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History of the Eurovision Song Contest

The Eurovision Song Contest (French: Concours Eurovision de la chanson) was first held in 1956, originally conceived as an experiment in transnational television broadcasting.[1] Following a series of exchange broadcasts in 1954, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) commissioned an international song competition, from an idea developed by Sergio Pugliese and Marcel Bezençon and originally based on the Italian Sanremo Music Festival.

Marcel Bezençon (1907–1981) was one of the key figures involved in creating the Eurovision Song Contest.

A total of 67 contests have been held since its first edition, and 1,721 songs representing 52 countries have been performed on the Eurovision stage as of 2023. The contest has seen many changes since its inauguration, such as the introduction of relegation in the 1990s, and subsequently semi-finals in the 2000s, as a response to growing numbers of interested participants. The rules of the contest have also seen multiple changes over the years, with the voting system and language criteria being modified on several occasions.

The Eurovision Song Contest has been identified as the longest-running annual international televised music competition in the world, as determined by Guinness World Records, and around 40 countries now regularly take part each year. Several other competitions have been inspired by Eurovision in the years since its formation, and the EBU has also created a number of complimentary contests which focus on other aspects of music and culture. The 2020 edition of the contest was the first to be cancelled, as no competitive event was able to take place due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Competition overview edit

 
London: Royal Albert Hall, venue of the 1968 contest.
 
Dublin: Gaiety Theatre, venue of the 1971 contest.
 
Jerusalem: International Convention Centre, venue of the 1979 and 1999 contests.
 
Oslo: Oslo Spektrum, venue of the 1996 contest.
 
Stockholm: Globe Arena, venue of the 2000 and 2016 contests.
 
Belgrade: Belgrade Arena, venue of the 2008 contest.
 
Malmö: Malmö Arena, venue of the 2013 and 2024 contests.
 
Lisbon: Altice Arena, venue of the 2018 contest.
Edition Year Date of final Host broadcaster(s) Venue Host city Countries Winning country Ref
Total In final
1st 1956 24 May RTSI Teatro Kursaal   Lugano 7[a]    Switzerland [2]
2nd 1957 3 March HR/ARD Großer Sendesaal des hessischen Rundfunks   Frankfurt 10   Netherlands [3]
3rd 1958 12 March NTS AVRO Studios   Hilversum   France [4]
4th 1959 11 March RTF Palais des Festivals   Cannes 11   Netherlands [5]
5th 1960 29 March BBC Royal Festival Hall   London 13   France [6]
6th 1961 18 March RTF Palais des Festivals   Cannes 16   Luxembourg [7]
7th 1962 18 March CLT Villa Louvigny   Luxembourg City   France [8]
8th 1963 23 March BBC BBC Television Centre   London   Denmark [9]
9th 1964 21 March DR Tivoli Concert Hall   Copenhagen   Italy [10]
10th 1965 20 March RAI Sala di Concerto della RAI   Naples 18   Luxembourg [11]
11th 1966 5 March CLT Villa Louvigny   Luxembourg City   Austria [12]
12th 1967 8 April ORF Großer Festsaal der Wiener Hofburg   Vienna 17   United Kingdom [13]
13th 1968 6 April BBC Royal Albert Hall   London   Spain [14]
14th 1969 29 March TVE Teatro Real   Madrid 16 [15]
15th 1970 21 March NOS RAI Congrescentrum   Amsterdam 12   Ireland [16]
16th 1971 3 April RTÉ Gaiety Theatre   Dublin 18   Monaco [17]
17th 1972 25 March BBC Usher Hall   Edinburgh   Luxembourg [18]
18th 1973 7 April CLT Nouveau Théâtre   Luxembourg City 17   Luxembourg [19]
19th 1974 6 April BBC Brighton Dome   Brighton   Sweden [20]
20th 1975 22 March SR Stockholmsmässan   Stockholm 19   Netherlands [21]
21st 1976 3 April NOS Nederlands Congresgebouw   The Hague 18   United Kingdom [22]
22nd 1977 7 May[b] BBC Wembley Conference Centre   London   France [23]
23rd 1978 22 April TF1 Palais des Congrès   Paris 20   Israel [24]
24th 1979 31 March IBA International Convention Centre   Jerusalem 19   Israel [25]
25th 1980 19 April NOS Nederlands Congresgebouw   The Hague   Ireland [26]
26th 1981 4 April RTÉ RDS Simmonscourt   Dublin 20   United Kingdom [27]
27th 1982 24 April BBC Harrogate Convention Centre   Harrogate 18   Germany [28]
28th 1983 23 April BR/ARD Rudi-Sedlmayer-Halle   Munich 20   Luxembourg [29]
29th 1984 5 May CLT Théâtre Municipal   Luxembourg City 19   Sweden [30]
30th 1985 4 May SVT Scandinavium   Gothenburg   Norway [31]
31st 1986 3 May NRK Grieghallen   Bergen 20   Belgium [32]
32nd 1987 9 May RTBF Palais de Centenaire   Brussels 22   Ireland [33]
33rd 1988 30 April RTÉ RDS Simmonscourt   Dublin 21    Switzerland [34]
34th 1989 6 May SRG SSR Palais de Beaulieu   Lausanne 22   Yugoslavia [35]
35th 1990 5 May JRT/RTZ Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall   Zagreb   Italy [36]
36th 1991 4 May RAI Studio 15 di Cinecittà   Rome   Sweden [37]
37th 1992 9 May SVT Malmö Isstadion   Malmö 23   Ireland [38][39]
38th 1993 15 May RTÉ Green Glens Arena   Millstreet 25   Ireland [40]
39th 1994 30 April Point Theatre   Dublin   Ireland [41]
40th 1995 13 May 23   Norway [42]
41st 1996 18 May NRK Oslo Spektrum   Oslo   Ireland [43]
42nd 1997 3 May RTÉ Point Theatre   Dublin 25   United Kingdom [44]
43rd 1998 9 May BBC National Indoor Arena   Birmingham   Israel [45]
44th 1999 29 May IBA International Convention Centre   Jerusalem 23   Sweden [46]
45th 2000 13 May SVT Globe Arena   Stockholm 24   Denmark [47]
46th 2001 12 May DR Parken Stadium   Copenhagen 23   Estonia [48]
47th 2002 25 May ETV Saku Suurhall   Tallinn 24   Latvia [49]
48th 2003 24 May LTV Skonto Hall   Riga 26   Turkey [50]
49th 2004 15 May TRT Abdi İpekçi Arena   Istanbul 36 24   Ukraine [51]
50th 2005 21 May NTU Palace of Sports   Kyiv 39   Greece [52]
51st 2006 20 May ERT Olympic Indoor Hall   Athens 37   Finland [53]
52nd 2007 12 May YLE Hartwall Arena   Helsinki 42   Serbia [54]
53rd 2008 24 May RTS Belgrade Arena   Belgrade 43 25   Russia [55]
54th 2009 16 May C1R Olimpiyskiy Arena   Moscow 42   Norway [56]
55th 2010 29 May NRK Telenor Arena   Oslo 39   Germany [57]
56th 2011 14 May NDR/ARD Düsseldorf Arena   Düsseldorf 43   Azerbaijan [58]
57th 2012 26 May İTV Baku Crystal Hall   Baku 42 26   Sweden [59]
58th 2013 18 May SVT Malmö Arena   Malmö 39   Denmark [60]
59th 2014 10 May DR B&W Hallerne   Copenhagen 37   Austria [61]
60th 2015 23 May ORF Wiener Stadthalle   Vienna 40 27   Sweden [62]
61st 2016 14 May SVT Globe Arena   Stockholm 42 26   Ukraine [63]
62nd 2017 13 May UA:PBC International Exhibition Centre   Kyiv   Portugal [64]
63rd 2018 12 May RTP Altice Arena   Lisbon 43   Israel [65]
64th 2019 18 May IPBC/Kan Expo Tel Aviv   Tel Aviv 41   Netherlands [66]
Cancelled 2020 16 May NPO/NOS/AVROTROS Rotterdam Ahoy   Rotterdam 41 26 No winner [67]
65th 2021 22 May NPO/NOS/AVROTROS Rotterdam Ahoy   Rotterdam 39 26   Italy [68]
66th 2022 14 May RAI PalaOlimpico   Turin 40 25   Ukraine [69]
67th 2023 13 May BBC Liverpool Arena   Liverpool 37 26   Sweden [70]
68th 2024 11 May SVT Malmö Arena   Malmö TBD [71]

Contest themes and slogans edit

An individual slogan has been associated with each edition of the contest since 2002, with the exception of 2009.[72][73] This slogan is decided by the host broadcaster and is then used to develop the contest's visual identity and design.[74][75] This slogan is typically used by the producers in planning and formulating the show's visual identity, and is channelled into the contest's stage design, the opening and interval acts, and the "postcards": short videos interspersed between the entries which usually highlight the host country, and in many cases introduce the competing acts.[76][77][78] The slogan of the 2023 contest, "United by Music", was announced on 14 November 2023 to be retained for future editions of the event as part of its global brand strategy.[79]

Year Host city Slogan
2002   Tallinn A Modern Fairytale
2003   Riga A Magical Rendez-vous
2004   Istanbul Under the Same Sky
2005   Kyiv Awakening
2006   Athens Feel the Rhythm
2007   Helsinki True Fantasy
2008   Belgrade Confluence of Sound
2009   Moscow No slogan
2010   Oslo Share the Moment
2011   Düsseldorf Feel Your Heart Beat!
2012   Baku Light Your Fire!
2013   Malmö We Are One
2014   Copenhagen #JoinUs
2015   Vienna Building Bridges
2016   Stockholm Come Together
2017   Kyiv Celebrate Diversity
2018   Lisbon All Aboard!
2019   Tel Aviv Dare to Dream
2020;[c] 2021   Rotterdam Open Up
2022   Turin The Sound of Beauty
2023–present
United by Music[d]

Origins edit

The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) was formed in 1950, when British broadcaster BBC hosted a conference with 23 organisations at the Imperial Hotel in Torquay, England, with the aim of establishing cooperation on creative endeavours and setting a foundation for the exchange of television programmes across borders.[80][81] "Eurovision" as a term in telecommunications was first used by British journalist George Campey in the London Evening Standard in 1951, when he referred to a BBC programme being relayed by Dutch television;[80][82] the EBU's Eurovision transmission network was subsequently founded in 1954, at the time formed of a series of microwave links across Europe.[83]

In the years following the formation of the EBU a number of big events were transmitted via their infrastructure, including the coronation of Elizabeth II, which was broadcast in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany, in addition to the United Kingdom.[80][82][84] In September 1953, an EBU meeting in London resulted in a series of international exchange programmes organised the following year, entitled the "European Television Season", and relayed live across Europe through the Eurovision network.[80][83] The first of these programmes was shown on 6 June 1954, showing coverage of the Narcissus Festival held in Montreux, France, followed by a tour of Vatican City. Further events were broadcast over the following days, including the Palio di Siena, an athletics meet in Glasgow, a parade by the Royal Navy passing Queen Elizabeth II, and live transmission of football matches from the 1954 FIFA World Cup in Switzerland, the first time the FIFA World Cup was accompanied by live television coverage.[80][82][84]

Following this summer season of programmes, the EBU formed a "Programme Committee" to investigate new initiatives for cooperation between broadcasters each year, with Marcel Bezençon, Director-General of the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SRG SSR), serving as the committee's first President, and Rene McCall, deputy director of the BBC, and Jean d'Arcy, Director of the French broadcaster Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF), serving as Vice Presidents. This committee met in Monte Carlo in January 1955, and approved two new projects for further study: a European song competition, initially proposed by Sergio Pugliese from the Italian broadcaster RAI, and a contest of amateur entertainers; the latter idea was eventually discarded.[82][85] On 19 October 1955, at the annual General Assembly of the EBU, held in the Palazzo Corsini in Rome under the Presidency of the Director-General of the BBC Sir Ian Jacob, the EBU agreed to the organising of the song contest, under the initial title of the European Grand Prix, and accepted a proposal by the Swiss delegation to host the event in Lugano in the spring of 1956.[82][86][87] A planning sub-group was formed to establish the rules of the competition, headed by Eduard Hass of SRG SSR, which used the Italian Sanremo Music Festival as a basis for their work, with several amendments and additions made to better reflect this new international version.[80]

1950s edit

 
Gustav Winckler and Birthe Wilke, representing Denmark at the 1957 contest in Frankfurt.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1956 was the first edition of the contest, organised by Radiotelevisione svizzera di lingua italiana (RTSI) and held on 24 May 1956 at the Teatro Kursaal in Lugano, Switzerland.[2][86] The regulations for this first contest allowed one participating broadcast organisation from each country to submit two songs of between 3 and 3½ minutes in length, the only edition to permit more than one song per country.[2][80][88] Each country was strongly encouraged to hold a national contest to select their competing entries, with only solo artists permitted to perform.[80] Seven countries entered the inaugural contest, with entries received from Belgium, France, West Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Switzerland.[2][86] Voting in this first contest was held behind closed doors: two jury members from each country situated at the venue ranked the competing songs, including those of their own country.[2][89] Switzerland's Lys Assia was crowned the contest's first winner, with the song "Refrain".[90] Only the overall winner of the contest was announced at its conclusion, and the full results have never been made public.[2][89] No known video footage of the event is known to survive beyond newsreel of the winning reprise; audio of most of the contest however does exist.[2][89]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1957 was the second edition of the contest, organised by Hessischer Rundfunk (HR) on behalf of ARD and held on 3 March 1957 at the Großer Sendesaal des hessischen Rundfunks in Frankfurt, West Germany.[3][91] Early rules established that a different broadcaster would take on the task of organising the contest each year, and Germany was selected to host the 1957 event.[92] Ten countries entered this second contest, with the seven original broadcasters joined by Austria, Denmark and the United Kingdom, with each country submitting one song for consideration.[3] Taking inspiration from the Festival of British Popular Songs, organised by the BBC in August 1956 which included a scoreboard and voting by regional juries, the contest organisers decided to incorporate these ideas into the pan-European contest, allowing viewers at home to follow the voting procedure.[91][93] A new voting system was introduced in tandem, with a jury of ten members in each country casting a single vote for their favourite song; jury members from one country could not vote for the song of their own country, a rule which still applies to the present day.[91][93] The Netherlands was voted the winner, represented by Corry Brokken with the song "Net als toen".[90]

 
Italy's Domenico Modugno performing in a rehearsal ahead of the 1958 contest in Hilversum.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1958 was the third edition of the contest, organised by Nederlandse Televisie Stichting (NTS) and held on 12 March 1958 at the AVRO Studios in Hilversum, Netherlands.[4][94] This marked the first time that the winning country of the previous edition was given the honour of hosting, setting a precedent that continues to be observed.[95] The United Kingdom decided not to compete in this edition, however Sweden made its debut, keeping the total number of competing countries at ten.[94][95] A new rule limiting the duration of each competing entry to 3 minutes was introduced, prompted by the previous year's contest when the Italian entry lasted for over 5 minutes.[3] France gained its first win in the contest, represented by André Claveau and "Dors, mon amour".[90] Despite only placing third, Italy's "Nel blu, dipinto di blu", popularly knows as "Volare" and performed by Domenico Modugno, would go on to greater commercial success than the winning song, hitting number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 and being recorded by various artists over the years, with combined sales of over 22 million copies worldwide.[94][96]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1959 was the fourth edition of the contest, organised by Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF) and held on 11 March 1959 at the Palais des Festivals in Cannes, France.[5][97] 11 countries competed in this edition, which saw the United Kingdom returning to the contest along with new entrants Monaco, while Luxembourg decided to withdraw.[5][98] The Netherlands's Teddy Scholten was crowned the winner with the song "Een beetje", becoming the first country to win the contest twice.[90][5][97] This contest also marked the only time that the top three entries were given a reprise performance, with the United Kingdom's Pearl Carr & Teddy Johnson and France's Jean Philippe also performing for a second time at the broadcast's conclusion.[5][98]

1960s edit

The Eurovision Song Contest 1960 was the fifth edition of the contest, organised by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and held on 25 March 1960 at the Royal Festival Hall in London, United Kingdom.[6][99] Dutch broadcaster NTS declined the opportunity to stage the event for the second time in three years, leading the EBU to approach the BBC to host the event as the previous year's runner-up.[6][100] The number of competing countries grew to 13, as Luxembourg returned and Norway sent its first entry.[6][100] France recorded their second contest win, with Jacqueline Boyer taking the title with "Tom Pillibi".[90]

 
Isabelle Aubret gave France its third win in five years, when she won the 1962 contest in Luxembourg City.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1961 was the sixth edition of the contest, organised by RTF and held on 18 March 1961 at the Palais des Festivals in Cannes, France.[7][101] France became the first country to host two contests, with the Palais des Festivals having also hosted the 1959 event. This was also the first contest to be held on a Saturday night, which has now become the standard time-slot for the contest's final.[7][101] A record 16 countries competed in this year's event, with debut entries from Finland, Spain and Yugoslavia.[7][102] Luxembourg became the fourth country to win the Eurovision title, with French singer Jean-Claude Pascal giving the Grand Duchy their first win with "Nous les amoureux".[7][90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1962 was the seventh edition of the contest, organised by Compagnie Luxembourgeoise de Radiodiffusion (CLT) and held on 18 March 1962 at the Grand Auditorium de RTL, Villa Louvigny in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg.[8][103] For the first time there was no change in the countries competing, with the same line-up seen as in 1961. A new voting system was implemented at this contest, with each country now giving 3, 2 and 1 points to the top three songs as determined by the combined votes of the assembled jury.[8][104] France's Isabelle Aubret was crowned the winner with "Un premier amour", giving France its third victory in five years.[90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1963 was the eighth edition of the contest, organised by the BBC and held on 23 March 1963 at the BBC Television Centre in London, United Kingdom.[9][105] France's RTF had declined the offer to stage the contest once again, and the BBC stepped in to host the contest for the second time.[105][106] A modification of the voting system used in 1962 was adopted, with countries now giving 5, 4, 3, 2 and 1 points for their favourite songs.[9][107] In a close fought contest for first place between Denmark and Switzerland, Grethe and Jørgen Ingmann emerged victorious with "Dansevise" for Denmark, giving the Scandinavian country their first victory on the final vote.[90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1964 was the ninth edition of the contest, organised by Danmarks Radio (DR) and held on 21 March 1964 at the Tivoli Concert Hall in Copenhagen, Denmark.[10][108] Sweden were forced to withdraw due to industrial action by the Swedish Musicians' Union, however as Portugal made its debut appearance the total number of competing countries remained at 16.[108][109] Another modification of the voting system now saw each country giving 5, 3 and 1 points to the top 3 songs based on the total of all votes cast by jury members, with each jury member having three votes to distribute among the songs; if all members voted for only two songs, these would get 6 and 3 points, and if all members voted for the same song it would get 9 points.[108][109] This event marked the first time that the contest was interrupted by a protester, when a man demonstrating against the right-wing dictatorships of Spain and Portugal and the inclusion of these countries in the contest entered the stage holding a banner stating "Boycott Franco and Salazar", before being quickly removed as cameras cut to a shot of the scoreboard.[108][110] No footage of this protest remains however as, like the 1956 contest, no video footage of the contest is known to exist, but footage of the opening sequence and the winning reprise, as well as audio recordings are known to survive.[10][109] Italy's Gigliola Cinquetti scored a landslide victory with the song "Non ho l'età", gaining almost three times as many points as the United Kingdom in second place and giving Italy its first Eurovision win.[90][110]

