Entertainment/Eurovision Song Contest
At a committee meeting of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) held in Monaco in 1955, director general of Swiss television and committee chairman Marcel Bezençon conceived the idea of an international song contest where countries would participate in one television programme, to be transmitted simultaneously to all countries of the union. The competition was based upon the existing Sanremo Music Festival held in Italy. The name "Eurovision" was first used in relation to the EBU's network by George Campey in the London Evening Standard in 1951. The programme was first known as the Eurovision Grand Prix
Each submission must have vocals; purely instrumental music has never been allowed. Originally, competitors were required to sing in their own national language, but this rule has been changed several times over the years
The voting system used in the contest has changed over the years. The current system has been in place since 1975, and is a positional voting system. Countries award 12 points to their favourite song, then 10 to the second favourite, and then scores from 8 down to 1 to another eight songs
1956
The first contest was held in the town of Lugano, Switzerland, on 24 May 1956. Seven countries participated (Switzerland, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands and Luxembourg) – each submitting two songs, for a total of 14. This was the only contest in which more than one song per country was performed
Refrain, performed in French by Lys Assia won, representing Switzerland
1957
UK, Austria and Denmark made their debuts. Patricia Bredin was the very first United Kingdom entrant. She took part in the 1957 contest, held in Frankfurt, and finished in seventh place out of ten entries with the song All. The contest was won by the Netherlands with Net als toen (Just like then) performed by Corry Brokken
1958
The contest took place in Hilversum, Netherlands, following the country's win at the 1957 Contest, forming the convention that the winning country of the previous Eurovision Song Contest hosts the following year's contest. Ten countries participated. Sweden made its debut while the United Kingdom did not enter the contest for the second and last time to date. The winner was France with the song Dors, mon amour (Sleep, my love), performed by André Claveau
1959
The contest was held in Cannes. Luxembourg withdrew, the UK returned, and Monaco made its debut. The contest was won by the Netherlands with the song Een beetje (A little bit), performed by Teddy Scholten. Sing, little birdie, performed by Pearl Carr and Teddy Johnson finished as runner-up for the UK
1960
Hosted by the BBC when the Netherlands declined due to expense. Held at the Royal Festival Hall in London. The UK was chosen to host because it had come second in 1959. The BBC chose Katie Boyle to be the mistress of ceremonies at the contest for the first time. Luxembourg returned, and Norway made its debut. The contest was won by France with the song Tom Pillibi, performed by Jacqueline Boyer. Looking High, High, High, performed by Bryan Johnson, finished as runner-up for the UK
1961
First contest to take place on a Saturday night. Held in Cannes. Luxembourg won for its first time with the song Nous les amoureux (We the lovers) performed in French by Jean-Claude Pascal. Finland, Spain and Yugoslavia made their debuts. 16 entries. Are You Sure?, performed by The Allisons, finished as runner-up for the UK
1962
The contest was won for a third time by France with the song Un premier amour (A first love), performed by Isabelle Aubret. This marked the first time a country had won three contests. Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, and Spain all scored "nul points" for the first time. Ring-A-Ding Girl, performed by Ronnie Carroll, finished in fourth place for the UK
1963
France were unable to host the event, due to financial difficulties. The BBC stepped in, and the event was held at BBC Television Centre. The contest was won by Denmark with the song Dansevise (Dance ballad), performed by Grethe & Jørgen Ingmann. Netherlands score no points for the second year in a row. Say Wonderful Things, performed by Ronnie Carroll, finished in fourth place for the UK. Nana Mouskouri finished in eighth place for Luxembourg
1964
Sweden withdrew, and Portugal made their debut. Italy won the contest for the first time with the song Non ho l'età (I’m not old enough), performed by Gigliola Cinquetti. I Love the Little Things, performed by Matt Munro, finished as runner-up for the UK
1965
The contest was held in Naples. Sweden returned, and Ireland made their debut. Luxembourg won with the song Poupée de cire, poupée de son (Wax doll, sawdust doll), performed by France Gall and composed by Serge Gainsbourg. I Belong, performed by Kathy Kirby, finished as runner-up for the UK
