room where the delegations and competitors awaited the results of the contest was placed directly behind the stage and unveiled shortly before the voting portion of the show commenced, allowing the audience to see the representatives of the competing nations as they received points.[40]

National host broadcaster edit

Initially, Arvīds Babris, head of the Latvian delegation at the 2002 contest, was appointed as executive producer for the contest, however, after production fell behind schedule and the EBU applied pressure upon LTV, he was dismissed and Brigita Rozenbrika took over the position, receiving additional support from the Swedish broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT) and Estonian broadcaster Eesti Televisioon (ETV).[11][41][42] SVT was also the technical producer of the contest for the second year running with Sven Stojanović as director and the Swedish lighting company Spectra+ contracted for the contest.[43][44]

Voting system edit

The EBU reintroduced televoting as an obligatory voting mode in all participating countries, which awarded 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 and 12 points to their ten favourite songs, in ascending order. Countries voted in the same order as they had performed. Bosnia and Herzegovina and Russia were granted an exception to holding a televote as they cited that their telecommunications penetration was less than 80%.[45][9] Polish broadcaster Telewizja Polska opted to use only SMS-voting.[46] In the televoting/smsvoting household shall not be permitted to vote more than three times.[9] All other countries planned to use a televote. This contest was also the first to introduce a computer-generated scoreboard which rearranged itself in order as the points were awarded. Broadcasters were required to assemble back-up juries that consisted of eight voting members, with age and gender equally distributed, in the case of televote failure on the night of the competition.[9] Four members of the jury had to be members of the general public and the other four members had to be music professionals.[9]

Future changes in contest format edit

With the increased number of potential participating countries, the EBU began to review the format of the contest with potential changes being considered such as adding extra evenings for the show, holding a regional pre-selection, or putting a limit to number of participating countries by increasing the entrance fee. On 29 January 2003, the EBU unveiled a two-night system for the contest in 2004: a semi-final would be held before a grand final. The "Big Four", along with the top ten from the 2003 contest, would automatically qualify for the 2004 final.[47] The format change eliminated the relegation system, allowing all countries to send an artist and song to the contest. The fourteen eventual countries from the 2003 contest that qualified to compete directly in the 2004 final were Turkey, Belgium, Russia, Norway, Sweden, Austria, Poland, Spain, Iceland, Romania, Ireland, Germany, France and the United Kingdom. All other countries would have to compete in the semi-final for ten remaining spots in the final.

Contest overview edit

The contest featured special guests that communicated with the hosts via satellite: Lys Assia, winner of the 1956 contest greeted the hosts and spectators from Nicosia, Elton John spoke to the presenters live from the Life Ball in Vienna and one astronaut and one cosmonaut—Ed Lu and Yuri Malenchenko—gave their greetings from the International Space Station.[48][49][50] The interval act for the contest was a short film directed by Anna Viduleja that featured a sequence of performances by Latvian post-folklore group Iļģi, Renārs Kaupers' band Brainstorm, Marie N and piano player Raimonds Pauls.[51]

The UK's result was their worst-ever at Eurovision; by contrast, Turkey's win was their first. Alf Poier's sixth place was Austria's best result for fourteen years, Poland's seventh place was their best in nine, and Romania's tenth place was one place behind their best-ever. Belgium's second place was their first top-five finish in seventeen years, while Spain's eighth place (tied with Iceland's, which was its best result since 1999) was their third top-ten finish in 2 years, but Latvia's third-from-bottom finish was their worst result in four attempts; it was also the worst placing for a host country since 1992, until 2015 when host country Austria received 'nul points' and came second to last (Germany also received 'nul points' but because of the running order Austria placed ahead of them).

  Winner
Results of the Eurovision Song Contest 2003[52]
R/O Country Artist Song Points Place
1   Iceland Birgitta "Open Your Heart" 81 8
2   Austria Alf Poier "Weil der Mensch zählt" 101 6
3   Ireland Mickey Harte "We've Got the World" 53 11
4   Turkey Sertab Erener "Everyway That I Can" 167 1
5   Malta Lynn Chircop "To Dream Again" 4 25
6   Bosnia and Herzegovina Mija Martina "Ne brini" 27 16
7   Portugal Rita Guerra "Deixa-me sonhar" 13 22
8   Croatia Claudia Beni "Više nisam tvoja" 29 15
9   Cyprus Stelios Constantas "Feeling Alive" 15 20
10   Germany Lou "Let's Get Happy" 53 11
11   Russia t.A.T.u. "Ne ver', ne boysia" 164 3
12   Spain Beth "Dime" 81 8
13   Israel Lior Narkis "Words for Love" 17 19
14   Netherlands Esther Hart "One More Night" 45 13
15   United Kingdom Jemini "Cry Baby" 0 26
16   Ukraine Olexandr "Hasta la vista" 30 14
17   Greece Mando "Never Let You Go" 25 17
18   Norway Jostein Hasselgård "I'm Not Afraid to Move On" 123 4
19   France Louisa Baïleche "Monts et merveilles" 19 18
20   Poland Ich Troje "Keine GrenzenŻadnych granic" 90 7
21   Latvia F.L.Y. "Hello from Mars" 5 24
22   Belgium Urban Trad "Sanomi" 165 2
23   Estonia Ruffus "Eighties Coming Back" 14 21
24   Romania Nicola "Don't Break My Heart" 73 10
25   Sweden Fame "Give Me Your Love" 107 5
26   Slovenia Karmen "Nanana" 7 23

Spokespersons edit

The voting order in the 2003 contest was the order in which the countries had been drawn to perform. The spokespersons for each country were:

  1.   Iceland – Eva María Jónsdóttir
  2.   Austria – Dodo Roscic [de]
  3.   Ireland – Pamela Flood
  4.   Turkey – Meltem Ersan Yazgan[53]
  5.   Malta – Sharon Borg[54]
  6.   Bosnia and Herzegovina – Ana Vilenica [hr]
  7.   Portugal – Helena Ramos [pt]
  8.   Croatia – Davor Meštrović [hr]
  9.   Cyprus – Loukas Hamatsos
  10.   Germany – Axel Bulthaupt
  11.   Russia – Yana Churikova
  12.   Spain – Anne Igartiburu
  13.   Israel – Michal Zo'aretz [he]
  14.   Netherlands – Marlayne
  15.   United Kingdom – Lorraine Kelly
  16.   Ukraine – Lyudmyla Hariv[55]
  17.   Greece – Alexis Kostalas [el][56]
  18.   Norway – Roald Øyen
  19.   France – Sandrine François
  20.   Poland – Maciej Orłoś [pl]
  21.   Latvia – Ģirts Līcis[57]
  22.   Belgium – Corinne Boulangier [fr]
  23.   Estonia – Ines
  24.   Romania – Leonard Miron
  25.   Sweden – Kattis Ahlström[58]
  26.   Slovenia – Peter Poles