 
France Gall and Udo Jürgens at the 1966 contest in Luxembourg City, as Jürgens celebrates his win for Austria.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1965 was the tenth edition of the contest, organised by Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI) and held on 20 March 1965 at the Sala di Concerto della RAI in Naples, Italy.[11][111] A record 18 countries competed in this anniversary event, with Sweden making its return and Ireland making its debut.[112] With the contest being picked up by the Eastern Europe Intervision network and broadcast in countries such as the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary and East Germany for the first time, the 1965 contest was the biggest yet with an estimated global audience of 150 million viewers.[111][112] Sweden's entry caused some controversy when their entry was performed in English, rather than in their national language Swedish; as there was no rule in place to dictate in what language a country could perform this was allowed despite protest from other competing countries.[11][113] Luxembourg won for the second time, with French chanteuse France Gall performing "Poupée de cire, poupée de son".[90] It was the first time that a pop song had won the contest, which would become an international hit for Gall, and would have an influence on the type of songs entered into the contest in years to come.[11][114]

Ahead of the 1966 contest, the EBU invited broadcasters to submit proposals on ideas they believed should be introduced in future editions. This was prompted by concerns from CLT on their ability to stage the next event.[113] Some ideas in common among several broadcasters included: the introduction of semi-finals to reduce the number of competing acts, with some also suggesting that competing countries should be split on a geographic or linguistic basis; music experts having a 50% stake in the result to enable more of an emphasis being placed on musical quality; and a tightening of the rules on language and submission cut-off, with the creation of an executive supervisor role in order to oversee the contest and raise production standards. Further proposals on changes to the contest included holding the event over multiple locations, with performances and hosting duties split across two or three different competing countries; this proposal was rejected following concerns raised that musical quality and consistency would suffer in a contest held across multiple locations and with multiple orchestras, and that the risk of technical failure would also increase by using multiple venues.[113] The EBU went on to adopt a number of the suggestions raised, with the following contest featuring music experts in the national juries, and the implementation of a language rule stipulating that songs must be performed in one of the national languages of the participating country.[12] Other changes, such as semi-finals and splitting countries by set criteria, would subsequently be revisited in decades to come.[113]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1966 was the eleventh edition of the contest, organised by CLT and held on 5 March 1966 at the Grand Auditorium de RTL, Villa Louvigny in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg.[12][115] This marked Luxembourg's second contest as host broadcaster, using the same venue as that in 1961. This contest saw the first performance by a black artist at Eurovision, when Milly Scott represented the Netherlands.[12][116] Udo Jürgens secured Austria's first win with "Merci, Chérie"; this was Jürgens' third attempt at victory, having previously finished 6th in 1964 and 4th in 1965.[90][117]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1967 was the twelfth edition of the contest, organised by Österreichischer Rundfunk (ORF) and held on 8 April 1967 at the Großer Festsaal der Wiener Hofburg in Vienna, Austria.[13][118] Denmark withdraw from this contest, reducing the number of competing countries to 17. The scoring system last used in 1961, with ten members casting a single vote for their favourite, was reintroduced, with at least half of the jury members in each country required to be less than 30 years old.[119][120] A number of other innovations introduced for the first time at this contest, such as shots of the green room during the voting process and each country's broadcaster appointing an official representative, have since become integral parts of the present-day contest.[120] The United Kingdom's Sandie Shaw won the contest with "Puppet on a String" in a landslide victory, with the UK gaining more than twice as many votes as the runner-up Ireland to gain its first Eurovision title.[90][13]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1968 was the thirteenth edition of the contest, organised by the BBC and held on 6 April 1968 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, United Kingdom.[14][121] This was the first edition of the contest to be produced in colour.[14][122] A tight voting sequence saw Spain and the United Kingdom vie for first place by the end, with the votes of the final juries being decisive in favour of Spain's Massiel by just one vote.[90] Joan Manuel Serrat had originally been announced as the Spanish representative, but when he wanted to sing in Catalan, Spain's dictator Francisco Franco demanded that he perform "La La La" in Castillian, resulting in his replacement by Massiel.[14][122] A Spanish documentary in 2008 claimed that, in an attempt to avoid civil unrest seen in other parts of Europe and to boost Spain's standing globally, Franco had ordered agents to attempt to manipulate the votes of the other countries' juries to secure a Spanish win at the contest.[123] The documentary goes on to suggest that the United Kingdom's Cliff Richard, who had been tipped for victory before the contest with "Congratulations", should have been the winner.[124][125] However the effectiveness of any potential bribery has been disputed, and others, including Massiel, have accused the documentary creators and broadcaster of manufacturing the scandal.[126][127]

 
The Netherlands' Lenny Kuhr was one of four winners at the 1969 contest.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1969 was the fourteenth edition of the contest, organised by Televisión Española (TVE) and held on 29 March 1969 at the Teatro Real in Madrid, Spain.[15][128] 16 countries entered this year's contest, with Austria refusing to take part due to the Spanish dictatorship.[128][129] A tight voting sequence saw France, Spain, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom in contention for first place, when with the votes of the final jury, all four countries finished on an equal number of points. With no rules in place to break a tie for first place all four countries were declared victors, the only time that more than one country has won in a single year.[128][130] As four medals had fortunately been struck for the prize-giving, Spain's Salomé, the UK's Lulu, the Netherlands' Lenny Kuhr and France's Frida Boccara were all able to receive their prize ahead of a reprise of all four winning songs: "Vivo cantando", "Boom Bang-a-Bang", "De troubadour", and "Un jour, un enfant" respectively.[15][130] The result meant that France gained a new record fourth win in the contest, with the Netherlands recording its third win, and both Spain and the United Kingdom earning their second wins; Spain also became the first country to achieve two wins in a row.[129]

1970s edit

 
Dana became the first of seven Irish winners at the 1970 contest in Amsterdam.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1970 was the fifteenth edition of the contest, organised by Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS) and held on 21 March 1970 at the RAI Congrescentrum in Amsterdam, Netherlands.[16][131] A draw was held to determine the host country of this contest following the four-way tie for first place in 1969, which chose the Netherlands as hosts over France, as Spain and the United Kingdom declined to take part in the draw due to having hosted recent contests.[132][133] Widespread dissatisfaction with the result of the 1969 contest led to the withdrawals of Finland, Norway, Sweden and Portugal, with Austria and Denmark also declining to participate in response, leaving only 12 countries to compete in Amsterdam, the lowest number of participants since 1959.[16][131][133] A tie-break rule was introduced for the first time to ensure there would be no further joint winners: in the result of a tie for first place the artists of the countries involved would perform again, and the juries in all other remaining countries would determine the winner by a show of hands; if that too resulted in a tie then the countries would share the title.[16][133] A number of innovations which have since become regular features of the contest were first implemented in this year, originally as a way to extend the broadcast due to the low number of participating entries. These include an extended opening film sequence highlighting the host country, and short film clip "postcards" highlighting the participants or host country which were placed between the competing songs.[133][131][132] Ireland, which would go on to win more times than any other country, recorded its first win here, with Dana taking the contest with "All Kinds of Everything".[90][132]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1971 was the sixteenth edition of the contest, organised by Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ) and held on 3 April 1971 at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin, Ireland.[17][134] A number of changes to the contest saw groups allowed for the first time, with a maximum of six performers on stage; previously only one or two principal vocalists had been permitted with support from a maximum of three supporting artists.[17][135][136] A new voting system was also introduced for this contest, implemented to ensure that there would be a clear-cut winner and to avoid countries receiving nul points: two jurors from each country, one below the age of 25 and the other above, ranked all songs except that of their own country on a scale of one to five.[17][135] All countries were now obligated to provide a music video of their entry and to broadcast all entries ahead of the contest via a preview show.[134] With these changes, the countries which had sat out in 1970 felt able to return, and 18 participants in total were present, the biggest contest since 1966, with Norway, Sweden, Finland, Austria and Portugal returning and Malta making its debut.[17][135] Monaco recorded their first and only win, with French singer Séverine victorious for the principality with "Un banc, un arbre, une rue".[90][136]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1972 was the seventeenth edition of the contest, organised by the BBC and held on 25 March 1972 at the Usher Hall in Edinburgh, United Kingdom.[18][137] Monaco's Télé Monte-Carlo (TMC) had initially expressed interest in hosting, however no suitable venue in Monaco was available in time for the contest. After Spain's TVE and Germany's ARD, having come second and third the previous year, and France's ORTF had turned down the opportunity to host, the BBC offered once again to step in, taking the contest outside of London and England for the first time, to the Scottish capital.[138][139] The same 18 countries from 1971 were again present, and the same voting system was implemented.[138] The contest was broadcast in 28 countries, and for the first time was available live in Asia, with viewers able to watch the show in Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, Hong Kong and Thailand.[18][139] Luxembourg earned their third contest win, represented by the Greek singer Vicky Leandros with "Après toi"; it was Leandros' second attempt at Eurovision, having previously come 4th for Luxembourg in 1967.[90][139]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1973 was the eighteenth edition of the contest, organised by CLT and held on 7 April 1973 at the Nouveau Théâtre in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg.[19][140] Israel made its first appearance, becoming the first non-European nation to enter the contest, while Austria and Malta both withdrew, bringing the total participating nations to 17.[141] Coming less than a year after the Munich massacre, security was unusually tight in light of Israel's debut, with the venue sealed off by the authorities and the Israeli delegation being isolated in their hotel and surrounded by armed guards when not required at the venue; the audience had also been warned not to stand during the show at the risk of being shot.[140][141] This year marked the first abolition of the language rule, allowing participants the freedom to choose the language in which they wished to perform: several countries capitalised on this, with Finland and Sweden performing in English, while Norway performed in both English and French.[19][141] Pre-recorded backing tracks were also permitted for the first time, however all vocals were still required to be performed live and any instruments featured on the track had to be seen on stage.[141][142] Luxembourg won the contest for the second year in a row, with the French singer Anne-Marie David giving Luxembourg its fourth win with "Tu te reconnaîtras"; Luxembourg thus became the first country to win two outright back-to-back victories, Spain having won in both 1968 and 1969 but sharing the latter title.[90][143]

 
Sweden's ABBA went on to achieve worldwide fame following their Eurovision win in 1974.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1974 was the nineteenth edition of the contest, organised by the BBC and held on 6 April 1974 at The Dome in Brighton, United Kingdom.[20][144] Luxembourg's CLT turned down the offer to host the contest for a second year in a row, and Spain's RTVE as runner-up in 1973 had also rejected hosting duties; an offer by Israel's IBA was turned down due to their limited technical capabilities, and in the end the BBC threw its hat into the ring once again to take on the contest for the fifth time.[20][145] 17 countries competed in total, with Greece making its debut appearance; France withdrew a number of days before the event following the death of the President of France Georges Pompidou, in a mark of respect as his funeral was arranged for the day of the contest.[145] The voting system was modified once again to bring back the system last used in 1970, with 10 jury members casting a single vote for their favourite song.[20][145] Sweden's ABBA were declared the winners of the contest with "Waterloo", giving Sweden its first Eurovision title.[90] ABBA's win in the contest would propel them to worldwide fame, with an estimated 380 million records sold across their career, with "Waterloo" alone selling five million copies and becoming one of the contest's most successful winning songs.[146][147][148]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1975 was the twentieth edition of the contest, organised by Sveriges Radio (SR) and held on 22 March 1975 at the Stockholmsmässan in Stockholm, Sweden.[21][149] A then-record 19 countries took part in this edition, which saw Greece withdrawing, France and Malta returning, and Turkey making its debut entry.[150] SR had initially been hesitant in staging the contest due to the expense that came with it, and had wanted all competing countries to share the costs, however these cost sharing plans were not implemented in time for the '75 event.[150][151] The Stockholm event also saw demonstrations by left-wing activists who opposed the high costs of hosting the event.[149] A new voting system was introduced at this contest, which has been the basis for the rewarding of points at all future contests: each country's jury awarded 12 points to their top placed song, 10 points to their second placed, and then 8 to 1 points for those ranked third to tenth.[21][149][151] The Netherlands was the first country to win the contest under this new system, with Teach-In achieving a fourth Dutch Eurovision win with "Ding-a-dong".[90]

 
"Save Your Kisses for Me" by Brotherhood of Man would become the contest's most successful winning song, selling over six million copies worldwide.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1976 was the twenty-first edition of the contest, organised by NOS and held on 3 April 1976 at the Nederlands Congresgebouw in The Hague, Netherlands.[22][152] The previous year's host Sweden, in response to the protests during the 1975 event and fearful of the costs involved in staging the event should they win again, decided to withdraw, joining Malta and Turkey, however with Austria and Greece returning a total of 18 countries took to the stage for the Netherlands' third contest as hosts.[22][152][153] Partly in response to the concerns raised by the Swedish broadcaster, all competing countries were now required to contribute to the costs of running Eurovision, with the value of the contribution fee dependent on the country's viewership and population.[153] The United Kingdom earned its third Eurovision victory, courtesy of Brotherhood of Man and "Save Your Kisses for Me", which would go on to sell over six million records worldwide, more than any other winning song in the history of the contest.[90][154]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1977 was the twenty-second edition of the contest, organised by the BBC and held on 7 May 1977 at the Wembley Conference Centre in London, United Kingdom.[23][155] Originally scheduled to take place on 2 April, a strike by BBC cameramen and technicians forced a five-week delay.[156][157] The language rule was re-introduced at this contest, meaning that songs could only be performed in one of the national languages of the country it represented.[23][157] 18 countries took part in the London contest, with Sweden returning and Yugoslavia withdrawing; an attempt was also made by Tunisia to take part in the contest for the first time, however this eventually did not materialise, despite being drawn to perform fourth on stage.[155][157] France set a new record in recording its fifth Eurovision win, with Marie Myriam taking the contest with "L'Oiseau et l'Enfant", in what would become France's last victory to date.[90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1978 was the twenty-third edition of the contest, organised by TF1 and held on 22 April 1978 at the Palais des Congrès in Paris, France.[24][158] A new record of 20 countries competed in France's third showing as host, with Denmark and Turkey returning, the former making its first appearance since 1966.[159][160] Israel won the contest for the first time, represented by Izhar Cohen and the Alphabeta with the song "A-Ba-Ni-Bi".[90] Israel's win proved problematic for a number of non-competing broadcasters who were airing the event, particularly those in the Arab world with limited recognition of Israel, and many broadcasters ended the transmission of the event early when it became clear that Israel would win.[159][160]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1979 was the twenty-fourth edition of the contest, organised by the Israel Broadcasting Authority (IBA) and held on 31 March 1979 at the International Convention Centre in Jerusalem.[25][161] 19 countries took part, with Turkey, who had initially intended to participate and had already selected their act, withdrawing at a late stage following pressure from Arab nations who objected to a predominantly Muslim nation taking part in Israel.[162] A tight result saw Israel and Spain vie for first place, with Spain leading by only one point going into the final vote, which was Spain's own; by giving the hosts 10 points they awarded Israel its second victory in a row, handing the victory to Milk and Honey and the song "Hallelujah".[90][25][162]

1980s edit

 
Ireland's Johnny Logan would go on to win the contest three times, picking up his first Eurovision win in 1980 in The Hague.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1980 was the twenty-fifth edition of the contest, organised by Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS) and held on 19 April 1980 at the Nederlands Congresgebouw in The Hague, Netherlands.[26][163] Israel, having won the previous year, had initially agreed to host the contest, however due to the cost of hosting the event for a second year in a row, IBA eventually declined to host the event. After a number of other broadcasters, including the BBC, appeared reluctant to stage the event, NOS stepped in on the understanding that they could host a scaled-back production, using the same venue as in 1976.[164] The 19 April date proved problematic for Israel as it conflicted with Yom HaZikaron, and after failed attempts to move the date Israel ultimately pulled out, the first and only time that the previous year's winning country was unable to defend its title.[164][165] Monaco also withdrew from the contest, however the number of competing countries remained steady at 19, with Turkey returning and Morocco making its debut entry, becoming the first African country to compete in the contest.[26][164] Johnny Logan recorded the first of his three Eurovision wins in The Hague, giving Ireland its second victory with the song "What's Another Year".[90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1981 was the twenty-sixth edition of the contest, organised by RTÉ and held on 4 April 1981 at the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin, Ireland.[27][166] 20 countries competed in total, with Cyprus making its debut appearance, Israel and Yugoslavia returning, and Morocco and Italy withdrawing, the latter for the first time since the contest was formed.[167] A worldwide audience of around 500 million viewers was expected, with some 30 countries taking the broadcast across Europe, Asia and North Africa.[167] The voting came down to a close contest between Switzerland, the United Kingdom and Germany, and the UK gained its fourth victory by a 4-point margin over Germany. Bucks Fizz, specially formed for the contest, would have great success in the following years, and their Eurovision winning song "Making Your Mind Up" would go on to become a Europe-wide hit.[166][90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1982 was the twenty-seventh edition of the contest, organised by the BBC and held on 24 April 1982 at the Harrogate Convention Centre in Harrogate, United Kingdom.[28][168] 18 countries competed in total, with France and Greece withdrawing.[169] French broadcaster TF1 in withdrawing criticised the contest's musical quality and describing it as a "monument to drivel", where as Greece, which would have performed second on the night, was forced to pull out a few weeks before the contest when it was discovered that its intended entry had been previously released and based on a Greek folk song.[168][169][170] Germany dominated the voting and would win with the biggest margin yet seen under the current system (61 points), as well as gaining a new record number of 12 points, with 9 juries placing them top. Nicole became the first German act to win the contest, 26 years after their first entry, and during the winning reprise would perform her winning entry "Ein bißchen Frieden" in English, French, Dutch and the original German.[28][90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1983 was the twenty-eighth edition of the contest, organised by Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR) on behalf of ARD and held on 23 April 1983 at the Rudi-Sedlmayer-Halle in Munich, West Germany.[29][171] 20 countries were present at Germany's second contest has hosts, with returns from Italy, Greece and France, with the latter represented by a new broadcaster, Antenne 2, following a public outcry over the previous year's absence, however Ireland withdrew for the first time due to a financial crisis at broadcaster RTÉ.[172][173] Luxembourg recorded its fifth outright win after a close vote over Israel, Sweden and Yugoslavia, with the French singer Corinne Hermès cementing the Grand Duchy as one of the contest's most successful countries with "Si la vie est cadeau".[90][173]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1984 was the twenty-ninth edition of the contest, organised by CLT and held on 5 May 1984 at the Théâtre Municipal in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg.[30][174] 19 countries in total took part, with Ireland returning and Israel declining to participate as the date of the contest clashed with Yom HaZikaron, with Greece also withdrawing at a late stage after broadcaster ERT decided that their potential songs were too low quality for the event.[175] Désirée Nosbusch, chosen as the hostess for the event, became the youngest person to compère the contest, at only 19 years old.[30][174] 10 years after ABBA had earned Sweden its first Eurovision win, Herreys gave the Scandinavian country its second, taking the contest with "Diggi-Loo Diggi-Ley".[90]

