Eurovision Song Contest 1988

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Eurovision Song Contest 1988
Image:ESC 1988 logo.png
Final 30 April 1988
Presenter(s) Pat Kenny
Michelle Rocca
Conductor Noel Kelehan
Director Declan Lowney
Host broadcaster Flag of Ireland RTÉ
Venue RDS Simmonscourt Pavilion, Dublin, Ireland
Winning song  Switzerland
"Ne partez pas sans moi"
Voting system
Each country awarded 12, 10, 8-1 points to their 10 favourite songs
Number of entries 21
Debuting countries None
Returning countries None
Withdrawing countries  Cyprus
Nul points  Austria
Opening act Johnny Logan
Interval act Hothouse Flowers
Eurovision Song Contest
◄1987        1989►

The Eurovision Song Contest 1988 was the 33rd Eurovision Song Contest and was held on April 30, 1988 in Dublin. The presenters were Pat Kenny and Michelle Rocca. Future international superstar, the French-Canadian Celine Dion, then only famous in the French-speaking world, was the winner of this Eurovision with the song, "Ne partez pas sans moi", composed by Swiss-Turkish composer Atilla Şereftuğ with lyrics by Nella Martinetti. This was the second victory, and, as of 2009, the last, for Switzerland. The first one was in 1956: "Refrain", performed by Lys Assia. It was also the last time a song sung in the French language won the Contest, having dominated the event in earlier years.

Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ), as the host broadcaster for this edition of the contest, decided that the show's production style needed to be revamped in order to attract and sustain a younger audience. They employed Declan Lowney (who was notable for being a director of music videos and youth programming) as director for this edition, and he would also direct the interval act which included the popular Irish rock group Hothouse Flowers which was filmed in 11 countries around Europe and was the most expensive music video ever produced in Ireland at that time. The traditional scoreboard was replaced with 2 giant Vidiwalls located on either side of the stage, which also projected live images of the performers from the green room, and a new computer-generated scoreboard was used. The stage itself, conceived by Paula Farrell under chief production designer Michael Grogan, was also the largest and most elaborate ever constructed for a Eurovision. To compensate for the fact that the vast stage took up most of the room in what is really an average size exhibition hall, the Director deliberately darkened the hall where the audience was located and refused to use wide angled shots of the audience, in order to create the illusion of the venue being bigger than it actually was.

Cyprus was drawn second to compete in Dublin and had selected the song 'Thimame' sung by Yiannis Dimitrou as their entry. However, at a late stage CyBC decided that the song was ineligible to represent them as it had been entered into the 1984 Cypriot selection, where it had finished in 3rd place. This was classed as a breach of the Cypriot rules of selecting their entry at this time (and an infringement of the Eurovision rules) and so Cyprus withdrew from the 1988 contest. It was quite a last-minute decision as the song was advertised in the Radio Times information about the preview programme of the contest. The song also appears on the Norwegian record release of the 1988 Eurovision Song Contest entries.

Contents

[edit] Individual Entries

[edit] Results

Draw Country Language Artist Song English Translation Place Points
1  Iceland Icelandic Beathoven "Þú og þeir (Sókrates)" You And They (Socrates) 16 20
2  Sweden Swedish Tommy Körberg "Stad i ljus" City of Light 12 52
3  Finland Finnish Boulevard "Nauravat silmät muistetaan" Laughing Eyes Are Remembered 20 3
4  United Kingdom English Scott Fitzgerald "Go" - 2 136
5  Turkey Turkish MFÖ "Sufi" Sufi 15 37
6  Spain Spanish La Década Prodigiosa "La chica que yo quiero (Made in Spain)" The Girl That I Want (Made In Spain) 11 58
7  Netherlands Dutch Gerard Joling "Shangri-La" Shangri-La 9 70
8  Israel Hebrew Yardena Arazi "Ben Adam" (בן אדם) Only Human 7 85
9  Switzerland French Céline Dion "Ne partez pas sans moi" Don't Leave Without Me 1 137
10  Ireland English Jump The Gun "Take Him Home" - 8 79
11  Germany German Maxi & Chris Garden "Lied für einen Freund" Song For A Friend 14 48
12  Austria German Wilfried "Lisa Mona Lisa" - 21 0
13  Denmark Danish Hot Eyes "Ka' du se hva' jeg sa'?" Can You See What I Said? 3 92
14  Greece Greek Afroditi Frida "Clown" (Κλόουν) - 17 10
15  Norway Norwegian Karoline Krüger "For vår jord" For Our Earth 5 88
16  Belgium French Reynaert "Laissez briller le soleil" Let The Sun Shine 18 5
17  Luxembourg French Lara Fabian "Croire" Believe 4 90
18  Italy Italian Luca Barbarossa "Vivo (Ti scrivo)" Alive (I'm Writing To You) 12 52
19  France French Gérard Lenorman "Chanteur de charme" Crooner 10 64
20  Portugal Portuguese Dora "Voltarei" I'll Come Back 18 5
21  Yugoslavia Serbo-Croatian Srebrna Krila "Mangup" Rascal 6 87

[edit] Voting structure

Each country had a jury who awarded 12, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 points for their top ten songs.

With the conclusion of voting from the penultimate jury, the UK representative Scott Fitzgerald looked well-placed for victory, holding a five-point lead over Switzerland. As the final jury, that of Yugoslavia, began to award its points in the customary ascending order, the international audience held its breath to see how the two rivals for victory would fare. Switzerland were the first to be named with six points, barely enough to keep their hopes of winning alive, edging them as it did into a one-point lead. However, given the pattern of voting all evening, it seemed highly likely that the UK would be given one of the higher set of points. But remarkably, after the seven, eight, ten and twelve points were announced, it transpired that Yugoslavia had awarded the UK no points at all, and Switzerland were left to savour a dramatic triumph.