Detailed voting results edit

Detailed voting results of the Eurovision Song Contest 2003[59][60]
Voting procedure used:
  100% televoting
  100% jury vote
Total score
Iceland
Austria
Ireland
Turkey
Malta
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Portugal
Croatia
Cyprus
Germany
Russia
Spain
Israel
Netherlands
United Kingdom
Ukraine
Greece
Norway
France
Poland
Latvia
Belgium
Estonia
Romania
Sweden
Slovenia
Contestants
Iceland 81 7 8 12 6 5 1 6 4 12 1 1 3 3 1 7 4
Austria 101 10 6 5 10 5 4 2 8 8 8 2 8 4 2 6 6 7
Ireland 53 2 5 5 7 4 7 12 1 6 1 1 2
Turkey 167 3 12 4 12 8 10 8 10 3 7 12 7 2 7 10 10 2 12 10 8 10
Malta 4 3 1
Bosnia and Herzegovina 27 7 12 8
Portugal 13 2 2 3 6
Croatia 29 5 6 3 6 1 8
Cyprus 15 2 1 12
Germany 53 8 1 4 3 7 4 2 4 5 2 2 1 10
Russia 164 4 8 10 1 3 4 12 10 8 6 10 1 12 10 2 7 4 12 7 12 7 2 12
Spain 81 6 2 12 7 6 6 12 5 5 10 5 4 1
Israel 17 5 1 3 8
Netherlands 45 5 7 2 10 2 1 5 8 5
United Kingdom 0
Ukraine 30 8 4 10 5 3
Greece 25 1 4 12 5 1 2
Norway 123 12 2 12 6 5 7 4 3 7 6 7 3 6 7 6 10 3 12 5
France 19 8 2 3 6
Poland 90 10 10 12 5 4 2 8 6 4 5 8 5 4 4 3
Latvia 5 5
Belgium 165 7 4 10 7 10 6 3 6 3 12 8 10 5 10 8 3 12 12 10 8 8 3
Estonia 14 1 8 2 3
Romania 73 6 1 7 1 2 4 12 10 6 6 4 1 4 8 1
Sweden 107 5 3 8 1 3 2 1 3 7 5 3 10 5 7 2 7 6 4 7 12 6
Slovenia 7 4 3

12 points edit

Below is a summary of all 12 points in the final:

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
5   Russia   Croatia,   Estonia,   Latvia,   Slovenia,   Ukraine
4   Turkey   Austria,   Belgium,   Bosnia and Herzegovina,   Netherlands
3   Norway   Iceland,   Ireland,   Sweden
  Belgium   France,   Poland,   Spain
2   Iceland   Malta,   Norway
  Spain   Israel,   Portugal
1   Bosnia and Herzegovina   Turkey
  Cyprus   Greece
  Greece   Cyprus
  Ireland   United Kingdom
  Poland   Germany
  Romania   Russia
  Sweden   Romania

Broadcasts edit

Each participating broadcaster was required to relay live and in full the contest via television. Non-participating EBU member broadcasters were also able to relay the contest as "passive participants"; any passive countries wishing to participate in the following year's event were also required to provide a live broadcast of the contest or a deferred broadcast within 24 hours.[9] Broadcasters were able to send commentators to provide coverage of the contest in their own native language and to relay information about the artists and songs to their viewers. Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators, are shown in the tables below. Broadcasters in 42 countries were reported to have broadcast the event live or deferred, including broadcasters in Albania, Armenia, Australia, Belarus, Puerto Rico, Serbia and Montenegro and the United States.[61][62][63]

Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries[61]
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Commentator(s) Ref(s)
  Austria ORF ORF 1 Andi Knoll [64][65]
  Belgium RTBF La Une, RTBF Sat Jean-Pierre Hautier [66][67]
VRT TV1 André Vermeulen and Anja Daems [68][69]
  Bosnia and Herzegovina PBSBiH
  Croatia HRT Daniela Trbović [hr] [70]
  Cyprus CyBC RIK Ena [71]
  Estonia ETV Marko Reikop [72]
  France France Télévisions France 3 Laurent Ruquier and Isabelle Mergault [66]
  Germany ARD Das Erste Peter Urban [64][73]
  Greece ERT ET1 Dafni Bokota [74]
ERA 1 Nikos Triboulidis
  Iceland RÚV Sjónvarpið Gísli Marteinn Baldursson [75]
Rás 2
  Ireland RTÉ RTÉ One Marty Whelan and Phil Coulter [76]
  Israel IBA
  Latvia LTV LTV1 Kārlis Streips [lv] [77]
  Malta PBS TVM John Bundy [78]
  Netherlands NPO Nederland 2 Willem van Beusekom [68][79]
Radio 2
  Norway NRK NRK1 Jostein Pedersen [80]
NRK P1
  Poland TVP TVP1 Artur Orzech [81]
  Portugal RTP Margarida Mercês de Melo [pt] [82]
  Romania TVR
  Russia Channel One Yuriy Aksyuta [ru] and Yelena Batinova [ru] [83][84]
  Slovenia RTVSLO SLO 2 [sl] Andrea F [85]
  Spain TVE La Primera, TVE Internacional José Luis Uribarri [66][86]
  Sweden SVT SVT1 Pekka Heino [58][80]
SR SR P4 Carolina Norén and Björn Kjellman [58]
  Turkey TRT TRT 1, TRT Int Bülend Özveren [53]
  Ukraine NTU Pershyi Natsionalnyi Dmytro Kryzhanivskyi [55][87]
  United Kingdom BBC BBC One, BBC Prime Terry Wogan [80][88][89]
BBC Radio 2 Ken Bruce
Broadcasters and commentators in non-participating countries[61]
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Commentator(s) Ref(s)
  Albania RTSH
  Andorra RTVA ATV Meri Picart [ca] and Albert Roig [90]
  Australia SBS SBS TV[c] Des Mangan [91][92]
  Belarus BTRC Belarus-1 Ales Kruglyakov and Tatyana Yakusheva [93][94]
  Denmark DR DR1 Jørgen de Mylius [80][95]
  Finland YLE YLE TV2 Maria Guzenina and Asko Murtomäki [fi] [96][97][98][99]
YLE FST Thomas Lundin [sv]
YLE Radio Suomi
YLE Radio Vega
  Italy GAY.tv Fabio Canino and Paolo Quilici [100]
  Lithuania LRT Darius Užkuraitis [lt] [101]
  Kosovo RTK
  Macedonia MRT
  Serbia and Montenegro UJRT
   Switzerland SRG SSR SF 2 Roman Kilchsperger [de] [64][66]
TSR 1 Jean-Marc Richard and Alain Morisod
TSI 1 Daniele Rauseo