 
Sandra Kim (pictured in 2012) became the contest's youngest winner in 1986, at 13 years old.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1985 was the thirtieth edition of the contest, organised by Sveriges Television (SVT) and held on 4 May 1985 at the Scandinavium in Gothenburg, Sweden.[31][176] With over 8,000 spectators present in the arena, the 1985 event was the largest yet held, and was the first contest to be broadcast live via satellite.[176][83] 19 countries were again present, with Israel and Greece returning but Yugoslavia and the Netherlands withdrawing, the latter for the first time; in both cases the contest clashed with national memorial days, with the Remembrance of the Dead held in the Netherlands and in Yugoslavia the anniversary of the death of President Josip Broz Tito.[176][177] A close-fought contest in the voting between Norway, Germany and Sweden saw the perennial losers victorious for the first time: Norway had previously come last on six occasion, more than any other country, leading to great celebrations in the arena when Bobbysocks! were crowned the winners with "La det swinge".[176][90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1986 was the thirty-first edition of the contest, organised by Norsk rikskringkasting (NRK) and held on 3 May 1986 at the Grieghallen in Bergen, Norway.[32][178] 20 countries competed in total: the Netherlands and Yugoslavia returned after a year's absence and Iceland made its debut appearance.[32] Italy had decided to opt-out of this year's event, while Greece withdrew at a late stage due to the contest coinciding with Holy Saturday.[179] In a landmark event the 500th song to grace the Eurovision stage was performed at this contest, courtesy of Luxembourg's Sherisse Laurence and "L'Amour de ma vie".[180] This contest also saw one of the first open representations of a member of the LGBT community, when members of the Norwegian drag group the Great Garlic Girls accompanied the home nation's singer Ketil Stokkan.[178] Belgium scored its first and only victory to date, with Sandra Kim becoming the contest's youngest ever winner, at only 13 years old, with the song "J'aime la vie";[90] Kim had previously told producers before the contest that she was 15 years old, and when the truth was revealed the Swiss delegation, who had come second, protested and petitioned for Belgium to be disqualified to no avail.[178][181]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1987 was the thirty-second edition of the contest, organised by Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française (RTBF) and held on 9 May 1987 at the Palais de Centenaire in Brussels, Belgium.[33][182] Belgium had at that point waited longer than any other country to host its first contest, 31 years after their debut entry. Since the contest's formation two broadcasters had been responsible for choosing Belgium's entries, with French-language RTBF and Dutch-language Belgische Radio- en Televisieomroep (BRT) alternating every other year. Initially BRT had wanted to co-produce the first Belgian contest with RTBF, the broadcaster which had won the previous year, however disagreements quickly arose between the two organisations, and so RTBF organised the contest on its own, with BRT selecting the Belgian entry.[183] 22 countries entered the contest, a new record, with Italy and Greece making a return and joining the 20 countries from the previous year.[184] Johnny Logan, the winner of the 1980 contest, returned for Ireland and became the first artist to record two wins in the contest with "Hold Me Now", and in doing so giving Ireland its third contest win.[33][90]

 
Céline Dion, one of the world's best-selling artists, was still relatively unknown outside of her native Canada when she won the 1988 contest for Switzerland.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1988 was the thirty-third edition of the contest, organised by RTÉ and held on 30 April 1988 at the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin, Ireland.[34][185] This was Ireland's third contest, which fell in the same year as the millennium of Dublin's founding.[186] The same group of countries from 1987 entered, however Cyprus was forced to withdraw at a late stage when it was discovered that their entry had previously competed in the Cypriot national selection in 1984.[186] The RTÉ production team made a great effort to modernise the contest and attract a younger audience, with a modern stage commissioned, the largest yet seen, which featured two giant video walls, and the first ever use of a computerised scoreboard.[186][187] In one of the closest contests yet seen, Switzerland emerged victorious by only a single point over the United Kingdom, with a then-unknown Céline Dion earning Switzerland its second victory with "Ne partez pas sans moi".[90] Although her Eurovision-winning song was not commercially successful, Dion would later become one of the world's best-selling artists, having sold over 200 million records throughout her career.[188]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1989 was the thirty-fourth edition of the contest, organised by the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SRG SSR) and held on 6 May 1989 at the Palais de Beaulieu in Lausanne, Switzerland.[35][189] This marked the second Eurovision to be held in Switzerland, 33 years after the inaugural contest was held in the Alpine country. With Cyprus returning, the final contest of the 1980s equalled the record of 22 competing countries set in 1987.[190] A modification to the tie-break rule was implemented this year: a count-back would now occur for the countries which were tied for first place, with the country with the most 12 points being declared the winner, with further comparisons against 10 points and lower also conducted if required to break the tie.[35][190] Two of the competing acts created controversy in the run-up to the contest due to their young age, with France's Nathalie Pâque and Israel's Gili Netanel becoming the youngest ever participants in contest history at 11 and 12 years old respectively.[35] Yugoslavia recorded their only win in the contest, when Riva took victory with "Rock Me".[90]

1990s edit

The Eurovision Song Contest 1990 was the thirty-fifth edition of the contest, organised by Jugoslovenska radio-televizija (JRT) and Radiotelevizija Zagreb (RTZ) and held on 5 May 1990 at the Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall in Zagreb, Yugoslavia.[36][191] In response to the Israeli and French singers in 1989, the EBU introduced a new age rule, barring anyone below the age of 16 on the day of the contest from competing; this rule means that Sandra Kim, the contest's youngest winner at 13 years old, remains so in perpetuity.[191][192] Italy's Toto Cutugno became the first winner of the decade, giving Italy its second win with Insieme: 1992, an ode to the planned formation of the European Union in 1992.[90][192]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1991 was the thirty-sixth edition of the contest, organised by RAI and held on 4 May 1991 at Studio 15 di Cinecittà in Rome, Italy.[37][193] This was the second edition of the contest to be held in Italy, and was presented by the two previous Italian winners, Gigliola Cinquetti and Toto Cutugno. The contest was originally planned to be held in Sanremo, the site of the Sanremo Music Festival which was the inspiration for Eurovision, however following the outbreak of the Gulf War, RAI decided to move the contest to the Italian capital to better ensure the security of the foreign delegations.[193][194] The Netherlands once again withdrew as the contest fell on the Remembrance of the Dead memorial, but Malta made its first appearance in the contest since 1975, keeping the contest participants at 22; Germany also made its first appearance as a unified country following German reunification in October 1990.[37][194] The closest ever final result was recorded, with Sweden and France both finishing with the same number of points; Sweden was subsequently declared the winner when, in the only ever use of the tie-break rule in contest history, a count-back revealed that Sweden had collected more 10 points than France, after both countries had collected the same number of 12 points.[37][193] Carola therefore became the third Swedish act to win the contest with "Fångad av en stormvind" in her second participation in the contest, having previously come third in 1983.[90]

 
In winning the 1992 contest, Linda Martin was the first of three Irish artists in a row to win Eurovision in the early 1990s.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1992 was the thirty-seventh edition of the contest, organised by SVT and held on 9 May 1992 at the Malmö Isstadion in Malmö, Sweden.[38][195][196] A new record 23 countries entered the contest, with the Netherlands making its return.[38][197] This contest would mark the last appearance of Yugoslavia, having already begun the process of breaking up and now representing the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.[195] Ireland's Linda Martin emerged the winner with the Johnny Logan-penned "Why Me?", giving Ireland its fourth win and Logan his third as both performer and songwriter; it was Martin's second contest appearance, having previously come second for Ireland in 1984.[90] With the United Kingdom and Malta taking second and third, this was the first contest to have solely English-language songs feature in the top 3.[38][197]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1993 was the thirty-eighth edition of the contest, organised by RTÉ and held on 15 May 1993 at the Green Glens Arena in Millstreet, Ireland.[40][198] It remains the only Irish production of the contest to be held outside of Dublin and, as a small town of only 1,500 people, Millstreet became the smallest Eurovision host to date, although the Green Glens Arena was able to hold up to 8,000 spectators.[40][199] Changes in Europe in the 1990s were first reflected at this contest, with several new countries formed following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and breakup of Yugoslavia wishing to compete for the first time. In order to accommodate this growing number, the first Eurovision pre-selection took place in Ljubljana, Slovenia on 3 April, Kvalifikacija za Millstreet;[40][200] seven countries competed for three places at the contest, with the former Yugoslav states Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia emerging the winners and joining 22 countries which had taken part in Malmö, with only Yugoslavia absent, banned from competing following UN sanctions.[201] In order to better manage the participating countries in years to come, a relegation system was introduced, which saw the bottom-placed countries missing out the following year and replaced by new and returning countries.[40][201] A two-horse race soon developed in the voting between the United Kingdom and Ireland, with the final jury crucial in giving victory to the hosts: Niamh Kavanagh became the first Irish act to win on home soil with "In Your Eyes", their second consecutive win and a record-equalling fifth win in total.[90][202]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1994 was the thirty-ninth edition of the contest, organised by RTÉ and held on 30 April 1994 at the Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland.[41][203] RTÉ thus became the first broadcaster to host two consecutive contests. Seven countries joined the contest for the first time, replacing the bottom six countries from Millstreet, and Italy which withdrew voluntarily; Luxembourg, one of those countries relegated, subsequently failed to return the following year, and their 1993 entry would remain their last for 31 years.[40][201][204] Estonia, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia, which had failed to qualify from Kvalifikacija za Millstreet the previous year, joined new entries from Lithuania, Poland and Russia in debuting, competing alongside the top 18 countries from Millstreet.[201][205] Riverdance, which would go on to become one of the world's most successful dance productions, made its debut in this edition as the interval act; originally a seven-minute performance, it would later be expanded into a full show which would go on to be performed at over 450 venues worldwide and be seen by over 250 million people.[201][206][207] Satellite links were used during the voting at this contest, which enabled the jury spokespersons to be seen in vision for the first time.[202][41] Ireland secured its third consecutive win, a feat yet to be replicated, and earned a record-breaking sixth win courtesy of Paul Harrington and Charlie McGettigan and "Rock 'n' Roll Kids";[90] Poland secured the best-ever showing yet seen for a debut country, when Edyta Górniak placed second.[41][203]

 
Eimear Quinn became the seventh artist to win the contest for Ireland in 1996, which remains a record to this day.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1995 was the fortieth edition of the contest, organised by RTÉ and held on 13 May 1995 at the Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland.[42][208] RTÉ had concerns about staging the contest for a third consecutive year, and the BBC submitted an offer to take on the event, as well as proposing a joint production in Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland;[208] ultimately RTÉ decided to produce the contest solo, hosting its third consecutive contest, which remains a record, with the Point Theatre becoming the first venue to host two contests in a row.[42] The number of competing countries was reduced to 23, with the bottom seven countries from 1994 relegated and the five countries relegated at Millstreet in 1993 returning.[42][209] Norway scored its second contest victory with the Irish-Norwegian duo Secret Garden and the song "Nocturne";[90] some criticism arose following its victory that, as a mainly instrumental number containing only 24 words in total, the winning song should not have been eligible for the song contest, to no avail.[208]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1996 was the forty-first edition of the contest, organised by NRK and held on 18 May 1996 at the Oslo Spektrum in Oslo, Norway.[43][210] A new qualifying system was introduced at this contest, principally to appease Germany, one of the contest's biggest financial backers, which otherwise would have been relegated, which saw all countries, except the host nation, competing in an audio-only qualifying round.[210] 29 countries entered in total, with all competing nations and Norway voting and deciding the 22 countries which would advance in the final.[211][212] Germany however would be one of the seven countries to be eliminated, along with Hungary, Denmark, Russia, Israel, Romania and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, in what would have been their debut entry.[43][210] For the first and only time to date, the voting was conducted using virtual reality technology, with the graphics for the scoreboard superimposed over the contest's 'blue room'.[210][212] Ireland secured its record seventh win, with Eimear Quinn providing its fourth win in five years with "The Voice".[90] As in previous contests the most commercially successful contest entry would be one of the losing songs, with the UK's "Ooh Aah... Just a Little Bit" by Gina G becoming an international hit, reaching the top 20 of the US Billboard Hot 100 and eventually being nominated for a Grammy Award;[43][212][213] it also remains the last UK entry to reach number one on the UK Singles Chart.[211][214]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1997 was the forty-second edition of the contest, organised by RTÉ and held on 3 May 1997 at the Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland.[44][142] 25 countries competed in the third contest held at the Point Theatre, with a new relegation system implemented to reduce the number of competing entries: the number of points each country earned in the last four contests was used to calculate an average score for each country, and the countries with the lowest average were made to sit out for a year.[44][215] Israel withdrew voluntarily due to the contest conflicting with Yom HaShoah, giving a reprieve to Bosnia and Herzegovina which would have otherwise been relegated; Italy also made a brief return after a four-year absence, in what would be their last entry for fourteen years.[215][216] The first use of televoting was implemented at this contest on a trial basis, with the points from Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Sweden and the United Kingdom being determined by the viewing public rather than an assembled jury.[44][142] Full backing tracks were also now permitted without restriction, allowing songs to be performed without live music if desired, although live vocals were still required.[142][215] The United Kingdom emerged victorious for the fifth time, 16 years after their last win, with Katrina and the Waves and "Love Shine a Light".[90]

 
Israel's Dana International became the contest's first trans and LGBT performer to win the contest in 1998.

The Eurovision Song Contest 1998 was the forty-third edition of the contest, organised by the BBC and held on 9 May 1998 at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham, United Kingdom.[45][217] 25 countries were featured in the eighth contest held in the UK, a new record, with Macedonia making its debut appearance.[45][218] Following the successful trial in 1997 televoting took place in the majority of countries for the first time at this contest.[45][218] The first result widely determined by the viewing public saw Israel, the UK and Malta vie for first place, with Israel's Dana International declared victorious with the final result, giving Israel its third win with "Diva".[45][90] Dana International, the contest's first trans performer, had emerged a controversial figure in Israel following her selection for the contest, with criticism being levied by conservative sections of Israeli society and death threats being received from fanatical factions.[217][219]

The Eurovision Song Contest 1999 was the forty-fourth edition of the contest, organised by IBA and held on 29 May 1999 at the International Convention Centre in Jerusalem, Israel.[46][220] 23 countries took part in Israel's second contest as hosts, with Lithuania returning after a 5-year absence.[221][222] It was the first contest not to feature an orchestra, which had become an optional requirement this year, a change which IBA had utilised in an effort to cut costs.[221] This change, which proved controversial, meant that all entries would be accompanied by a backing track for the first time, a decision which former winner Johnny Logan claimed had turned the contest into "karaoke".[220][222] The language rule was also relaxed once again, which allowed artists the option to perform in any language, with many now choosing to sing in English.[220][222] The "Big Four" group of countries was formed at this contest, a rule which saw the contest's largest financial backers, Germany, France, Spain and the United Kingdom, now being exempt from relegation and able to participate every year.[220][221] The contest became a close race between Sweden and Iceland, with Charlotte Nilsson earning Sweden's fourth contest win with "Take Me to Your Heaven".[90][220] Following the winning reprise the broadcast was concluded by all participating artists assembling on-stage to perform "Hallelujah", the Israeli winning song from 1979, as a tribute to the victims of the then-ongoing war in the Balkans.[46][220]

2000s edit

The Eurovision Song Contest 2000 was the forty-fifth edition of the contest, organised by SVT and held on 13 May 2000 at the Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden.[47][223] 24 countries competed in the contest, with Latvia making its first appearance.[47] The first contest of the new millennium was held before the biggest crowd yet seen in its history, with over 13,000 spectators witnessing the show in the arena, and it was the first contest to be broadcast live via the internet.[224][225] Denmark secured its second win, its first since 1963, represented by the Olsen Brothers with the song "Fly on the Wings of Love".[90] Russia, which had placed second, petitioned for the song's disqualification for the partial use of a vocoder, which was rejected by the EBU.[224]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2001 was the forty-sixth edition of the contest, organised by DR and held on 12 May 2001 at the Parken Stadium in Copenhagen, Denmark.[48][226] A retractable roof was specially constructed over the football stadium for the contest, and with 38,000 spectators it became the biggest live audience ever seen at Eurovision, a record which still stands.[226][227] 23 countries competed in total, and the relegation system was again altered, by removing the average score comparison and bringing back the system used in 1994 and 1995 of relegating the bottom-placed countries, with the Big Four being exempt no matter their placing.[48][227] Estonia was declared the winner, represented by Tanel Padar, Dave Benton and 2XL with "Everybody".[90] With its victory, Estonia became the first country from the former Eastern Bloc to win the contest, sparking an eight-year chain of victories for new countries, and Aruba-born Benton became the first black artist to win the contest.[227]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2002 was the forty-seventh edition of the contest, organised by Eesti Televisioon (ETV) and held on 25 May 2002 at the Saku Suurhall in Tallinn, Estonia.[49][228] 24 countries participated in the first contest to be held behind the former Iron Curtain.[229] The Marcel Bezençon Awards, a series of additional prizes honouring some of the best songs and artists in each contest's final as voted for by the accredited press, commentators and composers, were first awarded at this contest and have been subsequently featured at every contest since, traditionally handed out backstage shortly before the grand final.[230] Latvia earned its first title, only two years after their first entry, represented by Marie N and "I Wanna".[90] Latvia had originally been relegated due to its poor performance in Copenhagen, but was given a reprieve when Portugal decided to withdraw voluntarily.[228][229]

 
Ruslana earned Ukraine its first victory on only its second contest appearance in 2004.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2003 was the forty-eighth edition of the contest, organised by Latvijas Televīzija (LTV) and held on 24 May 2003 at the Skonto Hall in Riga, Latvia.[50][231] 26 countries took part in the contest, with Ukraine joining the contest for the first time.[231][232] This would become the last contest to be held over a single evening, with an announcement in January 2003 that from 2004 a semi-final would be introduced: the top 10 countries from the 2003 event alongside the "Big Four" would qualify automatically for the final in 2004, with all other countries competing in the semi-final for 10 qualification places.[231][233] Turkey gained its first Eurovision win, with Sertab Erener victorious in one of the closest contests ever seen, as "Everyway That I Can" triumphed with only three points separating the top three countries.[90][232]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2004 was the forty-ninth edition of the contest, organised by the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT) and held on 12 and 15 May 2004 at the Abdi İpekçi Arena in Istanbul, Turkey.[51][234] A record 36 countries competed in the first contest held under the new format, with the relegated countries from 2003 being joined by Albania, Andorra, Belarus and Serbia and Montenegro in their debut appearances, with Monaco also making its first appearance after a 25-year absence.[233] 22 countries entered the first Eurovision semi-final, with the top 10 joining the 14 automatic qualifiers in the final.[235] Ukraine emerged the winner, in only their second contest appearance, represented by Ruslana and "Wild Dances".[90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2005 was the fiftieth edition of the contest, organised by the National Television Company of Ukraine (NTU) and held on 19 and 21 May 2005 at the Palace of Sports in Kyiv, Ukraine.[52][236] 39 countries competed in total, with debut entries from Moldova and Bulgaria, and a return from Hungary for the first time since 1998.[237] Lebanon had also planned to make a debut appearance, however they withdrew at a late stage due to issues with competing alongside Israel.[236] Greece's Helena Paparizou became the winner of the anniversary edition of the contest with "My Number One", the first win for Greece after 31 years of competition.[90][236]