[edit] Score sheet

  Results
Image:ESCIcelandJ.svg Image:ESCSwedenJ.svg Image:ESCFinlandJ.svg Image:ESCUnitedKingdomJ.svg Image:ESCTurkeyJ.svg Image:ESCSpainJ.svg Image:ESCNetherlandsJ.svg Image:ESCIsraelJ.svg Image:ESCSwitzerlandJ.svg Image:ESCIrelandJ.svg Image:ESCGermanyJ.svg Image:ESCAustriaJ.svg Image:ESCDenmarkJ.svg Image:ESCGreeceJ.svg Image:ESCNorwayJ.svg Image:ESCBelgiumJ.svg Image:ESCLuxembourgJ.svg Image:ESCItalyJ.svg Image:ESCFranceJ.svg Image:ESCPortugalJ.svg Image:ESCYugoslaviaJ.svg
Contestants Iceland   1 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 1 2 8 0
Sweden 3   0 2 0 0 8 0 0 5 0 0 8 0 12 1 3 10 0 0 0
Finland 0 0   0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
United Kingdom 1 5 10   12 10 0 10 5 7 10 10 10 6 5 12 8 12 0 3 0
Turkey 0 4 0 1   5 1 8 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 6 0 0
Spain 2 0 0 0 5   0 2 6 0 0 8 1 8 2 6 6 8 0 0 4
Netherlands 0 0 0 6 6 0   7 7 2 6 0 0 12 0 0 12 5 0 0 7
Israel 6 0 6 4 0 6 3   10 1 5 2 0 3 0 10 5 3 10 10 1
Switzerland 7 12 5 10 10 8 10 4   10 12 0 0 10 8 4 1 7 1 12 6
Ireland 0 7 2 3 2 12 6 0 4   7 6 7 0 7 5 0 0 4 5 2
Germany 8 0 0 5 1 3 0 5 0 6   0 6 0 4 0 0 0 0 2 8
Austria 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0   0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Denmark 10 3 4 0 0 1 12 6 1 4 4 12   0 10 7 0 0 12 6 0
Greece 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0   0 0 0 0 7 0 0
Norway 5 8 7 12 0 0 7 1 0 8 1 3 5 7   3 0 4 0 7 10
Belgium 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0   0 0 5 0 0
Luxembourg 4 10 12 7 0 0 5 0 12 12 0 1 2 2 6 8   2 0 4 3
Italy 0 0 8 0 4 7 0 0 8 0 2 5 0 0 3 0 2   8 0 5
France 0 2 3 0 8 2 2 0 3 0 3 7 3 5 1 2 10 0   1 12
Portugal 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0   0
Yugoslavia 12 6 1 8 7 0 0 12 2 3 0 4 12 4 0 0 7 6 3 0  
THE TABLE IS ORDERED BY APPEARANCE

[edit] 12 points

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

N. Recipient nation Voting nation
3 Denmark Austria, France, Netherlands
Luxembourg Finland, Ireland, Switzerland
Switzerland Germany, Portugal, Sweden
United Kingdom Belgium, Italy, Turkey
Yugoslavia Denmark, Iceland, Israel
2 Netherlands Greece, Luxembourg
1 France Yugoslavia
Ireland Spain
Norway United Kingdom
Sweden Norway

[edit] Commentators

  • Iceland - TBD
  • Sweden - Bengt Grafström
  • Finland - Erkki Pohjanheimo
  • United Kingdom - Terry Wogan
  • Turkey - TBD
  • Spain - Beatriz Pécker
  • The Netherlands - Willem van Beusekom
  • Israel - No commentator
  • Switzerland - TBD (SRG), Serge Moisson (SSR), TBD (TSI)
  • Ireland - Ronan Collins
  • Germany - Nicole & Claus-Erich Boetzkes
  • Austria - Ernst Grissemann
  • Denmark - Jørgen de Mylius
  • Greece - Dafni Bokota
  • Norway - TBD
  • Belgium - Pierre Collard-Bovy (RTBF), Luc Appermont (BRT)
  • Luxembourg - Valérie Sarn
  • Italy - Daniele Piombi
  • France - Lionel Cassan
  • Portugal - Margarida Mercês de Mello
  • Yugoslavia - TBD

[edit] Spokespersons

  • Iceland - TBC
  • Sweden - Maud Uppling
  • Finland - Solveig Herlin
  • United Kingdom - Colin Berry
  • Turkey - Canan Kumbasar
  • Spain - Matilde Jarrín
  • The Netherlands - Joop van Os
  • Israel - Daniel Pe'er
  • Switzerland - Michel Dénériaz
  • Ireland - John Skehan
  • Germany - Sabine Sauer
  • Austria - Tilia Herold
  • Denmark - Bent Henius
  • Greece - Fotini Yiannoulatou
  • Norway - Andreas Diesen
  • Belgium - Georges Moucheron
  • Luxembourg - Jean Octave
  • Italy - Mariolina Cannuli
  • France - Marie Myriam
  • Portugal - Maria Margarida Gaspar
  • Yugoslavia - Miša Molk

[edit] Map

     Participating countries     Countries which had previously participated but did not do so in this year
Personal tools