Incidents edit

Organisational issues edit

In January 2003, German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that Riga was suffering from serious financial problems that could lead to a breach of contract so the contest might need to be moved to another city.[102] Ilona Bērziņa, spokesperson of LTV, denied that potential financial issues the city council of Riga may be facing would interrupt the organisation of the contest.[103] In February 2003, The Baltic Times reported that a committee of Riga municipality rejected the proposal to withdraw the funds it pledged in support of organising the contest.[104]

In March 2003, Danish newspaper B.T. published an article based on accusations that the EBU television director Bjørn Erichsen made in reference to LTV suffering from organisational chaos which could result in the removal of Latvia's hosting duties since they were running behind schedule.[105] The general director of LTV, Uldis-Ivars Grava, replied, saying: "A few weeks ago, the EBU's legal director, Werner Rumphorst, was in Riga, and I spent an entire day with him and with the former general director of the Danish broadcaster DR, Bjørn Erichsen. We talked about co-operation and about programme exchanges, and neither of them said a single word that would indicate any doubts, lack of trust or accusation."[106] Ingrida Smite, head of press for the Eurovision Song Contest 2003, reaffirmed that the contest would take place in Riga despite reports to the contrary.[106]

Controversies surrounding Russian band t.A.T.u. edit

Upon the selection of the Russian artists t.A.T.u., the duo gave an interview to German tabloid Bild in March 2003 where they claimed that they would win the contest without a doubt and criticised the German entrant Lou calling her a witch with duo member Julia Volkova (also referring to Germany's 2002 entrant) stating, "In Russia we nurse blind and old people, but we don't send them to the Grand Prix. This must be different in Germany."[107] Lou later responded to the comments stating, "I don't know whether bitching, fighting and boozing kids are the right representatives for such a beautiful country as Russia."

t.A.T.u.'s first rehearsal dominated proceedings on 20 May—the band were supposed to rehearse the day before, but had turned up a day late, claiming that Julia Volkova was suffering from a sore throat.[108] The group were booed by journalists during their press conference where they complained about the production's poor lighting and stage. EBU supervisor Sarah Yuen said "They are the bad girls of pop… we shouldn’t have expected them to come here and be nice and pleasant."[109] The EBU had originally planned to have a pre-recorded performance of the Russian entry ready to substitute during the live broadcast in case the duo performed a lesbian publicity stunt on stage, which they deemed inappropriate for a family entertainment show.[110] The EBU later stated that the performance would be broadcast live without any interruption.[111][112]

Russian complaint against Irish vote edit

After the contest, Russian broadcaster Channel One complained that Irish broadcaster RTÉ had used a back-up jury, and that it had cost them victory. A statement by Channel One said "Considering [the] insignificant difference in points between the first and third places, there are grounds to believe that the contest results could be much different for Russia."[113][114] On the night of the competition, the voting polls operated by Irish telecommunications company Eircom suffered a delay in delivering the results on time, which prompted RTÉ to use the votes of the back-up jury instead.[115] The EBU cleared RTÉ of any potential wrongdoing after an investigation on the matter and stated that the rules concerning substituting the back-up jury in place of the televote were correctly applied.[115] RTÉ later published the unused results of the televote, which showed that had the jury not been used, Turkey would still have won, and Ireland's voting "partners", the United Kingdom, would still have no points. Russia did not receive any points from the televote, however, since Belgium only received 2 points from the Irish televote as opposed to 10 points awarded by the Irish jury, Russia would have placed second.[116]

Other awards edit

Marcel Bezençon Awards edit

For the second year, the Marcel Bezençon Awards, organised by Sweden's then-Head of Delegation and 1992 representative Christer Björkman, and 1984 winner Richard Herrey, honoured songs in the contest.[117] The awards were divided into three categories: the Artistic Award, the Fan Award, and the Press Award.[118] The Fan Award was decided by the combined votes from members of OGAE, an organisation consisting of a network of over 40 Eurovision Song Contest fan clubs across Europe and beyond.[119][120]

Category Country Song Performer(s) Songwriter(s)
Artistic Award   Netherlands "One More Night" Esther Hart
Fan Award   Spain "Dime" Beth
  • Jesús María Pérez
  • Amaya Martínez
Press Award   Turkey "Everyway That I Can" Sertab Erener

Official album edit

 
Cover art of the official album

Eurovision Song Contest: Riga 2003 was the official compilation album of the 2003 contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by CMC International on 19 May 2003. The album featured all 26 songs that entered in the 2003 contest.[121]

Charts edit

Chart (2003) Peak
position
German Compilation Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[122] 3

Notes edit

  1. ^ Specifically Styrian, a Southern Bavarian dialect
  2. ^ On behalf of the German public broadcasting consortium ARD[25]
  3. ^ Deferred broadcast on 25 May at 20:30 AEST (10:30 UTC)[91]