On 22 October 2005, a special competition was held to celebrate the contest's 50th anniversary. Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest was organised by DR and held at the Forum Copenhagen in Copenhagen, Denmark, hosted by former Eurovision contestants Katrina Leskanich and Renārs Kaupers.[238] 14 songs from Eurovision history, chosen by fans and the contest's Reference Group, competed to determine the most popular song from the contest's first 50 years.[239][240] Broadcast live in 31 countries which had competed in Eurovision at that point, the combined votes of the viewing public and juries selected a winner over two rounds.[241] The winning song, announced at the end of the show, was "Waterloo" by ABBA, the winning song from the 1974 contest for Sweden.[239]

 
Serbia became only the second country to win on its debut appearance, when Marija Šerifović was victorious in 2007.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2006 was the fifty-first edition of the contest, organised by the Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation (ERT) and held on 18 and 20 May 2006 at the Olympic Indoor Hall in Athens, Greece.[53][242] 37 nations competed in the contest, with the first appearance of Armenia. Serbia and Montenegro had intended to compete, but controversy over the winner of their national selection resulted in their late withdrawal.[243] A new landmark was achieved at this contest with the performance of the 1,000th song in Eurovision history, when Ireland's Brian Kennedy performed "Every Song Is a Cry for Love" in the semi-final.[180] 45 years after first entering the contest, Finland secured its first win, represented by Lordi and "Hard Rock Hallelujah".[90][242]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2007 was the fifty-second edition of the contest, organised by Yleisradio (YLE) and held on 10 and 12 May 2007 at the Hartwall Arena in Helsinki, Finland.[54][244] A record 42 countries competed in the contest, which saw the debut entries from the Czech Republic, Georgia, Montenegro and Serbia, the latter two as independent countries for the first time. 28 countries competed in the single semi-final, the biggest number of participants ever seen in a Eurovision show.[245] Serbia became only the second country to win on its debut appearance, represented by Marija Šerifović and "Molitva".[90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2008 was the fifty-third edition of the contest, organised by Radio-televizija Srbije (RTS) and held on 20, 22 and 24 May 2008 at the Belgrade Arena in Belgrade, Serbia.[55][246] A new record 43 countries competed in the contest, with Azerbaijan and San Marino making their first appearances in the contest.[247] A second semi-final was introduced at this contest, with all countries except the hosts and the "Big Four" now competing on one of the two semi-finals.[248] Russia gained its first contest win, represented by Dima Bilan and the song "Believe"; it was Bilan's second appearance in the contest, having previously come second for Russia in 2006.[90]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2009 was the fifty-fourth edition of the contest, organised by Channel One (C1R) and held on 12, 14 and 16 May 2009 at the Olimpiyskiy Arena in Moscow, Russia.[56][249] 42 countries competed, including Slovakia in its first appearance in 11 years.[250] Georgia's entry was embroiled in controversy, when it was accused of being critical of Russian leader Vladimir Putin following the recent Russo-Georgian War; after requests made by the EBU to change the lyrics were rejected, Georgia subsequently withdrew.[251] Juries returned to the contest this year, with the points awarded in the final decided by an equal mix of jury and televoting; the qualifiers from the semi-finals however remained predominantly decided by televoting in this contest.[252] Norway secured its third contest win, as Alexander Rybak earned a runaway victory with "Fairytale"; with 387 points, Rybak earned the highest points total yet seen in the contest, which remains the highest total under this system.[90][252]

2010s edit

 
Five previous Eurovision-winning acts performed as part of the interval at the 2012 contest in Baku.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2010 was the fifty-fifth edition of the contest, organised by NRK and held on 25, 27 and 29 May 2010 at the Telenor Arena in Oslo, Norway.[57] 39 countries participated in total, with Georgia returning after a year's absence.[253] Several countries withdrew for this year due to the effects of the 2007–2008 financial crisis, including Andorra which has yet to make a reappearance, with the crisis also impacting the production of the contest.[254] The mix of jury and televoting seen in the 2009 final was extended into the semi-finals this year, each with an equal stake in determining the 10 qualifiers in each semi-final.[255] Germany gained its second contest win, becoming the first "Big Four" country to win since its formation in 1999, with Lena the first German winner in 28 years with "Satellite".[90][256][257]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2011 was the fifty-sixth edition of the contest, organised by Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) on behalf of ARD and held on 10, 12 and 14 May 2011 at the Düsseldorf Arena in Düsseldorf, Germany.[58] 43 countries competed in the third contest held on German soil, equalling the record set in 2008; among the returning countries was Italy, making its first appearance since 1997, which automatically qualified for the final as a member of the newly expanded "Big Five".[258] Azerbaijan earned its first title, represented by Ell & Nikki and the song "Running Scared".[90][259]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2012 was the fifty-seventh edition of the contest, organised by İctimai Television (İTV) and held on 22, 24 and 26 May 2012 at the Baku Crystal Hall in Baku, Azerbaijan.[59] 42 countries competed in the contest; Armenia had originally applied to compete, but withdrew at a late stage due to security concerns related to the ongoing conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.[260][261] The contest was also marked by concerns over Azerbaijan's human rights record, as well as tensions with neighbouring Iran over the "anti-Islamic" nature of the contest.[262][263] Sweden secured its fifth Eurovision title, represented by Loreen and "Euphoria", which would go on to become a great commercial success following the contest, selling over two million copies worldwide.[90][264][265]

 
Conchita Wurst became the second Austrian artist to win the contest in 2014.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2013 was the fifty-eighth edition of the contest, organised by SVT and held on 14, 16 and 18 May 2013 at the Malmö Arena in Malmö, Sweden.[60] 39 countries competed in total, with Armenia returning after a year's absence; among the withdrawing countries were Slovakia and Turkey, which have yet to make subsequent appearances in the contest, with the Turkish broadcaster TRT citing amendments to the contest rules in recent years, as well as espousing criticism of the LGBT nature of some performances, as reasons for their continued non-participation.[266][267] Denmark won the contest for the third time, represented by Emmelie de Forest and "Only Teardrops".[90][268]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2014 was the fifty-ninth edition of the contest, organised by DR and held on 6, 8 and 10 May 2014 at the B&W Hallerne in Copenhagen, Denmark.[61] Artists representing 37 countries competed in Denmark's third contest as host, with Austria emerging as the victor to gain their second victory, their first in 48 years, with Conchita Wurst and "Rise Like a Phoenix".[90][269][270] The bearded drag queen's victory proved controversial among some, particularly in Russia where several conservative voices voiced criticism for her win.[271] Developments in Russia, particularly the introduction of a gay propaganda law and the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, were also present in the contest when audible booing could be heard during the Russian entry and voting.[272]

In celebration of the contest's sixtieth anniversary, the EBU organised a special concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, United Kingdom on 31 March 2015.[273] Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits featured live performances from fifteen previous Eurovision acts from thirteen countries, video montages of past editions of the contest and footage of former entries, and a performance by the cast of Riverdance, originally conceived as the interval performance for the 1994 contest before being developed into a full production.[274][275] A BBC production, the concert was recorded live and aired as a delayed broadcast on various dates that suited the individual participating broadcasters: the BBC and Ireland's RTÉ were the first to broadcast the event, in a simulcast on 3 April 2015.[273][274]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2015 was the sixtieth edition of the contest, organised by ORF and held on 19, 21 and 23 May 2015 at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, Austria.[62] 39 countries were initially announced as appearing at the contest, the first held in Austria since 1967; Australia was later added as the 40th country, making its first appearance in what was billed as a one-off to celebrate the contest's 60th anniversary.[276][277] Australia would advance directly to the final, meaning 27 countries would compete in the largest final ever seen in the contest.[277] Sweden earned its sixth contest victory, represented by Måns Zelmerlöw and "Heroes".[90][278]

 
Portugal gained its first Eurovision title after 53 years of competition, when Salvador Sobral won the 2017 contest.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2016 was the sixty-first edition of the contest, organised by SVT and held on 10, 12 and 14 May 2016 at the Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden.[63] 43 countries were initially announced as being represented at the contest, with Australia being invited to compete for a second time;[279][280] Romania was subsequently barred from competing due to outstanding debts owed by the Romanian broadcaster TVR, leaving 42 countries to compete in Sweden's sixth outing as hosts.[281][282] The voting system was transformed for the first time in over 30 years at this contest: each country would now award two sets of points, representing the votes of each country's jury and public separately.[283] Ukraine recorded its second win in the contest, courtesy of Jamala with "1944".[90][284]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2017 was the sixty-second edition of the contest, organised by the Public Broadcasting Company of Ukraine (UA:PBC) and held on 9, 11 and 13 May 2017 at the International Exhibition Centre in Kyiv, Ukraine.[64] 43 countries applied to take part in the contest, however only 42 would subsequently take part in Ukraine's second contest: Russia were unable to compete after Ukrainian authorities banned their selected performer Yuliya Samoylova from entering Ukraine due to illegally entering Crimea in 2015, with proposals for Samoylova to compete via satellite from Russia being rejected by the Russian broadcaster.[285][286][287] Portugal earned its first Eurovision title, 53 years after first entering the contest, with Salvador Sobral earning the biggest points total ever seen in Eurovision history as "Amar pelos dois" gained 758 points.[90][288]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2018 was the sixty-third edition of the contest, organised by Rádio e Televisão de Portugal (RTP) and held on 8, 10 and 12 May 2018 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon, Portugal.[65] 43 countries competed in this contest, matching the previous record, with Russia returning after its absence the previous year.[289] This contest saw the performance of Eurovision's 1,500th song, when former winner Alexander Rybak performed "That's How You Write a Song" in the second semi-final for Norway.[180][290] Israel gained its fourth Eurovision title, represented by Netta with "Toy".[90][291]

 
Duncan Laurence's "Arcade", winner of the 2019 contest for the Netherlands, became the first Eurovision song of the 21st century to chart on the US Billboard Hot 100.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2019 was the sixty-fourth edition of the contest, organised by the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation (IPBC/Kan) and held on 14, 16 and 18 May 2019 at the Expo Tel Aviv in Tel Aviv, Israel.[66] The third Israeli contest was marked by controversy on multiple fronts, with Orthodox religious leaders and politicians in Israel calling on the contest to not interfere with Shabbat, while other groups, including BDS, called for a boycott of the event in response to the country's policies towards Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, and in opposition to what some consider as "pinkwashing" by the Israeli government.[292][293][294] 42 countries were initially announced as competing in this contest, with Australia having secured participation rights up to 2023.[295][296] However, only 41 countries entered the contest when Ukraine subsequently withdrew: conflicts between the Ukrainian broadcaster UA:PBC and the winner of its national selection Maruv led to the latter refusing to compete, resulting in its withdrawal after other acts from the selection also declined to partake.[297][298] The Netherlands recorded its fifth Eurovision win and first in 44 years, courtesy of Duncan Laurence with "Arcade", which would later become a sleeper hit in 2021, becoming the most-streamed Eurovision song on Spotify and the first since "Ooh Aah... Just a Little Bit" to chart on the US Billboard Hot 100, eventually reaching the top 30 of the chart.[90][299][300]

2020s edit

The Eurovision Song Contest 2020 was scheduled to be held on 12, 14 and 16 May 2020 at the Rotterdam Ahoy in Rotterdam, Netherlands and organised by Nederlandse Publieke Omroep (NPO), Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS) and AVROTROS.[67] 41 countries applied to enter what would have been the Netherlands' fifth contest as hosts, but in March 2020, for the first time in its history, the contest was cancelled due to the uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the restrictions put in place by governments across Europe, which included lockdowns and travel restrictions.[301][302] In its place, a special broadcast from Media Park in Hilversum, Eurovision: Europe Shine a Light, was held on what would have been the day of the final, in a celebration and showcase of the artists and songs that would have competed in the 2020 contest in a non-competitive format, as well as featuring performances by former Eurovision artists.[303][304]

 
Italy's Måneskin achieved international breakthrough following their Eurovision win in 2021.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2021 was the sixty-fifth edition of the contest, held on 18, 20 and 22 May 2021 at the Rotterdam Ahoy in Rotterdam, Netherlands and organised by NPO, NOS and AVROTROS.[68][305] Rotterdam was revealed as the host city of the 2021 contest during Eurovision: Europe Shine a Light.[306] Many of the artists which had initially been selected to compete in 2020 were confirmed for their countries once again, however any song entered into the 2020 contest was ineligible for 2021 per the rules of the contest.[307][308] Pre-recorded backing vocals were permitted for the first time in 2021 on a trial basis, announced as an effort to modernise and increase the sustainability of the contest.[309] The same 41 countries which had originally planned to enter the 2020 contest were initially announced as competing again in this contest, however, a late withdrawal of Armenia and subsequent disqualification of the entry from Belarus brought the number of competing countries down to 39.[310][311][312] Multiple contingency scenarios were devised in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, ranging from a normal, albeit less-crowded contest (which was the chosen option) to a fully-remote contest with participants performing via 'live-on-tape' recordings.[313][314][315] Australia and Iceland were ultimately unable to perform at the contest live: the Australian delegation opted to use their 'live-on-tape' performance given logistical difficulties in travelling abroad as part of the country's pandemic response; while Iceland competed using rehearsal footage following a COVID-19 outbreak among its delegation.[316][317] Italy recorded its third Eurovision win, becoming the second "Big Five" country to win since its formation, as Måneskin ended a 31-year wait for victory with "Zitti e buoni".[90][318] Second-placed France and third-placed Switzerland also achieved their best results since 1991 and 1993 respectively.[319][320] Måneskin's win in the contest marked the band's international breakthrough, with their releases entering numerous European and global weekly charts in the months following their victory.[321][322]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2022 was the sixty-sixth edition of the contest, held on 10, 12 and 14 May 2022 at the PalaOlimpico in Turin, Italy and organised by RAI.[69] 41 countries applied to take part in the contest, with Armenia and Montenegro submitting their first entries since 2019.[323] Russia, which had initially appeared on the list, was subsequently barred from competing following its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, resulting in 40 countries competing in Italy's third outing as hosts.[324] Ukraine recorded its third win in the contest, represented by Kalush Orchestra with "Stefania", while the United Kingdom, which placed second, and Spain, which placed third, also achieved their best results since 1998 and 1995 respectively.[325][326][327]

 
Upon winning the 2023 contest, Loreen became the second artist to win the contest twice, having previously won in 2012, and helped Sweden equal Ireland's record of seven contest wins.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2023 was the sixty-seventh edition of the contest, held on 9, 11 and 13 May 2023 at the Liverpool Arena in Liverpool, United Kingdom and organised by the BBC.[70] Ukraine's UA:PBC was initially given the opportunity to host following its victory the previous year, but due to security concerns caused by the Russian invasion of the country, the BBC was chosen, as the runner-up, to host the contest on its behalf.[328] 37 countries applied to take part in the ninth contest held in the UK, with several countries withdrawing for this year due to the effects of the global energy crisis.[329][330][331] Substantial changes to the voting system were made for this contest, with full televoting returning to determine the qualifiers from the semi-finals, and viewers from non-participating countries being allowed to vote in all shows, with their votes being aggregated and awarded as one set of points from an "extra country" for the overall public vote.[332] Loreen, the winner of the 2012 contest, returned for Sweden and became the second artist to record two wins in the contest with "Tattoo", and in doing so giving Sweden a record-tying seventh contest win.[333][334]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 is scheduled to be the sixty-eighth edition of the contest, to be held on 7, 9 and 11 May 2024 at the Malmö Arena in Malmö, Sweden and organised by SVT.[71] 37 countries applied to take part in the seventh contest held on Swedish soil, with Luxembourg set to make its first appearance since 1993.[204][335] Romania, whose broadcaster TVR had been given additional time to finalise its plans, ultimately opted not to participate this year.[336] The slogan of the previous year's event in Liverpool, "United by Music", will be retained for 2024 and all future editions, thus ending the practice of individual contest slogans being created for each edition which had begun in 2002.[79]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Each country in the first contest was represented by two songs.
  2. ^ The 1977 contest was originally scheduled for 2 April, but a strike by BBC camera operators and technicians resulted in a postponement until 7 May.
  3. ^ Contest cancelled
  4. ^ Announced on 14 November 2023 as the contest's permanent slogan[79]