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External links edit

  • Official website
  • Eurovision Song Contest 2003 at IMDb  

56°56′56″N 24°06′23″E / 56.94889°N 24.10639°E / 56.94889; 24.10639

eurovision, song, contest, 2003, eurovision, 2003, redirects, here, junior, contest, junior, 48th, edition, eurovision, song, contest, took, place, riga, latvia, following, country, victory, 2002, contest, with, song, wanna, marie, organised, european, broadca. Eurovision 2003 redirects here For the junior contest see Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003 The Eurovision Song Contest 2003 was the 48th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest It took place in Riga Latvia following the country s victory at the 2002 contest with the song I Wanna by Marie N Organised by the European Broadcasting Union EBU and host broadcaster Latvijas Televizija LTV the contest was held at the Skonto Hall on 24 May 2003 The contest was presented by last year s winner Marie N and former contestant Renars Kaupers 1 Eurovision Song Contest 2003Magical Rendez vousDatesFinal24 May 2003 2003 05 24 HostVenueSkonto HallRiga LatviaPresenter s Marie NRenars KaupersDirected bySven StojanovicExecutive supervisorSarah YuenExecutive producerBrigita RozenbrikaHost broadcasterLatvian Television LTV Websiteeurovision wbr tv wbr event wbr riga 2003ParticipantsNumber of entries26Debuting countries UkraineReturning countries Iceland Ireland Netherlands Norway Poland PortugalNon returning countries Denmark Finland Lithuania Macedonia SwitzerlandParticipation map Competing countries Relegated countries unable to participate Countries that participated in the past but not in 2003VoteVoting systemEach country awards 1 8 10 and 12 points to their ten favourite songsWinning song Turkey Everyway That I Can 2002 Eurovision Song Contest 2004 Twenty six countries participated in the contest beating the record of twenty five first set in 1993 It saw the return of Iceland Ireland the Netherlands Norway and Poland after having been relegated from competing the previous year Portugal also returned to the contest after being absent the previous year while Ukraine participated in the contest for the first time 2 Denmark Finland Lithuania Macedonia and Switzerland were relegated due to their poor results in 2002 The winner was Turkey with the song Everyway That I Can performed by Sertab Erener who wrote it with Demir Demirkan This was Turkey s first victory in the contest after 28 years of participation Belgium Russia Norway and Sweden rounded out the top five Further down the table the United Kingdom achieved their worst result to date finishing twenty sixth last place with no points However they avoided relegation due to being one of the Big Four countries at the time 3 The host country Latvia placed twenty fourth third from last this was the first time since 1995 that the host entry did not place in the top 10 and it was overall the worst result for a host entry since 1992 This was the last contest to take place on one evening The EBU revealed that it would be adding a semi final show to the competition in order to accommodate the growing number of interested countries wishing to take part in the contest 4 This was also the last contest in which a relegation system was used to determine which countries would participate in the following year s contest As the Belgian entry was sung in an imaginary language this was also the first time the contest featured a song with no parts performed in English or a language native to the country Contents 1 Location 1 1 Bidding phase 2 Participating countries 3 Format 3 1 Graphic design 3 2 National host broadcaster 3 3 Voting system 3 4 Future changes in contest format 4 Contest overview 4 1 Spokespersons 5 Detailed voting results 5 1 12 points 6 Broadcasts 7 Incidents 7 1 Organisational issues 7 2 Controversies surrounding Russian band t A T u 7 3 Russian complaint against Irish vote 8 Other awards 8 1 Marcel Bezencon Awards 9 Official album 9 1 Charts 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksLocation edit nbsp Skonto Hall Riga host venue of the 2003 contest On 22 August 2002 Latvian public broadcaster Latvijas Televizija LTV announced that it had chosen the Skonto Hall in Riga as the host venue for the 2003 contest Latvia won the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 on 25 May 2002 in Tallinn Estonia with the song I Wanna performed by Marie N This was Latvia s first victory in the contest which also carried the right for LTV to organise the 2003 contest LTV initially had budgetary concerns with staging the contest The chairman of the National Radio and Television Council Ojars Rubenis stated that if the government presented no budget guarantees the council which owns shares in LTV would vote against organising the contest Rubenis elaborated that LTV was prepared to cover the creative side and broadcasting of the contest but additional funds would be needed for infrastructure hotels and other financial issues The Government of Latvia allotted 5 3 million for the event with a further 1 1 million being provided by the Riga City Council covering the anticipated organisational costs for the contest 5 A task force that included members from LTV the National Radio and Television Council and state secretaries was formed to explicitly work on organisation of the contest and report on the estimated expenses Bidding phase edit nbsp nbsp Jurmala nbsp Riga nbsp Ventspilsclass notpageimage Locations of the candidate cities the chosen host city is marked in blue while the eliminated cities are marked in red Three cities were considered as host city of the contest Riga Ventspils and Jurmala 6 LTV requested proposals from the three cities concerning how they plan to organise the contest Riga City Council offered the Mezaparks Open air Stage Skonto Hall and the kipsala International Exhibition Centre as potential venues for hosting the contest Ventspils bid to host the contest at the Ventspils Olympic Centre with a pledge of support from city mayor Aivars Lembergs who added that Ventspils could also provide two cruise ferries that could be used to accommodate up to 8 000 guests 7 Jurmala City Council offered the Dzintari Concert Hall with plans to expand and upgrade the facility and surrounding infrastructure 6 LTV s organisational task force later decided to proceed with the bids from Riga and Ventspils eliminating Jurmala and the Mezaparks Open air Stage in Riga On 15 June 2002 the EBU Reference Group decided in conjunction with the organisational task force in Latvia that Riga would host the 2003 contest with the venue option between the Skonto Hall and kipsala International Exhibition Centre being decided upon by LTV 8 LTV ultimately chose the Skonto Hall as the venue to stage the contest Key Host venue Shortlisted City Venue Jurmala Dzintari Concert Hall Riga Mezaparks Open air Stage Skonto Hall kipsala International Exhibition Centre Ventspils Ventspils Olympic CenterParticipating countries editFurther information