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history, eurovision, song, contest, eurovision, song, contest, french, concours, eurovision, chanson, first, held, 1956, originally, conceived, experiment, transnational, television, broadcasting, following, series, exchange, broadcasts, 1954, european, broadc. The Eurovision Song Contest French Concours Eurovision de la chanson was first held in 1956 originally conceived as an experiment in transnational television broadcasting 1 Following a series of exchange broadcasts in 1954 the European Broadcasting Union EBU commissioned an international song competition from an idea developed by Sergio Pugliese and Marcel Bezencon and originally based on the Italian Sanremo Music Festival Marcel Bezencon 1907 1981 was one of the key figures involved in creating the Eurovision Song Contest A total of 67 contests have been held since its first edition and 1 721 songs representing 52 countries have been performed on the Eurovision stage as of 2023 update The contest has seen many changes since its inauguration such as the introduction of relegation in the 1990s and subsequently semi finals in the 2000s as a response to growing numbers of interested participants The rules of the contest have also seen multiple changes over the years with the voting system and language criteria being modified on several occasions The Eurovision Song Contest has been identified as the longest running annual international televised music competition in the world as determined by Guinness World Records and around 40 countries now regularly take part each year Several other competitions have been inspired by Eurovision in the years since its formation and the EBU has also created a number of complimentary contests which focus on other aspects of music and culture The 2020 edition of the contest was the first to be cancelled as no competitive event was able to take place due to the COVID 19 pandemic Contents 1 Competition overview 1 1 Contest themes and slogans 2 Origins 3 1950s 4 1960s 5 1970s 6 1980s 7 1990s 8 2000s 9 2010s 10 2020s 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksCompetition overview edit nbsp London Royal Albert Hall venue of the 1968 contest nbsp Dublin Gaiety Theatre venue of the 1971 contest nbsp Jerusalem International Convention Centre venue of the 1979 and 1999 contests nbsp Oslo Oslo Spektrum venue of the 1996 contest nbsp Stockholm Globe Arena venue of the 2000 and 2016 contests nbsp Belgrade Belgrade Arena venue of the 2008 contest nbsp Malmo Malmo Arena venue of the 2013 and 2024 contests nbsp Lisbon Altice Arena venue of the 2018 contest Edition Year Date of final Host broadcaster s Venue Host city Countries Winning country RefTotal In final1st 1956 24 May RTSI Teatro Kursaal nbsp Lugano 7 a nbsp Switzerland 2 2nd 1957 3 March HR ARD Grosser Sendesaal des hessischen Rundfunks nbsp Frankfurt 10 nbsp Netherlands 3 3rd 1958 12 March NTS AVRO Studios nbsp Hilversum nbsp France 4 4th 1959 11 March RTF Palais des Festivals nbsp Cannes 11 nbsp Netherlands 5 5th 1960 29 March BBC Royal Festival Hall nbsp London 13 nbsp France 6 6th 1961 18 March RTF Palais des Festivals nbsp Cannes 16 nbsp Luxembourg 7 7th 1962 18 March CLT Villa Louvigny nbsp Luxembourg City nbsp France 8 8th 1963 23 March BBC BBC Television Centre nbsp London nbsp Denmark 9 9th 1964 21 March DR Tivoli Concert Hall nbsp Copenhagen nbsp Italy 10 10th 1965 20 March RAI Sala di Concerto della RAI nbsp Naples 18 nbsp Luxembourg 11 11th 1966 5 March CLT Villa Louvigny nbsp Luxembourg City nbsp Austria 12 12th 1967 8 April ORF Grosser Festsaal der Wiener Hofburg nbsp Vienna 17 nbsp United Kingdom 13 13th 1968 6 April BBC Royal Albert Hall nbsp London nbsp Spain 14 14th 1969 29 March TVE Teatro Real nbsp Madrid 16 nbsp France nbsp Netherlands nbsp Spain nbsp United Kingdom 15 15th 1970 21 March NOS RAI Congrescentrum nbsp Amsterdam 12 nbsp Ireland 16 16th 1971 3 April RTE Gaiety Theatre nbsp Dublin 18 nbsp Monaco 17 17th 1972 25 March BBC Usher Hall nbsp Edinburgh nbsp Luxembourg 18 18th 1973 7 April CLT Nouveau Theatre nbsp Luxembourg City 17 nbsp Luxembourg 19 19th 1974 6 April BBC Brighton Dome nbsp Brighton nbsp Sweden 20 20th 1975 22 March SR Stockholmsmassan nbsp Stockholm 19 nbsp Netherlands 21 21st 1976 3 April NOS Nederlands Congresgebouw nbsp The Hague 18 nbsp United Kingdom 22 22nd 1977 7 May b BBC Wembley Conference Centre nbsp London nbsp France 23 23rd 1978 22 April TF1 Palais des Congres nbsp Paris 20 nbsp Israel 24 24th 1979 31 March IBA International Convention Centre nbsp Jerusalem 19 nbsp Israel 25 25th 1980 19 April NOS Nederlands Congresgebouw nbsp The Hague nbsp Ireland 26 26th 1981 4 April RTE RDS Simmonscourt nbsp Dublin 20 nbsp United Kingdom 27 27th 1982 24 April BBC Harrogate Convention Centre nbsp Harrogate 18 nbsp Germany 28 28th 1983 23 April BR ARD Rudi Sedlmayer Halle nbsp Munich 20 nbsp Luxembourg 29 29th 1984 5 May CLT Theatre Municipal nbsp Luxembourg City 19 nbsp Sweden 30 30th 1985 4 May SVT Scandinavium nbsp Gothenburg nbsp Norway 31 31st 1986 3 May NRK Grieghallen nbsp Bergen 20 nbsp Belgium 32 32nd 1987 9 May RTBF Palais de Centenaire nbsp Brussels 22 nbsp Ireland 33 33rd 1988 30 April RTE RDS Simmonscourt nbsp Dublin 21 nbsp Switzerland 34 34th 1989 6 May SRG SSR Palais de Beaulieu nbsp Lausanne 22 nbsp Yugoslavia 35 35th 1990 5 May JRT RTZ Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall nbsp Zagreb nbsp Italy 36 36th 1991 4 May RAI Studio 15 di Cinecitta nbsp Rome nbsp Sweden 37 37th 1992 9 May SVT Malmo Isstadion nbsp Malmo 23 nbsp Ireland 38 39 38th 1993 15 May RTE Green Glens Arena nbsp Millstreet 25 nbsp Ireland 40 39th 1994 30 April Point Theatre nbsp Dublin nbsp Ireland 41 40th 1995 13 May 23 nbsp Norway 42 41st 1996 18 May NRK Oslo Spektrum nbsp Oslo nbsp Ireland 43 42nd 1997 3 May RTE Point Theatre nbsp Dublin 25 nbsp United Kingdom 44 43rd 1998 9 May BBC National Indoor Arena nbsp Birmingham nbsp Israel 45 44th 1999 29 May IBA International Convention Centre nbsp Jerusalem 23 nbsp Sweden 46 45th 2000 13 May SVT Globe Arena nbsp Stockholm 24 nbsp Denmark 47 46th 2001 12 May DR Parken Stadium nbsp Copenhagen 23 nbsp Estonia 48 47th 2002 25 May ETV Saku Suurhall nbsp Tallinn 24 nbsp Latvia 49 48th 2003 24 May LTV Skonto Hall nbsp Riga 26 nbsp Turkey 50 49th 2004 15 May TRT Abdi Ipekci Arena nbsp Istanbul 36 24 nbsp Ukraine 51 50th 2005 21 May NTU Palace of Sports nbsp Kyiv 39 nbsp Greece 52 51st 2006 20 May ERT Olympic Indoor Hall nbsp Athens 37 nbsp Finland 53 52nd 2007 12 May YLE Hartwall Arena nbsp Helsinki 42 nbsp Serbia 54 53rd 2008 24 May RTS Belgrade Arena nbsp Belgrade 43 25 nbsp Russia 55 54th 2009 16 May C1R Olimpiyskiy Arena nbsp Moscow 42 nbsp Norway 56 55th 2010 29 May NRK Telenor Arena nbsp Oslo 39 nbsp Germany 57 56th 2011 14 May NDR ARD Dusseldorf Arena nbsp Dusseldorf 43 nbsp Azerbaijan 58 57th 2012 26 May ITV Baku Crystal Hall nbsp Baku 42 26 nbsp Sweden 59 58th 2013 18 May SVT Malmo Arena nbsp Malmo 39 nbsp Denmark 60 59th 2014 10 May DR B amp W Hallerne nbsp Copenhagen 37 nbsp Austria 61 60th 2015 23 May ORF Wiener Stadthalle nbsp Vienna 40 27 nbsp Sweden 62 61st 2016 14 May SVT Globe Arena nbsp Stockholm 42 26 nbsp Ukraine 63 62nd 2017 13 May UA PBC International Exhibition Centre nbsp Kyiv nbsp Portugal 64 63rd 2018 12 May RTP Altice Arena nbsp Lisbon 43 nbsp Israel 65 64th 2019 18 May IPBC Kan Expo Tel Aviv nbsp Tel Aviv 41 nbsp Netherlands 66 Cancelled 2020 16 May NPO NOS AVROTROS Rotterdam Ahoy nbsp Rotterdam 41 26 No winner 67 65th 2021 22 May NPO NOS AVROTROS Rotterdam Ahoy nbsp Rotterdam 39 26 nbsp Italy 68 66th 2022 14 May RAI PalaOlimpico nbsp Turin 40 25 nbsp Ukraine 69 67th 2023 13 May BBC Liverpool Arena nbsp Liverpool 37 26 nbsp Sweden 70 68th 2024 11 May SVT Malmo Arena nbsp Malmo TBD 71 Contest themes and slogans edit An individual slogan has been associated with each edition of the contest since 2002 with the exception of 2009 72 73 This slogan is decided by the host broadcaster and is then used to develop the contest s visual identity and design 74 75 This slogan is typically used by the producers in planning and formulating the show s visual identity and is channelled into the contest s stage design the opening and interval acts and the postcards short videos interspersed between the entries which usually highlight the host country and in many cases introduce the competing acts 76 77 78 The slogan of the 2023 contest United by Music was announced on 14 November 2023 to be retained for future editions of the event as part of its global brand strategy 79 Year Host city Slogan2002 nbsp Tallinn A Modern Fairytale2003 nbsp Riga A Magical Rendez vous2004 nbsp Istanbul Under the Same Sky2005 nbsp Kyiv Awakening2006 nbsp Athens Feel the Rhythm2007 nbsp Helsinki True Fantasy2008 nbsp Belgrade Confluence of Sound2009 nbsp Moscow No slogan2010 nbsp Oslo Share the Moment2011 nbsp Dusseldorf Feel Your Heart Beat 2012 nbsp Baku Light Your Fire 2013 nbsp Malmo We Are One2014 nbsp Copenhagen JoinUs2015 nbsp Vienna Building Bridges2016 nbsp Stockholm Come Together2017 nbsp Kyiv Celebrate Diversity2018 nbsp Lisbon All Aboard 2019 nbsp Tel Aviv Dare to Dream2020 c 2021 nbsp Rotterdam Open Up2022 nbsp Turin The Sound of Beauty2023 present nbsp LiverpoolAll subsequent host cities United by Music d Origins editThe European Broadcasting Union EBU was formed in 1950 when British broadcaster BBC hosted a conference with 23 organisations at the Imperial Hotel in Torquay England with the aim of establishing cooperation on creative endeavours and setting a foundation for the exchange of television programmes across borders 80 81 Eurovision as a term in telecommunications was first used by British journalist George Campey in the London Evening Standard in 1951 when he referred to a BBC programme being relayed by Dutch television 80 82 the EBU s Eurovision transmission network was subsequently founded in 1954 at the time formed of a series of microwave links across Europe 83 In the years following the formation of the EBU a number of big events were transmitted via their infrastructure including the coronation of Elizabeth II which was broadcast in France Belgium the Netherlands and Germany in addition to the United Kingdom 80 82 84 In September 1953 an EBU meeting in London resulted in a series of international exchange programmes organised the following year entitled the European Television Season and relayed live across Europe through the Eurovision network 80 83 The first of these programmes was shown on 6 June 1954 showing coverage of the Narcissus Festival held in Montreux France followed by a tour of Vatican City Further events were broadcast over the following days including the Palio di Siena an athletics meet in Glasgow a parade by the Royal Navy passing Queen Elizabeth II and live transmission of football matches from the 1954 FIFA World Cup in Switzerland the first time the FIFA World Cup was accompanied by live television coverage 80 82 84 Following this summer season of programmes the EBU formed a Programme Committee to investigate new initiatives for cooperation between broadcasters each year with Marcel Bezencon Director General of the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR serving as the committee s first President and Rene McCall deputy director of the BBC and Jean d Arcy Director of the French broadcaster Radiodiffusion Television Francaise RTF serving as Vice Presidents This committee met in Monte Carlo in January 1955 and approved two new projects for further study a European song competition initially proposed by Sergio Pugliese from the Italian broadcaster RAI and a contest of amateur entertainers the latter idea was eventually discarded 82 85 On 19 October 1955 at the annual General Assembly of the EBU held in the Palazzo Corsini in Rome under the Presidency of the Director General of the BBC Sir Ian Jacob the EBU agreed to the organising of the song contest under the initial title of the European Grand Prix and accepted a proposal by the Swiss delegation to host the event in Lugano in the spring of 1956 82 86 87 A planning sub group was formed to establish the rules of the competition headed by Eduard Hass of SRG SSR which used the Italian Sanremo Music Festival as a basis for their work with several amendments and additions made to better reflect this new international version 80 1950s edit nbsp Gustav Winckler and Birthe Wilke representing Denmark at the 1957 contest in Frankfurt The Eurovision Song Contest 1956 was the first edition of the contest organised by Radiotelevisione svizzera di lingua italiana RTSI and held on 24 May 1956 at the Teatro Kursaal in Lugano Switzerland 2 86 The regulations for this first contest allowed one participating broadcast organisation from each country to submit two songs of between 3 and 3 minutes in length the only edition to permit more than one song per country 2 80 88 Each country was strongly encouraged to hold a national contest to select their competing entries with only solo artists permitted to perform 80 Seven countries entered the inaugural contest with entries received from Belgium France West Germany Italy Luxembourg the Netherlands and Switzerland 2 86 Voting in this first contest was held behind closed doors two jury members from each country situated at the venue ranked the competing songs including those of their own country 2 89 Switzerland s Lys Assia was crowned the contest s first winner with the song Refrain 90 Only the overall winner of the contest was announced at its conclusion and the full results have never been made public 2 89 No known video footage of the event is known to survive beyond newsreel of the winning reprise audio of most of the contest however does exist 2 89 The Eurovision Song Contest 1957 was the second edition of the contest organised by Hessischer Rundfunk HR on behalf of ARD and held on 3 March 1957 at the Grosser Sendesaal des hessischen Rundfunks in Frankfurt West Germany 3 91 Early rules established that a different broadcaster would take on the task of organising the contest each year and Germany was selected to host the 1957 event 92 Ten countries entered this second contest with the seven original broadcasters joined by Austria Denmark and the United Kingdom with each country submitting one song for consideration 3 Taking inspiration from the Festival of British Popular Songs organised by the BBC in August 1956 which included a scoreboard and voting by regional juries the contest organisers decided to incorporate these ideas into the pan European contest allowing viewers at home to follow the voting procedure 91 93 A new voting system was introduced in tandem with a jury of ten members in each country casting a single vote for their favourite song jury members from one country could not vote for the song of their own country a rule which still applies to the present day 91 93 The Netherlands was voted the winner represented by Corry Brokken with the song Net als toen 90 nbsp Italy s Domenico Modugno performing in a rehearsal ahead of the 1958 contest in Hilversum The Eurovision Song Contest 1958 was the third edition of the contest organised by Nederlandse Televisie Stichting NTS and held on 12 March 1958 at the AVRO Studios in Hilversum Netherlands 4 94 This marked the first time that the winning country of the previous edition was given the honour of hosting setting a precedent that continues to be observed 95 The United Kingdom decided not to compete in this edition however Sweden made its debut keeping the total number of competing countries at ten 94 95 A new rule limiting the duration of each competing entry to 3 minutes was introduced prompted by the previous year s contest when the Italian entry lasted for over 5 minutes 3 France gained its first win in the contest represented by Andre Claveau and Dors mon amour 90 Despite only placing third Italy s Nel blu dipinto di blu popularly knows as Volare and performed by Domenico Modugno would go on to greater commercial success than the winning song hitting number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 and being recorded by various artists over the years with combined sales of over 22 million copies worldwide 94 96 The Eurovision Song Contest 1959 was the fourth edition of the contest organised by Radiodiffusion Television Francaise RTF and held on 11 March 1959 at the Palais des Festivals in Cannes France 5 97 11 countries competed in this edition which saw the United Kingdom returning to the contest along with new entrants Monaco while Luxembourg decided to withdraw 5 98 The Netherlands s Teddy Scholten was crowned the winner with the song Een beetje becoming the first country to win the contest twice 90 5 97 This contest also marked the only time that the top three entries were given a reprise performance with the United Kingdom s Pearl Carr amp Teddy Johnson and France s Jean Philippe also performing for a second time at the broadcast s conclusion 5 98 1960s editThe Eurovision Song Contest 1960 was the fifth edition of the contest organised by the British Broadcasting Corporation BBC and held on 25 March 1960 at the Royal Festival Hall in London United Kingdom 6 99 Dutch broadcaster NTS declined the opportunity to stage the event for the second time in three years leading the EBU to approach the BBC to host the event as the previous year s runner up 6 100 The number of competing countries grew to 13 as Luxembourg returned and Norway sent its first entry 6 100 France recorded their second contest win with Jacqueline Boyer taking the title with Tom Pillibi 90 nbsp Isabelle Aubret gave France its third win in five years when she won the 1962 contest in Luxembourg City The Eurovision Song Contest 1961 was the sixth edition of the contest organised by RTF and held on 18 March 1961 at the Palais des Festivals in Cannes France 7 101 France became the first country to host two contests with the Palais des Festivals having also hosted the 1959 event This was also the first contest to be held on a Saturday night which has now become the standard time slot for the contest s final 7 101 A record 16 countries competed in this year s event with debut entries from Finland Spain and Yugoslavia 7 102 Luxembourg became the fourth country to win the Eurovision title with French singer Jean Claude Pascal giving the Grand Duchy their first win with Nous les amoureux 7 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1962 was the seventh edition of the contest organised by Compagnie Luxembourgeoise de Radiodiffusion CLT and held on 18 March 1962 at the Grand Auditorium de RTL Villa Louvigny in Luxembourg City Luxembourg 8 103 For the first time there was no change in the countries competing with the same line up seen as in 1961 A new voting system was implemented at this contest with each country now giving 3 2 and 1 points to the top three songs as determined by the combined votes of the assembled jury 8 104 France s Isabelle Aubret was crowned the winner with Un premier amour giving France its third victory in five years 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1963 was the eighth edition of the contest organised by the BBC and held on 23 March 1963 at the BBC Television Centre in London United Kingdom 9 105 France s RTF had declined the offer to stage the contest once again and the BBC stepped in to host the contest for the second time 105 106 A modification of the voting system used in 1962 was adopted with countries now giving 5 4 3 2 and 1 points for their favourite songs 9 107 In a close fought contest for first place between Denmark and Switzerland Grethe and Jorgen Ingmann emerged victorious with Dansevise for Denmark giving the Scandinavian country their first victory on the final vote 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1964 was the ninth edition of the contest organised by Danmarks Radio DR and held on 21 March 1964 at the Tivoli Concert Hall in Copenhagen Denmark 10 108 Sweden were forced to withdraw due to industrial action by the Swedish Musicians Union however as Portugal made its debut appearance the total number of competing countries remained at 16 108 109 Another modification of the voting system now saw each country giving 5 3 and 1 points to the top 3 songs based on the total of all votes cast by jury members with each jury member having three votes to distribute among the songs if all members voted for only two songs these would get 6 and 3 points and if all members voted for the same song it would get 9 points 108 109 This event marked the first time that the contest was interrupted by a protester when a man demonstrating against the right wing dictatorships of Spain and Portugal and the inclusion of these countries in the contest entered the stage holding a banner stating Boycott Franco and Salazar before being quickly removed as cameras cut to a shot of the scoreboard 108 110 No footage of this protest remains however as like the 1956 contest no video footage of the contest is known to exist but footage of the opening sequence and the winning reprise as well as audio recordings are known to survive 10 109 Italy s Gigliola Cinquetti scored a landslide victory with the song Non ho l eta gaining almost three times as many points as the United Kingdom in second place and giving Italy its first Eurovision win 90 110 nbsp France Gall and Udo Jurgens at the 1966 contest in Luxembourg City as Jurgens celebrates his win for Austria The Eurovision Song Contest 1965 was the tenth edition of the contest organised by Radiotelevisione italiana RAI and held on 20 March 1965 at the Sala di Concerto della RAI in Naples Italy 11 111 A record 18 countries competed in this anniversary event with Sweden making its return and Ireland making its debut 112 With the contest being picked up by the Eastern Europe Intervision network and broadcast in countries such as the Soviet Union Czechoslovakia Poland Hungary and East Germany for the first time the 1965 contest was the biggest yet with an estimated global audience of 150 million viewers 111 112 Sweden s entry caused some controversy when their entry was performed in English rather than in their national language Swedish as there was no rule in place to dictate in what language a country could perform this was allowed despite protest from other competing countries 11 113 Luxembourg won for the second time with French chanteuse France Gall performing Poupee de cire poupee de son 90 It was the first time that a pop song had won the contest which would become an international hit for Gall and would have an influence on the type of songs entered into the contest in years to come 11 114 Ahead of the 1966 contest the EBU invited broadcasters to submit proposals on ideas they believed should be introduced in future editions This was prompted by concerns from CLT on their ability to stage the next event 113 Some ideas in common among several broadcasters included the introduction of semi finals to reduce the number of competing acts with some also suggesting that competing countries should be split on a geographic or linguistic basis music experts having a 50 stake in the result to enable more of an emphasis being placed on musical quality and a tightening of the rules on language and submission cut off with the creation of an executive supervisor role in order to oversee the contest and raise production standards Further proposals on changes to the contest included holding the event over multiple locations with performances and hosting duties split across two or three different competing countries this proposal was rejected following concerns raised that musical quality and consistency would suffer in a contest held across multiple locations and with multiple orchestras and that the risk of technical failure would also increase by using multiple venues 113 The EBU went on to adopt a number of the suggestions raised with the following contest featuring music experts in the national juries and the implementation of a language rule stipulating that songs must be performed in one of the national languages of the participating country 12 Other changes such as semi finals and splitting countries by set criteria would subsequently be revisited in decades to come 113 The Eurovision Song Contest 1966 was the eleventh edition of the contest organised by CLT and held on 5 March 1966 at the Grand Auditorium de RTL