List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest Eurovision Song Contest 2003 Participation summaries by countryAustriaBelgiumBosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaCyprusEstoniaFranceGermanyGreeceIcelandIrelandIsraelLatviaMaltaNetherlandsNorwayPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaSloveniaSpainSwedenTurkeyUkraineUnited Kingdom Per the rules of the contest twenty six countries were allowed to participate in the event a new record number of competing entries in a single edition 9 10 Originally a total of twenty five countries were scheduled to participate in the event however Ukraine was added to the line up shortly before the publication of the competing countries in November 2002 making its debut appearance in the contest 10 11 Iceland Ireland the Netherlands Norway Poland and Portugal returned after being absent from the previous year s event and competed alongside Ukraine the Big Four largest contributing participating countries France Germany Spain and the United Kingdom and the remaining fifteen highest scoring participating countries from the 2002 contest 12 13 Having received the lowest scores in the 2002 contest Denmark 14 Finland 15 Lithuania 16 Macedonia 17 and Switzerland 18 were subsequently relegated and were prevented from participating in this year s event 9 Twenty four countries participated in the 2002 contest in Tallinn of these fourteen were expected to compete in 2003 The bottom ten in Tallinn would be relegated to allow countries to compete for the first time 19 In reality only five countries were relegated nineteen countries that entered in 2002 competed in Riga 20 Originally Serbia and Montenegro Albania and Belarus had planned 2003 debuts but the EBU s late changes to the relegation procedure meant that they could not compete 21 The countries eventually made their debuts in 2004 The 2003 contest was one of the few editions where no lead artists had previously competed as lead artists in past contests although Slovenian representative Karmen had previously performed as a backing singer to Vili Resnik for Slovenia at the 1998 contest 22 Participants of the Eurovision Song Contest 2003 23 24 Country Broadcaster Artist Song Language Songwriter s nbsp Austria ORF Alf Poier Weil der Mensch zahlt German a Alf Poier nbsp Belgium RTBF Urban Trad Sanomi Imaginary Yves Barbieux nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina PBSBiH Mija Martina Ne brini Croatian English Arjana KunstekInes Prajo nbsp Croatia HRT Claudia Beni Vise nisam tvoja Croatian English Andrej Babic nbsp Cyprus CyBC Stelios Constantas Feeling Alive English Stelios Constantas nbsp Estonia ETV Ruffus Eighties Coming Back English Vaiko Eplik nbsp France France Televisions Louisa Baileche Monts et merveilles French Hocine Hallaf nbsp Germany NDR b Lou Let s Get Happy English Bernd MeinungerRalph Siegel nbsp Greece ERT Mando Never Let You Go English MandoTeri Siganos nbsp Iceland RUV Birgitta Open Your Heart English Birgitta HaukdalHallgrimur oskarssonSveinbjorn I Baldvinsson nbsp Ireland RTE Mickey Harte We ve Got the World English Martin BranniganKeith Molloy nbsp Israel IBA Lior Narkis Words for Love Hebrew Yossi GispanYoni Ro eh nbsp Latvia LTV F L Y Hello from Mars English Martins FreimanisLauris Reiniks nbsp Malta PBS Lynn Chircop To Dream Again English Cynthia SammutAlfred Zammit nbsp Netherlands NOS Esther Hart One More Night English Alan MichaelTjeerd van Zanen nbsp Norway NRK Jostein Hasselgard I m Not Afraid to Move On English Arve FursetVJ Strom nbsp Poland TVP Ich Troje Keine Grenzen Zadnych granic German Polish Russian Andre FrankeJoachim Horn BerngesJacek LagwaMichal Wisniewski nbsp Portugal RTP Rita Guerra Deixa me sonhar Portuguese English Paulo Martins nbsp Romania TVR Nicola Don t Break My Heart English Mihai AlexandruNicola nbsp Russia C1R t A T u Ne ver ne boysia Ne ver ne bojsya Russian Mars LasarValery Polienko nbsp Slovenia RTVSLO Karmen Nanana English Karmen StavecMartin Stibernik nbsp Spain TVE Beth Dime Spanish Amaya MartinezJesus Maria Perez nbsp Sweden SVT Fame Give Me Your Love English Calle KindbomCarl Losnitz nbsp Turkey TRT Sertab Erener Everyway That I Can English Demir DemirkanSertab Erener nbsp Ukraine NTU Olexandr Hasta la vista English Svika PickMirit Shem Or nbsp United Kingdom BBC Jemini Cry Baby English Martin IsherwoodFormat editThe EBU released the rules for the 2003 contest in November 2002 which detailed that twenty six countries would participate making it the largest number of participants to take part in the contest up to this point 9 The rules also modified the eligibility criteria for entries changing the date of release cut off point for songs from 1 January 2003 to 1 October 2002 There was also a change in the tie break rule which would now resolve such a case in favour of the nation that received points from a higher number of countries rather than taking into account the number of top scores 12 points received The draw for running order was held on 29 November 2002 in Riga hosted by Marie N and Renars Kaupers with the results being revealed during a delayed broadcast of the proceedings later that day 26 27 The official sponsors for the contest were Latvian mobile telecom provider Latvijas Mobilais Telefons and Latvian bank company Parex Banka 28 LTV selected Latvia Tours as its official partner to provide lodging travel and recreation for the contest delegations and other guests 29 Riga City Council was also responsible for offering promotion and activities during the week preceding the contest 30 Full preparations for the 2003 contest began on 18 May 2003 at the Skonto Hall There were rehearsals press conferences and participants were also involved in an internet chat 31 Two dress rehearsals were held on 23 May in front of an estimated 12 000 people The organisers of the contest held a press conference one of the issues complained about was the lack of invitations for the after party The final dress rehearsal was held on 24 May the day of the contest A simulation of the voting procedure was also held in which the presenters linked up with all twenty six countries by satellite for the first time 31 On the day of the contest bookmaker William Hill s odds placed Russia as joint favourites to win the contest with Spain Ireland Slovenia Estonia Norway and Iceland were behind in third fourth and joint fifth respectively 32 At the conclusion of the contest favourites Russia placed third and Spain placed eighth while outsiders Turkey 20 1 and Belgium 50 1 claimed the first and second places respectively Austria at 100 1 were favourites to finish last however they scored their best result since 1989 placing sixth 32 An official compilation album featuring all twenty six competing entries from the contest was released for the first time on the EMI CMC label 33 Graphic design edit The design of the contest was built around the theme Magical rendez vous which represented the meeting of the various European nations coming to Latvia and encountering Latvia s versatile landscapes 34 11 LTV launched a