Villa Louvigny in Luxembourg City Luxembourg 12 115 This marked Luxembourg s second contest as host broadcaster using the same venue as that in 1961 This contest saw the first performance by a black artist at Eurovision when Milly Scott represented the Netherlands 12 116 Udo Jurgens secured Austria s first win with Merci Cherie this was Jurgens third attempt at victory having previously finished 6th in 1964 and 4th in 1965 90 117 The Eurovision Song Contest 1967 was the twelfth edition of the contest organised by Osterreichischer Rundfunk ORF and held on 8 April 1967 at the Grosser Festsaal der Wiener Hofburg in Vienna Austria 13 118 Denmark withdraw from this contest reducing the number of competing countries to 17 The scoring system last used in 1961 with ten members casting a single vote for their favourite was reintroduced with at least half of the jury members in each country required to be less than 30 years old 119 120 A number of other innovations introduced for the first time at this contest such as shots of the green room during the voting process and each country s broadcaster appointing an official representative have since become integral parts of the present day contest 120 The United Kingdom s Sandie Shaw won the contest with Puppet on a String in a landslide victory with the UK gaining more than twice as many votes as the runner up Ireland to gain its first Eurovision title 90 13 The Eurovision Song Contest 1968 was the thirteenth edition of the contest organised by the BBC and held on 6 April 1968 at the Royal Albert Hall in London United Kingdom 14 121 This was the first edition of the contest to be produced in colour 14 122 A tight voting sequence saw Spain and the United Kingdom vie for first place by the end with the votes of the final juries being decisive in favour of Spain s Massiel by just one vote 90 Joan Manuel Serrat had originally been announced as the Spanish representative but when he wanted to sing in Catalan Spain s dictator Francisco Franco demanded that he perform La La La in Castillian resulting in his replacement by Massiel 14 122 A Spanish documentary in 2008 claimed that in an attempt to avoid civil unrest seen in other parts of Europe and to boost Spain s standing globally Franco had ordered agents to attempt to manipulate the votes of the other countries juries to secure a Spanish win at the contest 123 The documentary goes on to suggest that the United Kingdom s Cliff Richard who had been tipped for victory before the contest with Congratulations should have been the winner 124 125 However the effectiveness of any potential bribery has been disputed and others including Massiel have accused the documentary creators and broadcaster of manufacturing the scandal 126 127 nbsp The Netherlands Lenny Kuhr was one of four winners at the 1969 contest The Eurovision Song Contest 1969 was the fourteenth edition of the contest organised by Television Espanola TVE and held on 29 March 1969 at the Teatro Real in Madrid Spain 15 128 16 countries entered this year s contest with Austria refusing to take part due to the Spanish dictatorship 128 129 A tight voting sequence saw France Spain the Netherlands and the United Kingdom in contention for first place when with the votes of the final jury all four countries finished on an equal number of points With no rules in place to break a tie for first place all four countries were declared victors the only time that more than one country has won in a single year 128 130 As four medals had fortunately been struck for the prize giving Spain s Salome the UK s Lulu the Netherlands Lenny Kuhr and France s Frida Boccara were all able to receive their prize ahead of a reprise of all four winning songs Vivo cantando Boom Bang a Bang De troubadour and Un jour un enfant respectively 15 130 The result meant that France gained a new record fourth win in the contest with the Netherlands recording its third win and both Spain and the United Kingdom earning their second wins Spain also became the first country to achieve two wins in a row 129 1970s edit nbsp Dana became the first of seven Irish winners at the 1970 contest in Amsterdam The Eurovision Song Contest 1970 was the fifteenth edition of the contest organised by Nederlandse Omroep Stichting NOS and held on 21 March 1970 at the RAI Congrescentrum in Amsterdam Netherlands 16 131 A draw was held to determine the host country of this contest following the four way tie for first place in 1969 which chose the Netherlands as hosts over France as Spain and the United Kingdom declined to take part in the draw due to having hosted recent contests 132 133 Widespread dissatisfaction with the result of the 1969 contest led to the withdrawals of Finland Norway Sweden and Portugal with Austria and Denmark also declining to participate in response leaving only 12 countries to compete in Amsterdam the lowest number of participants since 1959 16 131 133 A tie break rule was introduced for the first time to ensure there would be no further joint winners in the result of a tie for first place the artists of the countries involved would perform again and the juries in all other remaining countries would determine the winner by a show of hands if that too resulted in a tie then the countries would share the title 16 133 A number of innovations which have since become regular features of the contest were first implemented in this year originally as a way to extend the broadcast due to the low number of participating entries These include an extended opening film sequence highlighting the host country and short film clip postcards highlighting the participants or host country which were placed between the competing songs 133 131 132 Ireland which would go on to win more times than any other country recorded its first win here with Dana taking the contest with All Kinds of Everything 90 132 The Eurovision Song Contest 1971 was the sixteenth edition of the contest organised by Raidio Teilifis Eireann RTE and held on 3 April 1971 at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin Ireland 17 134 A number of changes to the contest saw groups allowed for the first time with a maximum of six performers on stage previously only one or two principal vocalists had been permitted with support from a maximum of three supporting artists 17 135 136 A new voting system was also introduced for this contest implemented to ensure that there would be a clear cut winner and to avoid countries receiving nul points two jurors from each country one below the age of 25 and the other above ranked all songs except that of their own country on a scale of one to five 17 135 All countries were now obligated to provide a music video of their entry and to broadcast all entries ahead of the contest via a preview show 134 With these changes the countries which had sat out in 1970 felt able to return and 18 participants in total were present the biggest contest since 1966 with Norway Sweden Finland Austria and Portugal returning and Malta making its debut 17 135 Monaco recorded their first and only win with French singer Severine victorious for the principality with Un banc un arbre une rue 90 136 The Eurovision Song Contest 1972 was the seventeenth edition of the contest organised by the BBC and held on 25 March 1972 at the Usher Hall in Edinburgh United Kingdom 18 137 Monaco s Tele Monte Carlo TMC had initially expressed interest in hosting however no suitable venue in Monaco was available in time for the contest After Spain s TVE and Germany s ARD having come second and third the previous year and France s ORTF had turned down the opportunity to host the BBC offered once again to step in taking the contest outside of London and England for the first time to the Scottish capital 138 139 The same 18 countries from 1971 were again present and the same voting system was implemented 138 The contest was broadcast in 28 countries and for the first time was available live in Asia with viewers able to watch the show in Japan Taiwan the Philippines Hong Kong and Thailand 18 139 Luxembourg earned their third contest win represented by the Greek singer Vicky Leandros with Apres toi it was Leandros second attempt at Eurovision having previously come 4th for Luxembourg in 1967 90 139 The Eurovision Song Contest 1973 was the eighteenth edition of the contest organised by CLT and held on 7 April 1973 at the Nouveau Theatre in Luxembourg City Luxembourg 19 140 Israel made its first appearance becoming the first non European nation to enter the contest while Austria and Malta both withdrew bringing the total participating nations to 17 141 Coming less than a year after the Munich massacre security was unusually tight in light of Israel s debut with the venue sealed off by the authorities and the Israeli delegation being isolated in their hotel and surrounded by armed guards when not required at the venue the audience had also been warned not to stand during the show at the risk of being shot 140 141 This year marked the first abolition of the language rule allowing participants the freedom to choose the language in which they wished to perform several countries capitalised on this with Finland and Sweden performing in English while Norway performed in both English and French 19 141 Pre recorded backing tracks were also permitted for the first time however all vocals were still required to be performed live and any instruments featured on the track had to be seen on stage 141 142 Luxembourg won the contest for the second year in a row with the French singer Anne Marie David giving Luxembourg its fourth win with Tu te reconnaitras Luxembourg thus became the first country to win two outright back to back victories Spain having won in both 1968 and 1969 but sharing the latter title 90 143 nbsp Sweden s ABBA went on to achieve worldwide fame following their Eurovision win in 1974 The Eurovision Song Contest 1974 was the nineteenth edition of the contest organised by the BBC and held on 6 April 1974 at The Dome in Brighton United Kingdom 20 144 Luxembourg s CLT turned down the offer to host the contest for a second year in a row and Spain s RTVE as runner up in 1973 had also rejected hosting duties an offer by Israel s IBA was turned down due to their limited technical capabilities and in the end the BBC threw its hat into the ring once again to take on the contest for the fifth time 20 145 17 countries competed in total with Greece making its debut appearance France withdrew a number of days before the event following the death of the President of France Georges Pompidou in a mark of respect as his funeral was arranged for the day of the contest 145 The voting system was modified once again to bring back the system last used in 1970 with 10 jury members casting a single vote for their favourite song 20 145 Sweden s ABBA were declared the winners of the contest with Waterloo giving Sweden its first Eurovision title 90 ABBA s win in the contest would propel them to worldwide fame with an estimated 380 million records sold across their career with Waterloo alone selling five million copies and becoming one of the contest s most successful winning songs 146 147 148 The Eurovision Song Contest 1975 was the twentieth edition of the contest organised by Sveriges Radio SR and held on 22 March 1975 at the Stockholmsmassan in Stockholm Sweden 21 149 A then record 19 countries took part in this edition which saw Greece withdrawing France and Malta returning and Turkey making its debut entry 150 SR had initially been hesitant in staging the contest due to the expense that came with it and had wanted all competing countries to share the costs however these cost sharing plans were not implemented in time for the 75 event 150 151 The Stockholm event also saw demonstrations by left wing activists who opposed the high costs of hosting the event 149 A new voting system was introduced at this contest which has been the basis for the rewarding of points at all future contests each country s jury awarded 12 points to their top placed song 10 points to their second placed and then 8 to 1 points for those ranked third to tenth 21 149 151 The Netherlands was the first country to win the contest under this new system with Teach In achieving a fourth Dutch Eurovision win with Ding a dong 90 nbsp Save Your Kisses for Me by Brotherhood of Man would become the contest s most successful winning song selling over six million copies worldwide The Eurovision Song Contest 1976 was the twenty first edition of the contest organised by NOS and held on 3 April 1976 at the Nederlands Congresgebouw in The Hague Netherlands 22 152 The previous year s host Sweden in response to the protests during the 1975 event and fearful of the costs involved in staging the event should they win again decided to withdraw joining Malta and Turkey however with Austria and Greece returning a total of 18 countries took to the stage for the Netherlands third contest as hosts 22 152 153 Partly in response to the concerns raised by the Swedish broadcaster all competing countries were now required to contribute to the costs of running Eurovision with the value of the contribution fee dependent on the country s viewership and population 153 The United Kingdom earned its third Eurovision victory courtesy of Brotherhood of Man and Save Your Kisses for Me which would go on to sell over six million records worldwide more than any other winning song in the history of the contest 90 154 The Eurovision Song Contest 1977 was the twenty second edition of the contest organised by the BBC and held on 7 May 1977 at the Wembley Conference Centre in London United Kingdom 23 155 Originally scheduled to take place on 2 April a strike by BBC cameramen and technicians forced a five week delay 156 157 The language rule was re introduced at this contest meaning that songs could only be performed in one of the national languages of the country it represented 23 157 18 countries took part in the London contest with Sweden returning and Yugoslavia withdrawing an attempt was also made by Tunisia to take part in the contest for the first time however this eventually did not materialise despite being drawn to perform fourth on stage 155 157 France set a new record in recording its fifth Eurovision win with Marie Myriam taking the contest with L Oiseau et l Enfant in what would become France s last victory to date 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1978 was the twenty third edition of the contest organised by TF1 and held on 22 April 1978 at the Palais des Congres in Paris France 24 158 A new record of 20 countries competed in France s third showing as host with Denmark and Turkey returning the former making its first appearance since 1966 159 160 Israel won the contest for the first time represented by Izhar Cohen and the Alphabeta with the song A Ba Ni Bi 90 Israel s win proved problematic for a number of non competing broadcasters who were airing the event particularly those in the Arab world with limited recognition of Israel and many broadcasters ended the transmission of the event early when it became clear that Israel would win 159 160 The Eurovision Song Contest 1979 was the twenty fourth edition of the contest organised by the Israel Broadcasting Authority IBA and held on 31 March 1979 at the International Convention Centre in Jerusalem 25 161 19 countries took part with Turkey who had initially intended to participate and had already selected their act withdrawing at a late stage following pressure from Arab nations who objected to a predominantly Muslim nation taking part in Israel 162 A tight result saw Israel and Spain vie for first place with Spain leading by only one point going into the final vote which was Spain s own by giving the hosts 10 points they awarded Israel its second victory in a row handing the victory to Milk and Honey and the song Hallelujah 90 25 162 1980s edit nbsp Ireland s Johnny Logan would go on to win the contest three times picking up his first Eurovision win in 1980 in The Hague The Eurovision Song Contest 1980 was the twenty fifth edition of the contest organised by Nederlandse Omroep Stichting NOS and held on 19 April 1980 at the Nederlands Congresgebouw in The Hague Netherlands 26 163 Israel having won the previous year had initially agreed to host the contest however due to the cost of hosting the event for a second year in a row IBA eventually declined to host the event After a number of other broadcasters including the BBC appeared reluctant to stage the event NOS stepped in on the understanding that they could host a scaled back production using the same venue as in 1976 164 The 19 April date proved problematic for Israel as it conflicted with Yom HaZikaron and after failed attempts to move the date Israel ultimately pulled out the first and only time that the previous year s winning country was unable to defend its title 164 165 Monaco also withdrew from the contest however the number of competing countries remained steady at 19 with Turkey returning and Morocco making its debut entry becoming the first African country to compete in the contest 26 164 Johnny Logan recorded the first of his three Eurovision wins in The Hague giving Ireland its second victory with the song What s Another Year 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1981 was the twenty sixth edition of the contest organised by RTE and held on 4 April 1981 at the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin Ireland 27 166 20 countries competed in total with Cyprus making its debut appearance Israel and Yugoslavia returning and Morocco and Italy withdrawing the latter for the first time since the contest was formed 167 A worldwide audience of around 500 million viewers was expected with some 30 countries taking the broadcast across Europe Asia and North Africa 167 The voting came down to a close contest between Switzerland the United Kingdom and Germany and the UK gained its fourth victory by a 4 point margin over Germany Bucks Fizz specially formed for the contest would have great success in the following years and their Eurovision winning song Making Your Mind Up would go on to become a Europe wide hit 166 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1982 was the twenty seventh edition of the contest organised by the BBC and held on 24 April 1982 at the Harrogate Convention Centre in Harrogate United Kingdom 28 168 18 countries competed in total with France and Greece withdrawing 169 French broadcaster TF1 in withdrawing criticised the contest s musical quality and describing it as a monument to drivel where as Greece which would have performed second on the night was forced to pull out a few weeks before the contest when it was discovered that its intended entry had been previously released and based on a Greek folk song 168 169 170 Germany dominated the voting and would win with the biggest margin yet seen under the current system 61 points as well as gaining a new record number of 12 points with 9 juries placing them top Nicole became the first German act to win the contest 26 years after their first entry and during the winning reprise would perform her winning entry Ein bisschen Frieden in English French Dutch and the original German 28 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1983 was the twenty eighth edition of the contest organised by Bayerischer Rundfunk BR on behalf of ARD and held on 23 April 1983 at the Rudi Sedlmayer Halle in Munich West Germany 29 171 20 countries were present at Germany s second contest has hosts with returns from Italy Greece and France with the latter represented by a new broadcaster Antenne 2 following a public outcry over the previous year s absence however Ireland withdrew for the first time due to a financial crisis at broadcaster RTE 172 173 Luxembourg recorded its fifth outright win after a close vote over Israel Sweden and Yugoslavia with the French singer Corinne Hermes cementing the Grand Duchy as one of the contest s most successful countries with Si la vie est cadeau 90 173 The Eurovision Song Contest 1984 was the twenty ninth edition of the contest organised by CLT and held on 5 May 1984 at the Theatre Municipal in Luxembourg City Luxembourg 30 174 19 countries in total took part with Ireland returning and Israel declining to participate as the date of the contest clashed with Yom HaZikaron with Greece also withdrawing at a late stage after broadcaster ERT decided that their potential songs were too low quality for the event 175 Desiree Nosbusch chosen as the hostess for the event became the youngest person to compere the contest at only 19 years old 30 174 10 years after ABBA had earned Sweden its first Eurovision win Herreys gave the Scandinavian country its second taking the contest with Diggi Loo Diggi Ley 90 nbsp Sandra Kim pictured in 2012 became the contest s youngest winner in 1986 at 13 years old The Eurovision Song Contest 1985 was the thirtieth edition of the contest organised by Sveriges Television SVT and held on 4 May 1985 at the Scandinavium in Gothenburg Sweden 31 176 With over 8 000 spectators present in the arena the 1985 event was the largest yet held and was the first contest to be broadcast live via satellite 176 83 19 countries were again present with Israel and Greece returning but Yugoslavia and the Netherlands withdrawing the latter for the first time in both cases the contest clashed with national memorial days with the Remembrance of the Dead held in the Netherlands and in Yugoslavia the anniversary of the death of President Josip Broz Tito 176 177 A close fought contest in the voting between Norway Germany and Sweden saw the perennial losers victorious for the first time Norway had previously come last on six occasion more than any other country leading to great celebrations in the arena when Bobbysocks were crowned the winners with La det swinge 176 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 1986 was the thirty first edition of the contest organised by Norsk rikskringkasting NRK and held on 3 May 1986 at the Grieghallen in Bergen Norway 32 178 20 countries competed in total the Netherlands and Yugoslavia returned after a year s absence and Iceland made its debut appearance 32 Italy had decided to opt out of this year s event while Greece withdrew at a late stage due to the contest coinciding with Holy Saturday 179 In a landmark event the 500th song to grace the Eurovision stage was performed at this contest courtesy of Luxembourg s Sherisse Laurence and L Amour de ma vie 180 This contest also saw one of the first open representations of a member of the LGBT community when members of the Norwegian drag group the Great Garlic Girls accompanied the home nation s singer Ketil Stokkan 178 Belgium scored its first and only victory to date with Sandra Kim becoming the contest s youngest ever winner at only 13 years old with the song J aime la vie 90 Kim had previously told producers before the contest that she was 15 years old and when the truth was revealed the Swiss delegation who had come second protested and petitioned for Belgium to be disqualified to no avail 178 181 The Eurovision Song Contest 1987 was the thirty second edition of the contest organised by Radio television belge de la Communaute francaise RTBF and held on 9 May 1987 at the Palais de Centenaire in Brussels Belgium 33 182 Belgium had at that point waited longer than any other country to host its first contest 31 years after their debut entry Since the contest s formation two broadcasters had been responsible for choosing Belgium s entries with French language RTBF and Dutch language Belgische Radio en Televisieomroep BRT alternating every other year Initially BRT had wanted to co produce the first Belgian contest with RTBF the broadcaster which had won the previous year however disagreements quickly arose between the two organisations and so RTBF organised the contest on its own with BRT selecting the Belgian entry 183 22 countries entered the contest a new record with Italy and Greece making a return and joining the 20 countries from the previous year 184 Johnny Logan the winner of the 1980 contest returned for Ireland and became the first artist to record two wins in the contest with Hold Me Now and in doing so giving Ireland its third contest win 33 90 nbsp Celine Dion one of the world s best selling artists was still relatively unknown outside of her