competition in order to find the logo for the contest At the close of the competition high interest from the public translated into 204 logo submissions which were ultimately judged by a jury panel consisting of Uldis Ivars Grava general director of LTV Arvids Babris then executive producer of the contest Ugis Brikmanis director Laimonis Steinbergs artist Inguna Ribena architect Arta Giga LTV representative and Juhan Paadam EBU representative 35 On 16 November 2002 LTV and the EBU presented the logo for the contest which was designed by the director of the Computer Graphics Department of LTV Maris Kalve with further elaboration by LTV s chief artist Kristaps Skulte 36 The logo was named upes the Latvian word for rivers and carried the slogan All rivers flow toward the sea all songs flow toward the Eurovision Song Contest The postcards shown between the entries were directed by Ugis Brikmanis and featured the artists competing at the contest interacting with Latvia s various landscapes forests rivers lakes and towns The postcards were recorded during the preceding week of the contest and ran behind schedule leading to some postcards featuring only footage from the rehearsals and press conferences 37 The stage design was created by Aigars Ozolins and based on the concept called Planet Latvia 38 39 The stage used several light and video effects and included an innovation new to the contest a video screen stage floor that could be used to give each entry a unique look 39 The green room where the delegations and competitors awaited the results of the contest was placed directly behind the stage and unveiled shortly before the voting portion of the show commenced allowing the audience to see the representatives of the competing nations as they received points 40 National host broadcaster edit Initially Arvids Babris head of the Latvian delegation at the 2002 contest was appointed as executive producer for the contest however after production fell behind schedule and the EBU applied pressure upon LTV he was dismissed and Brigita Rozenbrika took over the position receiving additional support from the Swedish broadcaster Sveriges Television SVT and Estonian broadcaster Eesti Televisioon ETV 11 41 42 SVT was also the technical producer of the contest for the second year running with Sven Stojanovic as director and the Swedish lighting company Spectra contracted for the contest 43 44 Voting system edit The EBU reintroduced televoting as an obligatory voting mode in all participating countries which awarded 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 and 12 points to their ten favourite songs in ascending order Countries voted in the same order as they had performed Bosnia and Herzegovina and Russia were granted an exception to holding a televote as they cited that their telecommunications penetration was less than 80 45 9 Polish broadcaster Telewizja Polska opted to use only SMS voting 46 In the televoting smsvoting household shall not be permitted to vote more than three times 9 All other countries planned to use a televote This contest was also the first to introduce a computer generated scoreboard which rearranged itself in order as the points were awarded Broadcasters were required to assemble back up juries that consisted of eight voting members with age and gender equally distributed in the case of televote failure on the night of the competition 9 Four members of the jury had to be members of the general public and the other four members had to be music professionals 9 Future changes in contest format edit With the increased number of potential participating countries the EBU began to review the format of the contest with potential changes being considered such as adding extra evenings for the show holding a regional pre selection or putting a limit to number of participating countries by increasing the entrance fee On 29 January 2003 the EBU unveiled a two night system for the contest in 2004 a semi final would be held before a grand final The Big Four along with the top ten from the 2003 contest would automatically qualify for the 2004 final 47 The format change eliminated the relegation system allowing all countries to send an artist and song to the contest The fourteen eventual countries from the 2003 contest that qualified to compete directly in the 2004 final were Turkey Belgium Russia Norway Sweden Austria Poland Spain Iceland Romania Ireland Germany France and the United Kingdom All other countries would have to compete in the semi final for ten remaining spots in the final Contest overview editThe contest featured special guests that communicated with the hosts via satellite Lys Assia winner of the 1956 contest greeted the hosts and spectators from Nicosia Elton John spoke to the presenters live from the Life Ball in Vienna and one astronaut and one cosmonaut Ed Lu and Yuri Malenchenko gave their greetings from the International Space Station 48 49 50 The interval act for the contest was a short film directed by Anna Viduleja that featured a sequence of performances by Latvian post folklore group Ilgi Renars Kaupers band Brainstorm Marie N and piano player Raimonds Pauls 51 The UK s result was their worst ever at Eurovision by contrast Turkey s win was their first Alf Poier s sixth place was Austria s best result for fourteen years Poland s seventh place was their best in nine and Romania s tenth place was one place behind their best ever Belgium s second place was their first top five finish in seventeen years while Spain s eighth place tied with Iceland s which was its best result since 1999 was their third top ten finish in 2 years but Latvia s third from bottom finish was their worst result in four attempts it was also the worst placing for a host country since 1992 until 2015 when host country Austria received nul points and came second to last Germany also received nul points but because of the running order Austria placed ahead of them Winner Results of the Eurovision Song Contest 2003 52 R O Country Artist Song Points Place 1 nbsp Iceland Birgitta Open Your Heart 81 8 2 nbsp Austria Alf Poier Weil der Mensch zahlt 101 6 3 nbsp Ireland Mickey Harte We ve Got the World 53 11 4 nbsp Turkey Sertab Erener Everyway That I Can 167 1 5 nbsp Malta Lynn Chircop To Dream Again 4 25 6 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina Mija Martina Ne brini 27 16 7 nbsp Portugal Rita Guerra Deixa me sonhar 13 22 8 nbsp Croatia Claudia Beni Vise nisam tvoja 29 15 9 nbsp Cyprus Stelios Constantas Feeling Alive 15 20 10 nbsp Germany Lou Let s Get Happy 53 11 11 nbsp Russia t A T u Ne ver ne boysia 164 3 12 nbsp Spain Beth Dime 81 8 13 nbsp Israel Lior Narkis Words for Love 17 19 14 nbsp Netherlands Esther Hart One More Night 45 13 15 nbsp United Kingdom Jemini Cry Baby 0 26 16 nbsp Ukraine Olexandr Hasta la vista 30 14 17 nbsp Greece Mando Never Let You Go 25 17 18 nbsp Norway Jostein Hasselgard I m Not Afraid to Move On 123 4 19 nbsp France Louisa Baileche Monts et merveilles 19 18 20 nbsp Poland Ich Troje Keine Grenzen Zadnych granic 90 7 21 nbsp Latvia F L Y Hello from Mars 5 24 22 nbsp Belgium Urban Trad Sanomi 165 2 23 nbsp Estonia Ruffus Eighties Coming Back 14 21 24 nbsp Romania Nicola Don t Break My Heart 73 10 25 nbsp Sweden Fame Give Me Your Love 107 5 26 nbsp Slovenia Karmen Nanana 7 23 Spokespersons edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The voting order in the 2003 contest was the order in which the countries had been drawn to perform The spokespersons for each country were nbsp Iceland Eva Maria Jonsdottir nbsp Austria Dodo Roscic de nbsp Ireland Pamela Flood nbsp Turkey Meltem Ersan Yazgan 53 nbsp Malta Sharon Borg 54 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina Ana Vilenica hr nbsp Portugal Helena Ramos pt nbsp Croatia Davor Mestrovic hr nbsp Cyprus Loukas Hamatsos nbsp Germany Axel Bulthaupt nbsp Russia Yana Churikova nbsp Spain Anne Igartiburu nbsp Israel Michal Zo aretz he nbsp Netherlands Marlayne nbsp United Kingdom Lorraine Kelly nbsp Ukraine Lyudmyla Hariv 55 nbsp Greece Alexis Kostalas el 56 nbsp Norway Roald Oyen nbsp France Sandrine Francois nbsp Poland Maciej Orlos pl nbsp Latvia Girts Licis 57 nbsp Belgium Corinne Boulangier fr nbsp Estonia Ines nbsp Romania Leonard Miron nbsp Sweden Kattis Ahlstrom 58 nbsp Slovenia Peter PolesDetailed voting results editDetailed voting results of the Eurovision Song Contest 2003 59 60 Voting procedure used 100 televoting 100 jury vote Total score Iceland Austria Ireland Turkey Malta Bosnia and Herzegovina Portugal Croatia Cyprus Germany Russia Spain Israel Netherlands United Kingdom Ukraine Greece Norway France Poland Latvia Belgium Estonia Romania Sweden Slovenia Contestants Iceland 81 7 8 12 6 5 1 6 4 12 1 1 3 3 1 7 4 Austria 101 10 6 5 10 5 4 2 8 8 8 2 8 4 2 6 6 7 Ireland 53 2 5 5 7 4 7 12 1 6 1 1 2 Turkey 167 3 12 4 12 8 10 8 10 3 7 12 7 2 7 10 10 2 12 10 8 10 Malta 4 3 1 Bosnia and Herzegovina 27 7 12 8 Portugal 13 2 2 3 6 Croatia 29 5 6 3 6 1 8 Cyprus 15 2 1 12 Germany 53 8 1 4 3 7 4 2 4 5 2 2 1 10 Russia 164 4 8 10 1 3 4 12 10 8 6 10 1 12 10 2 7 4 12 7 12 7 2 12 Spain 81 6 2 12 7 6 6 12 5 5 10 5 4 1 Israel 17 5 1 3 8 Netherlands 45 5 7 2 10 2 1 5 8 5 United Kingdom 0 Ukraine 30 8 4 10 5 3 Greece 25 1 4 12 5 1 2 Norway 123 12 2 12 6 5 7 4 3 7 6 7 3 6 7 6 10 3 12 5 France 19 8 2 3 6 Poland 90 10 10 12 5 4 2 8 6 4 5 8 5 4 4 3 Latvia 5 5 Belgium 165 7 4 10 7 10 6 3 6 3 12 8 10 5 10 8 3 12 12 10 8 8 3 Estonia 14 1 8 2 3 Romania 73 6 1 7 1 2 4 12 10 6 6 4 1 4 8 1 Sweden 107 5 3 8 1 3 2 1 3 7 5 3 10 5 7 2 7 6 4 7 12 6 Slovenia 7 4 3 12 points edit Below is a summary of all 12 points in the final N Contestant Nation s giving 12 points 5 nbsp Russia nbsp Croatia nbsp Estonia nbsp Latvia nbsp Slovenia nbsp Ukraine 4 nbsp Turkey nbsp Austria nbsp Belgium nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina nbsp Netherlands 3 nbsp Norway nbsp Iceland nbsp Ireland nbsp Sweden nbsp Belgium nbsp France nbsp Poland nbsp Spain 2 nbsp Iceland nbsp Malta nbsp Norway nbsp Spain nbsp Israel nbsp Portugal 1 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina nbsp Turkey nbsp Cyprus nbsp Greece nbsp Greece nbsp Cyprus nbsp Ireland nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Poland nbsp Germany nbsp Romania nbsp Russia nbsp Sweden nbsp RomaniaBroadcasts editEach participating broadcaster was required to relay live and in full the contest via television Non participating EBU member broadcasters were also able to relay the contest as passive participants any passive countries wishing to participate in the following year s event were also required to provide a live broadcast of the contest or a deferred broadcast within 24 hours 9 Broadcasters were able to send commentators to provide coverage of the contest in their own native language and to relay information about the artists and songs to their viewers Known details on the broadcasts in each country including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below Broadcasters in 42 countries were reported to have broadcast the event live or deferred including broadcasters in Albania Armenia Australia Belarus Puerto Rico Serbia and Montenegro and the United States 61 62 63 Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries 61 Country Broadcaster Channel s Commentator s Ref s nbsp Austria ORF ORF 1 Andi Knoll 64 65 nbsp Belgium RTBF La Une RTBF Sat Jean Pierre Hautier 66 67 VRT TV1 Andre Vermeulen and Anja Daems 68 69 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina PBSBiH nbsp Croatia HRT Daniela Trbovic hr 70 nbsp Cyprus CyBC RIK Ena 71 nbsp Estonia ETV Marko Reikop 72 nbsp France France Televisions France 3 Laurent Ruquier and Isabelle Mergault 66 nbsp Germany ARD Das Erste Peter Urban 64 73 nbsp Greece ERT ET1 Dafni Bokota 74 ERA 1 Nikos Triboulidis nbsp Iceland RUV Sjonvarpid Gisli Marteinn Baldursson 75 Ras 2 nbsp Ireland RTE RTE One Marty Whelan and Phil Coulter 76 nbsp Israel IBA nbsp Latvia LTV LTV1 Karlis Streips lv 77 nbsp Malta PBS TVM John Bundy 78 nbsp Netherlands NPO Nederland 2 Willem van Beusekom 68 79 Radio 2 nbsp Norway NRK NRK1 Jostein Pedersen 80 NRK P1 nbsp Poland TVP TVP1 Artur Orzech 81 nbsp Portugal RTP Margarida Merces de Melo pt 82 nbsp Romania TVR nbsp Russia Channel One Yuriy Aksyuta ru and Yelena Batinova ru 83 84 nbsp Slovenia RTVSLO SLO 2 sl Andrea F 85 nbsp Spain TVE La Primera TVE Internacional Jose Luis Uribarri 66 86 nbsp Sweden SVT SVT1 Pekka Heino 58 80 SR SR P4 Carolina Noren and Bjorn Kjellman 58 nbsp Turkey TRT TRT 1 TRT Int Bulend Ozveren 53 nbsp Ukraine NTU Pershyi Natsionalnyi Dmytro Kryzhanivskyi 55 87 nbsp United Kingdom BBC BBC One BBC Prime Terry Wogan 80 88 89 BBC Radio 2 Ken Bruce Broadcasters and commentators in non participating countries 61 Country Broadcaster Channel s Commentator s Ref s nbsp Albania RTSH nbsp Andorra RTVA ATV Meri Picart ca and Albert Roig 90 nbsp Australia SBS SBS TV c Des Mangan 91 92 nbsp Belarus BTRC Belarus 1 Ales Kruglyakov and Tatyana Yakusheva 93 94 nbsp Denmark DR DR1 Jorgen de Mylius 80 95 nbsp Finland YLE YLE TV2 Maria Guzenina and Asko Murtomaki fi 96 97 98 99 YLE FST Thomas Lundin sv YLE Radio Suomi YLE Radio Vega nbsp Italy GAY tv Fabio Canino and Paolo Quilici 100 nbsp Lithuania LRT Darius Uzkuraitis lt 101 nbsp Kosovo RTK nbsp Macedonia MRT nbsp Serbia and Montenegro UJRT nbsp Switzerland SRG SSR SF 2 Roman Kilchsperger de 64 66 TSR 1 Jean Marc Richard and Alain Morisod TSI 1 Daniele RauseoIncidents editOrganisational issues edit In January 2003 German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that Riga was suffering from serious financial problems that could lead to a breach of contract so the contest might need to be moved to another city 102 Ilona Berzina spokesperson of LTV denied that potential financial issues the city council of Riga may be facing would interrupt the organisation of the contest 103 In February 2003 The Baltic Times reported that a committee of Riga municipality rejected the proposal to withdraw the funds it pledged in support of organising the contest 104 In March 2003 Danish newspaper B T published an article based on accusations