native Canada when she won the 1988 contest for Switzerland The Eurovision Song Contest 1988 was the thirty third edition of the contest organised by RTE and held on 30 April 1988 at the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin Ireland 34 185 This was Ireland s third contest which fell in the same year as the millennium of Dublin s founding 186 The same group of countries from 1987 entered however Cyprus was forced to withdraw at a late stage when it was discovered that their entry had previously competed in the Cypriot national selection in 1984 186 The RTE production team made a great effort to modernise the contest and attract a younger audience with a modern stage commissioned the largest yet seen which featured two giant video walls and the first ever use of a computerised scoreboard 186 187 In one of the closest contests yet seen Switzerland emerged victorious by only a single point over the United Kingdom with a then unknown Celine Dion earning Switzerland its second victory with Ne partez pas sans moi 90 Although her Eurovision winning song was not commercially successful Dion would later become one of the world s best selling artists having sold over 200 million records throughout her career 188 The Eurovision Song Contest 1989 was the thirty fourth edition of the contest organised by the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR and held on 6 May 1989 at the Palais de Beaulieu in Lausanne Switzerland 35 189 This marked the second Eurovision to be held in Switzerland 33 years after the inaugural contest was held in the Alpine country With Cyprus returning the final contest of the 1980s equalled the record of 22 competing countries set in 1987 190 A modification to the tie break rule was implemented this year a count back would now occur for the countries which were tied for first place with the country with the most 12 points being declared the winner with further comparisons against 10 points and lower also conducted if required to break the tie 35 190 Two of the competing acts created controversy in the run up to the contest due to their young age with France s Nathalie Paque and Israel s Gili Netanel becoming the youngest ever participants in contest history at 11 and 12 years old respectively 35 Yugoslavia recorded their only win in the contest when Riva took victory with Rock Me 90 1990s editThe Eurovision Song Contest 1990 was the thirty fifth edition of the contest organised by Jugoslovenska radio televizija JRT and Radiotelevizija Zagreb RTZ and held on 5 May 1990 at the Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall in Zagreb Yugoslavia 36 191 In response to the Israeli and French singers in 1989 the EBU introduced a new age rule barring anyone below the age of 16 on the day of the contest from competing this rule means that Sandra Kim the contest s youngest winner at 13 years old remains so in perpetuity 191 192 Italy s Toto Cutugno became the first winner of the decade giving Italy its second win with Insieme 1992 an ode to the planned formation of the European Union in 1992 90 192 The Eurovision Song Contest 1991 was the thirty sixth edition of the contest organised by RAI and held on 4 May 1991 at Studio 15 di Cinecitta in Rome Italy 37 193 This was the second edition of the contest to be held in Italy and was presented by the two previous Italian winners Gigliola Cinquetti and Toto Cutugno The contest was originally planned to be held in Sanremo the site of the Sanremo Music Festival which was the inspiration for Eurovision however following the outbreak of the Gulf War RAI decided to move the contest to the Italian capital to better ensure the security of the foreign delegations 193 194 The Netherlands once again withdrew as the contest fell on the Remembrance of the Dead memorial but Malta made its first appearance in the contest since 1975 keeping the contest participants at 22 Germany also made its first appearance as a unified country following German reunification in October 1990 37 194 The closest ever final result was recorded with Sweden and France both finishing with the same number of points Sweden was subsequently declared the winner when in the only ever use of the tie break rule in contest history a count back revealed that Sweden had collected more 10 points than France after both countries had collected the same number of 12 points 37 193 Carola therefore became the third Swedish act to win the contest with Fangad av en stormvind in her second participation in the contest having previously come third in 1983 90 nbsp In winning the 1992 contest Linda Martin was the first of three Irish artists in a row to win Eurovision in the early 1990s The Eurovision Song Contest 1992 was the thirty seventh edition of the contest organised by SVT and held on 9 May 1992 at the Malmo Isstadion in Malmo Sweden 38 195 196 A new record 23 countries entered the contest with the Netherlands making its return 38 197 This contest would mark the last appearance of Yugoslavia having already begun the process of breaking up and now representing the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 195 Ireland s Linda Martin emerged the winner with the Johnny Logan penned Why Me giving Ireland its fourth win and Logan his third as both performer and songwriter it was Martin s second contest appearance having previously come second for Ireland in 1984 90 With the United Kingdom and Malta taking second and third this was the first contest to have solely English language songs feature in the top 3 38 197 The Eurovision Song Contest 1993 was the thirty eighth edition of the contest organised by RTE and held on 15 May 1993 at the Green Glens Arena in Millstreet Ireland 40 198 It remains the only Irish production of the contest to be held outside of Dublin and as a small town of only 1 500 people Millstreet became the smallest Eurovision host to date although the Green Glens Arena was able to hold up to 8 000 spectators 40 199 Changes in Europe in the 1990s were first reflected at this contest with several new countries formed following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and breakup of Yugoslavia wishing to compete for the first time In order to accommodate this growing number the first Eurovision pre selection took place in Ljubljana Slovenia on 3 April Kvalifikacija za Millstreet 40 200 seven countries competed for three places at the contest with the former Yugoslav states Slovenia Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia emerging the winners and joining 22 countries which had taken part in Malmo with only Yugoslavia absent banned from competing following UN sanctions 201 In order to better manage the participating countries in years to come a relegation system was introduced which saw the bottom placed countries missing out the following year and replaced by new and returning countries 40 201 A two horse race soon developed in the voting between the United Kingdom and Ireland with the final jury crucial in giving victory to the hosts Niamh Kavanagh became the first Irish act to win on home soil with In Your Eyes their second consecutive win and a record equalling fifth win in total 90 202 The Eurovision Song Contest 1994 was the thirty ninth edition of the contest organised by RTE and held on 30 April 1994 at the Point Theatre in Dublin Ireland 41 203 RTE thus became the first broadcaster to host two consecutive contests Seven countries joined the contest for the first time replacing the bottom six countries from Millstreet and Italy which withdrew voluntarily Luxembourg one of those countries relegated subsequently failed to return the following year and their 1993 entry would remain their last for 31 years 40 201 204 Estonia Hungary Romania and Slovakia which had failed to qualify from Kvalifikacija za Millstreet the previous year joined new entries from Lithuania Poland and Russia in debuting competing alongside the top 18 countries from Millstreet 201 205 Riverdance which would go on to become one of the world s most successful dance productions made its debut in this edition as the interval act originally a seven minute performance it would later be expanded into a full show which would go on to be performed at over 450 venues worldwide and be seen by over 250 million people 201 206 207 Satellite links were used during the voting at this contest which enabled the jury spokespersons to be seen in vision for the first time 202 41 Ireland secured its third consecutive win a feat yet to be replicated and earned a record breaking sixth win courtesy of Paul Harrington and Charlie McGettigan and Rock n Roll Kids 90 Poland secured the best ever showing yet seen for a debut country when Edyta Gorniak placed second 41 203 nbsp Eimear Quinn became the seventh artist to win the contest for Ireland in 1996 which remains a record to this day The Eurovision Song Contest 1995 was the fortieth edition of the contest organised by RTE and held on 13 May 1995 at the Point Theatre in Dublin Ireland 42 208 RTE had concerns about staging the contest for a third consecutive year and the BBC submitted an offer to take on the event as well as proposing a joint production in Belfast the capital of Northern Ireland 208 ultimately RTE decided to produce the contest solo hosting its third consecutive contest which remains a record with the Point Theatre becoming the first venue to host two contests in a row 42 The number of competing countries was reduced to 23 with the bottom seven countries from 1994 relegated and the five countries relegated at Millstreet in 1993 returning 42 209 Norway scored its second contest victory with the Irish Norwegian duo Secret Garden and the song Nocturne 90 some criticism arose following its victory that as a mainly instrumental number containing only 24 words in total the winning song should not have been eligible for the song contest to no avail 208 The Eurovision Song Contest 1996 was the forty first edition of the contest organised by NRK and held on 18 May 1996 at the Oslo Spektrum in Oslo Norway 43 210 A new qualifying system was introduced at this contest principally to appease Germany one of the contest s biggest financial backers which otherwise would have been relegated which saw all countries except the host nation competing in an audio only qualifying round 210 29 countries entered in total with all competing nations and Norway voting and deciding the 22 countries which would advance in the final 211 212 Germany however would be one of the seven countries to be eliminated along with Hungary Denmark Russia Israel Romania and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in what would have been their debut entry 43 210 For the first and only time to date the voting was conducted using virtual reality technology with the graphics for the scoreboard superimposed over the contest s blue room 210 212 Ireland secured its record seventh win with Eimear Quinn providing its fourth win in five years with The Voice 90 As in previous contests the most commercially successful contest entry would be one of the losing songs with the UK s Ooh Aah Just a Little Bit by Gina G becoming an international hit reaching the top 20 of the US Billboard Hot 100 and eventually being nominated for a Grammy Award 43 212 213 it also remains the last UK entry to reach number one on the UK Singles Chart 211 214 The Eurovision Song Contest 1997 was the forty second edition of the contest organised by RTE and held on 3 May 1997 at the Point Theatre in Dublin Ireland 44 142 25 countries competed in the third contest held at the Point Theatre with a new relegation system implemented to reduce the number of competing entries the number of points each country earned in the last four contests was used to calculate an average score for each country and the countries with the lowest average were made to sit out for a year 44 215 Israel withdrew voluntarily due to the contest conflicting with Yom HaShoah giving a reprieve to Bosnia and Herzegovina which would have otherwise been relegated Italy also made a brief return after a four year absence in what would be their last entry for fourteen years 215 216 The first use of televoting was implemented at this contest on a trial basis with the points from Austria Switzerland Germany Sweden and the United Kingdom being determined by the viewing public rather than an assembled jury 44 142 Full backing tracks were also now permitted without restriction allowing songs to be performed without live music if desired although live vocals were still required 142 215 The United Kingdom emerged victorious for the fifth time 16 years after their last win with Katrina and the Waves and Love Shine a Light 90 nbsp Israel s Dana International became the contest s first trans and LGBT performer to win the contest in 1998 The Eurovision Song Contest 1998 was the forty third edition of the contest organised by the BBC and held on 9 May 1998 at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham United Kingdom 45 217 25 countries were featured in the eighth contest held in the UK a new record with Macedonia making its debut appearance 45 218 Following the successful trial in 1997 televoting took place in the majority of countries for the first time at this contest 45 218 The first result widely determined by the viewing public saw Israel the UK and Malta vie for first place with Israel s Dana International declared victorious with the final result giving Israel its third win with Diva 45 90 Dana International the contest s first trans performer had emerged a controversial figure in Israel following her selection for the contest with criticism being levied by conservative sections of Israeli society and death threats being received from fanatical factions 217 219 The Eurovision Song Contest 1999 was the forty fourth edition of the contest organised by IBA and held on 29 May 1999 at the International Convention Centre in Jerusalem Israel 46 220 23 countries took part in Israel s second contest as hosts with Lithuania returning after a 5 year absence 221 222 It was the first contest not to feature an orchestra which had become an optional requirement this year a change which IBA had utilised in an effort to cut costs 221 This change which proved controversial meant that all entries would be accompanied by a backing track for the first time a decision which former winner Johnny Logan claimed had turned the contest into karaoke 220 222 The language rule was also relaxed once again which allowed artists the option to perform in any language with many now choosing to sing in English 220 222 The Big Four group of countries was formed at this contest a rule which saw the contest s largest financial backers Germany France Spain and the United Kingdom now being exempt from relegation and able to participate every year 220 221 The contest became a close race between Sweden and Iceland with Charlotte Nilsson earning Sweden s fourth contest win with Take Me to Your Heaven 90 220 Following the winning reprise the broadcast was concluded by all participating artists assembling on stage to perform Hallelujah the Israeli winning song from 1979 as a tribute to the victims of the then ongoing war in the Balkans 46 220 2000s editThe Eurovision Song Contest 2000 was the forty fifth edition of the contest organised by SVT and held on 13 May 2000 at the Globe Arena in Stockholm Sweden 47 223 24 countries competed in the contest with Latvia making its first appearance 47 The first contest of the new millennium was held before the biggest crowd yet seen in its history with over 13 000 spectators witnessing the show in the arena and it was the first contest to be broadcast live via the internet 224 225 Denmark secured its second win its first since 1963 represented by the Olsen Brothers with the song Fly on the Wings of Love 90 Russia which had placed second petitioned for the song s disqualification for the partial use of a vocoder which was rejected by the EBU 224 The Eurovision Song Contest 2001 was the forty sixth edition of the contest organised by DR and held on 12 May 2001 at the Parken Stadium in Copenhagen Denmark 48 226 A retractable roof was specially constructed over the football stadium for the contest and with 38 000 spectators it became the biggest live audience ever seen at Eurovision a record which still stands 226 227 23 countries competed in total and the relegation system was again altered by removing the average score comparison and bringing back the system used in 1994 and 1995 of relegating the bottom placed countries with the Big Four being exempt no matter their placing 48 227 Estonia was declared the winner represented by Tanel Padar Dave Benton and 2XL with Everybody 90 With its victory Estonia became the first country from the former Eastern Bloc to win the contest sparking an eight year chain of victories for new countries and Aruba born Benton became the first black artist to win the contest 227 The Eurovision Song Contest 2002 was the forty seventh edition of the contest organised by Eesti Televisioon ETV and held on 25 May 2002 at the Saku Suurhall in Tallinn Estonia 49 228 24 countries participated in the first contest to be held behind the former Iron Curtain 229 The Marcel Bezencon Awards a series of additional prizes honouring some of the best songs and artists in each contest s final as voted for by the accredited press commentators and composers were first awarded at this contest and have been subsequently featured at every contest since traditionally handed out backstage shortly before the grand final 230 Latvia earned its first title only two years after their first entry represented by Marie N and I Wanna 90 Latvia had originally been relegated due to its poor performance in Copenhagen but was given a reprieve when Portugal decided to withdraw voluntarily 228 229 nbsp Ruslana earned Ukraine its first victory on only its second contest appearance in 2004 The Eurovision Song Contest 2003 was the forty eighth edition of the contest organised by Latvijas Televizija LTV and held on 24 May 2003 at the Skonto Hall in Riga Latvia 50 231 26 countries took part in the contest with Ukraine joining the contest for the first time 231 232 This would become the last contest to be held over a single evening with an announcement in January 2003 that from 2004 a semi final would be introduced the top 10 countries from the 2003 event alongside the Big Four would qualify automatically for the final in 2004 with all other countries competing in the semi final for 10 qualification places 231 233 Turkey gained its first Eurovision win with Sertab Erener victorious in one of the closest contests ever seen as Everyway That I Can triumphed with only three points separating the top three countries 90 232 The Eurovision Song Contest 2004 was the forty ninth edition of the contest organised by the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation TRT and held on 12 and 15 May 2004 at the Abdi Ipekci Arena in Istanbul Turkey 51 234 A record 36 countries competed in the first contest held under the new format with the relegated countries from 2003 being joined by Albania Andorra Belarus and Serbia and Montenegro in their debut appearances with Monaco also making its first appearance after a 25 year absence 233 22 countries entered the first Eurovision semi final with the top 10 joining the 14 automatic qualifiers in the final 235 Ukraine emerged the winner in only their second contest appearance represented by Ruslana and Wild Dances 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 2005 was the fiftieth edition of the contest organised by the National Television Company of Ukraine NTU and held on 19 and 21 May 2005 at the Palace of Sports in Kyiv Ukraine 52 236 39 countries competed in total with debut entries from Moldova and Bulgaria and a return from Hungary for the first time since 1998 237 Lebanon had also planned to make a debut appearance however they withdrew at a late stage due to issues with competing alongside Israel 236 Greece s Helena Paparizou became the winner of the anniversary edition of the contest with My Number One the first win for Greece after 31 years of competition 90 236 On 22 October 2005 a special competition was held to celebrate the contest s 50th anniversary Congratulations 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest was organised by DR and held at the Forum Copenhagen in Copenhagen Denmark hosted by former Eurovision contestants Katrina Leskanich and Renars Kaupers 238 14 songs from Eurovision history chosen by fans and the contest s Reference Group competed to determine the most popular song from the contest s first 50 years 239 240 Broadcast live in 31 countries which had competed in Eurovision at that point the combined votes of the viewing public and juries selected a winner over two rounds 241 The winning song announced at the end of the show was Waterloo by ABBA the winning song from the 1974 contest for Sweden 239 nbsp Serbia became only the second country to win on its debut appearance when Marija Serifovic was victorious in 2007 The Eurovision Song Contest 2006 was the fifty first edition of the contest organised by the Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation ERT and held on 18 and 20 May 2006 at the Olympic Indoor Hall in Athens Greece 53 242 37 nations competed in the contest with the first appearance of Armenia Serbia and Montenegro had intended to compete but controversy over the winner of their national selection resulted in their late withdrawal 243 A new landmark was achieved at this contest with the performance of the 1 000th song in Eurovision history when Ireland s Brian Kennedy performed Every Song Is a Cry for Love in the semi final 180 45 years after first entering the contest Finland secured its first win represented by Lordi and Hard Rock Hallelujah 90 242 The Eurovision Song Contest 2007 was the fifty second edition of the contest organised by Yleisradio YLE and held on 10 and 12 May 2007 at the Hartwall Arena in Helsinki Finland 54 244 A record 42 countries competed in the contest which saw the debut entries from the Czech Republic Georgia Montenegro and Serbia the latter two as independent countries for the first time 28 countries competed in the single semi final the biggest number of participants ever seen in a Eurovision show 245 Serbia became only the second country to win on its debut appearance represented by Marija Serifovic and Molitva 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 2008 was the fifty third edition of the contest organised by Radio televizija Srbije RTS and held on 20 22 and 24 May 2008 at the Belgrade Arena in Belgrade Serbia 55 246 A new record 43 countries competed in the contest with Azerbaijan and San Marino making their first appearances in the contest 247 A second semi final was introduced at this contest with all countries except the hosts and the Big Four now competing on one of the two semi finals 248 Russia gained its first contest win represented by Dima Bilan and the song Believe it was Bilan s second appearance in the contest having previously come second for Russia in 2006 90 The Eurovision Song Contest 2009 was the fifty fourth edition of the contest organised by Channel One C1R and held on 12 14 and 16 May 2009 at the Olimpiyskiy Arena in Moscow Russia 56 249 42 countries competed including Slovakia in its first appearance in 11 years 250 Georgia s entry was embroiled in controversy when it was accused of being critical of Russian leader Vladimir Putin following the recent Russo Georgian War after requests made by the EBU to change the lyrics were rejected Georgia subsequently withdrew 251 Juries returned to the contest this year with the points awarded in the final decided by an equal mix of jury and televoting the qualifiers from the semi finals however remained predominantly decided by televoting in this contest 252 Norway secured its third contest win as Alexander Rybak earned a runaway victory with Fairytale with 387 points Rybak earned the highest points total yet seen in the contest which remains the highest total under this system 90 252 2010s edit nbsp Five previous Eurovision winning acts performed as part of the interval at the 2012 contest in Baku The Eurovision Song Contest 2010 was the fifty fifth edition of the contest organised by NRK and held on 25 27 and 29 May 2010 at the Telenor Arena in Oslo