that the EBU television director Bjorn Erichsen made in reference to LTV suffering from organisational chaos which could result in the removal of Latvia s hosting duties since they were running behind schedule 105 The general director of LTV Uldis Ivars Grava replied saying A few weeks ago the EBU s legal director Werner Rumphorst was in Riga and I spent an entire day with him and with the former general director of the Danish broadcaster DR Bjorn Erichsen We talked about co operation and about programme exchanges and neither of them said a single word that would indicate any doubts lack of trust or accusation 106 Ingrida Smite head of press for the Eurovision Song Contest 2003 reaffirmed that the contest would take place in Riga despite reports to the contrary 106 Controversies surrounding Russian band t A T u edit Upon the selection of the Russian artists t A T u the duo gave an interview to German tabloid Bild in March 2003 where they claimed that they would win the contest without a doubt and criticised the German entrant Lou calling her a witch with duo member Julia Volkova also referring to Germany s 2002 entrant stating In Russia we nurse blind and old people but we don t send them to the Grand Prix This must be different in Germany 107 Lou later responded to the comments stating I don t know whether bitching fighting and boozing kids are the right representatives for such a beautiful country as Russia t A T u s first rehearsal dominated proceedings on 20 May the band were supposed to rehearse the day before but had turned up a day late claiming that Julia Volkova was suffering from a sore throat 108 The group were booed by journalists during their press conference where they complained about the production s poor lighting and stage EBU supervisor Sarah Yuen said They are the bad girls of pop we shouldn t have expected them to come here and be nice and pleasant 109 The EBU had originally planned to have a pre recorded performance of the Russian entry ready to substitute during the live broadcast in case the duo performed a lesbian publicity stunt on stage which they deemed inappropriate for a family entertainment show 110 The EBU later stated that the performance would be broadcast live without any interruption 111 112 Russian complaint against Irish vote edit After the contest Russian broadcaster Channel One complained that Irish broadcaster RTE had used a back up jury and that it had cost them victory A statement by Channel One said Considering the insignificant difference in points between the first and third places there are grounds to believe that the contest results could be much different for Russia 113 114 On the night of the competition the voting polls operated by Irish telecommunications company Eircom suffered a delay in delivering the results on time which prompted RTE to use the votes of the back up jury instead 115 The EBU cleared RTE of any potential wrongdoing after an investigation on the matter and stated that the rules concerning substituting the back up jury in place of the televote were correctly applied 115 RTE later published the unused results of the televote which showed that had the jury not been used Turkey would still have won and Ireland s voting partners the United Kingdom would still have no points Russia did not receive any points from the televote however since Belgium only received 2 points from the Irish televote as opposed to 10 points awarded by the Irish jury Russia would have placed second 116 Other awards editMarcel Bezencon Awards edit For the second year the Marcel Bezencon Awards organised by Sweden s then Head of Delegation and 1992 representative Christer Bjorkman and 1984 winner Richard Herrey honoured songs in the contest 117 The awards were divided into three categories the Artistic Award the Fan Award and the Press Award 118 The Fan Award was decided by the combined votes from members of OGAE an organisation consisting of a network of over 40 Eurovision Song Contest fan clubs across Europe and beyond 119 120 Category Country Song Performer s Songwriter s Artistic Award nbsp Netherlands One More Night Esther Hart Tjeerd van ZanenAlan Michael Fan Award nbsp Spain Dime Beth Jesus Maria PerezAmaya Martinez Press Award nbsp Turkey Everyway That I Can Sertab Erener Sertab ErenerDemir DemirkanOfficial album edit nbsp Cover art of the official album Eurovision Song Contest Riga 2003 was the official compilation album of the 2003 contest put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by CMC International on 19 May 2003 The album featured all 26 songs that entered in the 2003 contest 121 Charts edit Chart 2003 Peak position German Compilation Albums Offizielle Top 100 122 3Notes edit Specifically Styrian a Southern Bavarian dialect On behalf of the German public broadcasting consortium ARD 25 Deferred broadcast on 25 May at 20 30 AEST 10 30 UTC 91 References edit Bakker Sietse 1 December 2002 Renars Kaupers and Marie N hosts 2003 show ESCToday com Archived from the original on 21 October 2020 Retrieved 16 November 2013 Bakker Sietse 27 November 2002 EBU released list of participant for 2003 ESCToday com Archived from the original on 4 December 2020 Retrieved 16 November 2013 UK act hits Eurovision low BBC News BBC News 25 May 2003 Archived from the original on 26 August 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2013 Barak Itamar 22 May 2003 EBU press conference about the contest s future ESCToday com Archived from the original on 22 May 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2013 Vestule noliedz Eirovizijas finansu problemas in Latvian Delfi 31 January 2003 Archived from the original on 27 September 2020 Retrieved 27 October 2013 a b Dzintaru koncertzales parbuve Eirovizijas rikosanai izmaksatu tris miljonus latu in Latvian TVNET 6 June 2002 Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 27 October 2013 Levalde Vesma 3 June 2002 Ventspils dome velas Eirovizijas rikosanu Ventspili papildinats in Latvian db lv Archived from the original on 3 November 2018 Retrieved 27 October 2013 Eirovizija izmaksas 4 7 vai 5 5 miljonus latu in Latvian TVNET 2 July 2002 Archived from the original on 3 November 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2013 a b c d e f g h Rules of 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Archived from the original on 27 January 2012 Retrieved 17 June 2012 Eurovision Song Contest Riga 2003 amazon co uk Amazon Archived from the original on 29 April 2022 Retrieved 5 November 2014 Product details released 19 May 2003 Eurovision Song Contest 2003 Offiziellecharts de GfK Entertainment Charts Retrieved 17 March 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eurovision Song Contest 2003 Official website Official rules for 2003 Eurovision Song Contest 2003 at IMDb nbsp 56 56 56 N 24 06 23 E 56 94889 N 24 10639 E 56 94889 24 10639 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eurovision Song Contest 2003 amp oldid 1223680711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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