Norway 57 39 countries participated in total with Georgia returning after a year s absence 253 Several countries withdrew for this year due to the effects of the 2007 2008 financial crisis including Andorra which has yet to make a reappearance with the crisis also impacting the production of the contest 254 The mix of jury and televoting seen in the 2009 final was extended into the semi finals this year each with an equal stake in determining the 10 qualifiers in each semi final 255 Germany gained its second contest win becoming the first Big Four country to win since its formation in 1999 with Lena the first German winner in 28 years with Satellite 90 256 257 The Eurovision Song Contest 2011 was the fifty sixth edition of the contest organised by Norddeutscher Rundfunk NDR on behalf of ARD and held on 10 12 and 14 May 2011 at the Dusseldorf Arena in Dusseldorf Germany 58 43 countries competed in the third contest held on German soil equalling the record set in 2008 among the returning countries was Italy making its first appearance since 1997 which automatically qualified for the final as a member of the newly expanded Big Five 258 Azerbaijan earned its first title represented by Ell amp Nikki and the song Running Scared 90 259 The Eurovision Song Contest 2012 was the fifty seventh edition of the contest organised by Ictimai Television ITV and held on 22 24 and 26 May 2012 at the Baku Crystal Hall in Baku Azerbaijan 59 42 countries competed in the contest Armenia had originally applied to compete but withdrew at a late stage due to security concerns related to the ongoing conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan 260 261 The contest was also marked by concerns over Azerbaijan s human rights record as well as tensions with neighbouring Iran over the anti Islamic nature of the contest 262 263 Sweden secured its fifth Eurovision title represented by Loreen and Euphoria which would go on to become a great commercial success following the contest selling over two million copies worldwide 90 264 265 nbsp Conchita Wurst became the second Austrian artist to win the contest in 2014 The Eurovision Song Contest 2013 was the fifty eighth edition of the contest organised by SVT and held on 14 16 and 18 May 2013 at the Malmo Arena in Malmo Sweden 60 39 countries competed in total with Armenia returning after a year s absence among the withdrawing countries were Slovakia and Turkey which have yet to make subsequent appearances in the contest with the Turkish broadcaster TRT citing amendments to the contest rules in recent years as well as espousing criticism of the LGBT nature of some performances as reasons for their continued non participation 266 267 Denmark won the contest for the third time represented by Emmelie de Forest and Only Teardrops 90 268 The Eurovision Song Contest 2014 was the fifty ninth edition of the contest organised by DR and held on 6 8 and 10 May 2014 at the B amp W Hallerne in Copenhagen Denmark 61 Artists representing 37 countries competed in Denmark s third contest as host with Austria emerging as the victor to gain their second victory their first in 48 years with Conchita Wurst and Rise Like a Phoenix 90 269 270 The bearded drag queen s victory proved controversial among some particularly in Russia where several conservative voices voiced criticism for her win 271 Developments in Russia particularly the introduction of a gay propaganda law and the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine were also present in the contest when audible booing could be heard during the Russian entry and voting 272 In celebration of the contest s sixtieth anniversary the EBU organised a special concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London United Kingdom on 31 March 2015 273 Eurovision Song Contest s Greatest Hits featured live performances from fifteen previous Eurovision acts from thirteen countries video montages of past editions of the contest and footage of former entries and a performance by the cast of Riverdance originally conceived as the interval performance for the 1994 contest before being developed into a full production 274 275 A BBC production the concert was recorded live and aired as a delayed broadcast on various dates that suited the individual participating broadcasters the BBC and Ireland s RTE were the first to broadcast the event in a simulcast on 3 April 2015 273 274 The Eurovision Song Contest 2015 was the sixtieth edition of the contest organised by ORF and held on 19 21 and 23 May 2015 at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna Austria 62 39 countries were initially announced as appearing at the contest the first held in Austria since 1967 Australia was later added as the 40th country making its first appearance in what was billed as a one off to celebrate the contest s 60th anniversary 276 277 Australia would advance directly to the final meaning 27 countries would compete in the largest final ever seen in the contest 277 Sweden earned its sixth contest victory represented by Mans Zelmerlow and Heroes 90 278 nbsp Portugal gained its first Eurovision title after 53 years of competition when Salvador Sobral won the 2017 contest The Eurovision Song Contest 2016 was the sixty first edition of the contest organised by SVT and held on 10 12 and 14 May 2016 at the Globe Arena in Stockholm Sweden 63 43 countries were initially announced as being represented at the contest with Australia being invited to compete for a second time 279 280 Romania was subsequently barred from competing due to outstanding debts owed by the Romanian broadcaster TVR leaving 42 countries to compete in Sweden s sixth outing as hosts 281 282 The voting system was transformed for the first time in over 30 years at this contest each country would now award two sets of points representing the votes of each country s jury and public separately 283 Ukraine recorded its second win in the contest courtesy of Jamala with 1944 90 284 The Eurovision Song Contest 2017 was the sixty second edition of the contest organised by the Public Broadcasting Company of Ukraine UA PBC and held on 9 11 and 13 May 2017 at the International Exhibition Centre in Kyiv Ukraine 64 43 countries applied to take part in the contest however only 42 would subsequently take part in Ukraine s second contest Russia were unable to compete after Ukrainian authorities banned their selected performer Yuliya Samoylova from entering Ukraine due to illegally entering Crimea in 2015 with proposals for Samoylova to compete via satellite from Russia being rejected by the Russian broadcaster 285 286 287 Portugal earned its first Eurovision title 53 years after first entering the contest with Salvador Sobral earning the biggest points total ever seen in Eurovision history as Amar pelos dois gained 758 points 90 288 The Eurovision Song Contest 2018 was the sixty third edition of the contest organised by Radio e Televisao de Portugal RTP and held on 8 10 and 12 May 2018 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon Portugal 65 43 countries competed in this contest matching the previous record with Russia returning after its absence the previous year 289 This contest saw the performance of Eurovision s 1 500th song when former winner Alexander Rybak performed That s How You Write a Song in the second semi final for Norway 180 290 Israel gained its fourth Eurovision title represented by Netta with Toy 90 291 nbsp Duncan Laurence s Arcade winner of the 2019 contest for the Netherlands became the first Eurovision song of the 21st century to chart on the US Billboard Hot 100 The Eurovision Song Contest 2019 was the sixty fourth edition of the contest organised by the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation IPBC Kan and held on 14 16 and 18 May 2019 at the Expo Tel Aviv in Tel Aviv Israel 66 The third Israeli contest was marked by controversy on multiple fronts with Orthodox religious leaders and politicians in Israel calling on the contest to not interfere with Shabbat while other groups including BDS called for a boycott of the event in response to the country s policies towards Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza and in opposition to what some consider as pinkwashing by the Israeli government 292 293 294 42 countries were initially announced as competing in this contest with Australia having secured participation rights up to 2023 295 296 However only 41 countries entered the contest when Ukraine subsequently withdrew conflicts between the Ukrainian broadcaster UA PBC and the winner of its national selection Maruv led to the latter refusing to compete resulting in its withdrawal after other acts from the selection also declined to partake 297 298 The Netherlands recorded its fifth Eurovision win and first in 44 years courtesy of Duncan Laurence with Arcade which would later become a sleeper hit in 2021 becoming the most streamed Eurovision song on Spotify and the first since Ooh Aah Just a Little Bit to chart on the US Billboard Hot 100 eventually reaching the top 30 of the chart 90 299 300 2020s editThe Eurovision Song Contest 2020 was scheduled to be held on 12 14 and 16 May 2020 at the Rotterdam Ahoy in Rotterdam Netherlands and organised by Nederlandse Publieke Omroep NPO Nederlandse Omroep Stichting NOS and AVROTROS 67 41 countries applied to enter what would have been the Netherlands fifth contest as hosts but in March 2020 for the first time in its history the contest was cancelled due to the uncertainty caused by the COVID 19 pandemic and the restrictions put in place by governments across Europe which included lockdowns and travel restrictions 301 302 In its place a special broadcast from Media Park in Hilversum Eurovision Europe Shine a Light was held on what would have been the day of the final in a celebration and showcase of the artists and songs that would have competed in the 2020 contest in a non competitive format as well as featuring performances by former Eurovision artists 303 304 nbsp Italy s Maneskin achieved international breakthrough following their Eurovision win in 2021 The Eurovision Song Contest 2021 was the sixty fifth edition of the contest held on 18 20 and 22 May 2021 at the Rotterdam Ahoy in Rotterdam Netherlands and organised by NPO NOS and AVROTROS 68 305 Rotterdam was revealed as the host city of the 2021 contest during Eurovision Europe Shine a Light 306 Many of the artists which had initially been selected to compete in 2020 were confirmed for their countries once again however any song entered into the 2020 contest was ineligible for 2021 per the rules of the contest 307 308 Pre recorded backing vocals were permitted for the first time in 2021 on a trial basis announced as an effort to modernise and increase the sustainability of the contest 309 The same 41 countries which had originally planned to enter the 2020 contest were initially announced as competing again in this contest however a late withdrawal of Armenia and subsequent disqualification of the entry from Belarus brought the number of competing countries down to 39 310 311 312 Multiple contingency scenarios were devised in response to the COVID 19 pandemic ranging from a normal albeit less crowded contest which was the chosen option to a fully remote contest with participants performing via live on tape recordings 313 314 315 Australia and Iceland were ultimately unable to perform at the contest live the Australian delegation opted to use their live on tape performance given logistical difficulties in travelling abroad as part of the country s pandemic response while Iceland competed using rehearsal footage following a COVID 19 outbreak among its delegation 316 317 Italy recorded its third Eurovision win becoming the second Big Five country to win since its formation as Maneskin ended a 31 year wait for victory with Zitti e buoni 90 318 Second placed France and third placed Switzerland also achieved their best results since 1991 and 1993 respectively 319 320 Maneskin s win in the contest marked the band s international breakthrough with their releases entering numerous European and global weekly charts in the months following their victory 321 322 The Eurovision Song Contest 2022 was the sixty sixth edition of the contest held on 10 12 and 14 May 2022 at the PalaOlimpico in Turin Italy and organised by RAI 69 41 countries applied to take part in the contest with Armenia and Montenegro submitting their first entries since 2019 323 Russia which had initially appeared on the list was subsequently barred from competing following its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 resulting in 40 countries competing in Italy s third outing as hosts 324 Ukraine recorded its third win in the contest represented by Kalush Orchestra with Stefania while the United Kingdom which placed second and Spain which placed third also achieved their best results since 1998 and 1995 respectively 325 326 327 nbsp Upon winning the 2023 contest Loreen became the second artist to win the contest twice having previously won in 2012 and helped Sweden equal Ireland s record of seven contest wins The Eurovision Song Contest 2023 was the sixty seventh edition of the contest held on 9 11 and 13 May 2023 at the Liverpool Arena in Liverpool United Kingdom and organised by the BBC 70 Ukraine s UA PBC was initially given the opportunity to host following its victory the previous year but due to security concerns caused by the Russian invasion of the country the BBC was chosen as the runner up to host the contest on its behalf 328 37 countries applied to take part in the ninth contest held in the UK with several countries withdrawing for this year due to the effects of the global energy crisis 329 330 331 Substantial changes to the voting system were made for this contest with full televoting returning to determine the qualifiers from the semi finals and viewers from non participating countries being allowed to vote in all shows with their votes being aggregated and awarded as one set of points from an extra country for the overall public vote 332 Loreen the winner of the 2012 contest returned for Sweden and became the second artist to record two wins in the contest with Tattoo and in doing so giving Sweden a record tying seventh contest win 333 334 The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 is scheduled to be the sixty eighth edition of the contest to be held on 7 9 and 11 May 2024 at the Malmo Arena in Malmo Sweden and organised by SVT 71 37 countries applied to take part in the seventh contest held on Swedish soil with Luxembourg set to make its first appearance since 1993 204 335 Romania whose broadcaster TVR had been given additional time to finalise its plans ultimately opted not to participate this year 336 The slogan of the previous year s event in Liverpool United by Music will be retained for 2024 and all future editions thus ending the practice of individual contest slogans being created for each edition which had begun in 2002 79 Notes edit Each country in the first contest was represented by two songs The 1977 contest was originally scheduled for 2 April but a strike by BBC camera operators and technicians resulted in a postponement until 7 May Contest cancelled Announced on 14 November 2023 as the contest s permanent slogan 79 References edit The Origins of Eurovision Eurovision Song Contest Retrieved 15 April 2023 a b c d e f g Eurovision Song Contest Lugano 1956 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Frankfurt 1957 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Hilversum 1958 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d e Eurovision Song Contest Cannes 1959 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest London 1960 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d e Eurovision Song Contest Cannes 1961 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Luxembourg 1962 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest London 1963 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Copenhagen 1964 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Naples 1965 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Luxembourg 1966 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Vienna 1967 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest London 1968 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Madrid 1969 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Amsterdam 1970 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d e Eurovision Song Contest Dublin 1971 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Edinburgh 1972 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Luxembourg 1973 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Brighton 1974 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Stockholm 1975 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest The Hague 1976 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest London 1977 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Paris 1978 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Jerusalem 1979 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest The Hague 1980 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Dublin 1981 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Harrogate 1982 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Munich 1983 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Luxembourg 1984 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Gothenburg 1985 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Bergen 1986 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Brussels 1987 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Dublin 1988 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Lausanne 1989 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Zagreb 1990 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Rome 1991 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Malmo 1992 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 Watch Now EurovisionAgain Malmo 1992 European Broadcasting Union 21 August 2021 Archived from the original on 21 August 2021 a b c d e f Eurovision Song Contest Millstreet 1993 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Dublin 1994 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Dublin 1995 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Oslo 1996 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d Eurovision Song Contest Dublin 1997 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c d e Eurovision Song Contest Birmingham 1998 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Jerusalem 1999 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Stockholm 2000 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Eurovision Song Contest Copenhagen 2001 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Tallinn 2002 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Riga 2003 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Istanbul 2004 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Kyiv 2005 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Athens 2006 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Helsinki 2007 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Belgrade 2008 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Moscow 2009 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Oslo 2010 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Dusseldorf 2011 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Baku 2012 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Malmo 2013 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Copenhagen 2014 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Vienna 2015 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Stockholm 2016 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Kyiv 2017 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Lisbon 2018 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Tel Aviv 2019 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Rotterdam 2020 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Rotterdam 2021 eurovision tv Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Eurovision Song Contest Turin 2022 Eurovision tv Retrieved 8 October 2021 a b Eurovision Song Contest Liverpool 2023 Eurovision tv Retrieved 10 December 2022 a b Eurovision Song Contest Malmo 2024 Eurovision tv Retrieved 7 July 2023 Eurovision Song Contest Logos and Artwork Eurovision Song Contest 12 January 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2021 West 2020 pp 217 220 Eurovision Song Contest Brand Eurovision Song Contest Archived from the original on 1 February 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2020 Gleave Amy 2 May 2023 Eurovision branding over the years Dawn Creative Retrieved 2 September 2023 Groot Evert 28 October 2018 Tel Aviv 2019 Dare to Dream Eurovision Song Contest Retrieved 7 July 2020 LaFleur Louise 25 October 2019 The making of Open Up Eurovision Song Contest Retrieved 7 July 2020 2020 postcard concept revealed as Dutch people can join in on the fun Eurovision Song Contest 9 December 2019 Retrieved 7 July 2020 a b c United By Music chosen as permanent Eurovision slogan Eurovision tv EBU 14 November 2023 Retrieved 14 November 2023 a b c d e f g h Roxburgh 2012 pp 93 96 Staff 17 May 2005 Singing out loud and proud Bristol Evening Post Daily Mail and General Trust In the mid 1950s the members of the European Broadcasting Union set up an ad hoc committee to investigate ways of rallying the countries of Europe round a light entertainment programme The European Broadcasting Union EBU was formed on 12 February 1950 by 23 broadcasting organisations from Europe and the Mediterranean at a conference in Devon United Kingdom It was on 6 June 1954 that Montreux became the venue for the first transmission by the EBU s Eurovision Network of the Narcissus Festival and its flower bedecked procession floats At Monaco in late January 1955 this committee chaired by Marcel Bezencon director general of Swiss Television came up with the idea of creating a song contest inspired by the very popular San Remo Festival The idea was approved by the EBU General Assembly in Rome on 19 October 1955 and it was decided that the first Eurovision Grand Prix so baptised incidentally by a British journalist would take place in spring 1956 at Lugano Switzerland a b c d e Jaquin Patrick 1 December 2004 Eurovision s Golden Jubilee European Broadcasting Union Archived from the original on 11 August 2004 Retrieved 18 July 2009 a b c Waters George T Winter 1994 Eurovision 40 years of network development four decades of service to broadcasters ebu ch European Broadcasting Union Archived from the original on 27 June 2006 Retrieved 27 June 2020 a b Eurovision About us who we are eurovision net Eurovision Retrieved 28 June 2020 Sommerlad Joe 18 May 2019 Eurovision 2019 What exactly is the point of the annual song contest and how did it begin independent co uk The Independent Retrieved 27 June 2020 a b c O Connor 2010 pp 8 9 Roxburgh Gordon 19 October 2015 A diamond day for the Eurovision Song Contest eurovision tv European Broadcasting Union Retrieved 24 February 2021 Reglement du Grand Prix Europeenne 1956 de la Chanson Europeenne Rules of the 1956 Eurovision Song Contest Grand Prix PDF eurovision tv in French Archived from the original PDF on 4 January 2012 Retrieved 11 August 2020 a b c Roxburgh 2012 pp 96 101 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl Eurovision Song Contest Winners eurovision tv Archived from the original on 12 May 2018 Retrieved 11 August 2020 a b c O Connor 2010 pp 10 11 Looking back to just like it was in 1957 eurovision tv 3 March 2014 Retrieved 11 August 2020 a b Roxburgh 2012 pp 152 159 a b c O Connor 2010 pp 12 13 a b Roxburgh 2012 pp 160 165 Pierluigi Panza 17 February 1996 Piramidi rotanti luci da record e 007 in azione Corriere della Sera Archived from the original on 2 August 2012 Retrieved 9 July 2020 Il brano presentato a Sanremo che ha venduto di piu e Nel blu dipinto di blu di Domenico Modugno 22 milioni di dischi a b O Connor 2010 pp 14 15 a b Roxburgh 2012 pp 184 192 O Connor 2010 pp 16 17 a b Roxburgh 2012 pp 213 224 a b O Connor 2010 pp 18 19 Roxburgh 2012 pp 254 264 O Connor 2010 pp 20 21 Roxburgh 2012 pp 291 299 a b O Connor 2010 pp 22 23 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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