1966
The winner was Austria with the song Merci, Chérie (Thank you, darling) performed and composed by Udo Jürgens. The rule stating that a country could only sing in any of its national languages was originally created in this year. A Man Without Love, performed by Kenneth McKellar, finished in ninth place for the UK
1967
17 entries, as Denmark withdrew. The winning entry Puppet on a String, sung by Sandie Shaw had one of the widest margins of victory ever witnessed in the competition. First win for the UK. Rolf Harris provided the commentary for BBC Television viewers. Portugal was represented by Eduardo Nascimento who was the first black male singer in the history of Eurovision Song Contest
1968
Held at the Royal Albert Hall, and hosted by Michael Aspel. The contest was won by the Spanish song La, la, la performed by Massiel, beating Congratulations, performed by Cliff Richard, by one vote. Originally Spain entered Joan Manuel Serrat to sing La La La, but his demand to sing in Catalan was an affront to Francoist Spain. Serrat was withdrawn and replaced by Massiel, who sang the same song in Spanish. First time that the Eurovision Song Contest was broadcast in colour
1969
Austria withdrew. Four countries won the contest, the first time ever a tie-break situation had occurred. However, there was no rule at the time to cover such an eventuality, so all four countries were declared joint winners. It was the first time that any country (Spain) had a winning entry two years in a row. The tie was between Lulu , performing Boom Bang-a-Bang, France, Spain and Netherlands. The metal sculpture used on the stage was designed by Salvador Dali
1970
Held in Amsterdam. With the UK having hosted the 1968 Contest and Spain the 1969 Contest, only France and Netherlands were in consideration. A toss of a coin resulted in the host country being decided as the Netherlands. Finland, Norway, Portugal and Sweden withdrew. Ireland won the contest with All Kinds of Everything, sung by Dana, an 18-year-old schoolgirl from Derry. Knock, Knock Who’s There? sung by Mary Hopkin finished as runner-up. The then unknown Julio Iglesias finished fourth for Spain
1971
The contest was held at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin. Groups of up to six people were allowed to perform for the first time. Malta made their debut in this year's contest, along Austria, Finland, Norway, Portugal, and Sweden, who all returned. The winner was Monaco with the song Un Banc, un Arbre, une Rue (A bench, a tree, a street) performed in French by Severine. Monaco's win was their first and only victory. Jack in the Box, performed by Cloadagh Rodgers, finished in fourth place for the UK
1972
Monaco was unable to meet the demands of hosting the event, which was held at Usher Hall in Edinburgh. Presented by Moira Shearer. The winner was Luxembourg with the song Apres toi (After you) performed in French by Vicky Leandros. Beg, Steal or Borrow, performed by The New Seekers, finished as runner-up for the UK
1973
Austria and Malta withdrew. Israel entered for the first time. The language rule forcing countries to enter songs sung in any of their national languages was dropped, so performers from some countries sang in English. The winner was Luxembourg with the song Tu te reconnaîtras (You will recognize yourself) performed in French by Anne-Marie David. Spain finished second, and Cliff Richard finished third performing Power to all Our Friends. Luxembourg became the first country to win successive outright Eurovision Song Contests
1974
Luxembourg declined to host the event on the grounds of expense. It was held at The Dome, in Brighton. France withdrew as a mark of respect following the death of French President, Georges Pompidou. Greece entered for the first time. The winner was Sweden with the song Waterloo performed by ABBA. Long Live Love, performed by Olivia Newton-John, finished in fourth place for the UK
1975
France and Malta returned, and Turkey entered for the first time. Greece withdrew from this contest in response to the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus, in protest of Turkey's participation. A new scoring system was implemented, one which is still used today. Each jury would now give 12 points to the best song, 10 to the second best, then 8 to the third, 7 to the fourth, 6 to the fifth and so forth until the tenth best song received a single point. The contest was won by Teach-In, who sang Ding-a-dong in English, representing the Netherlands. The Portuguese entry was a celebration of the Carnation Revolution. Let Me Be The One, performed by The Shadows, finished as runner-up for the UK
1976
The contest was held in The Hague. Sweden, Malta and Turkey withdrew from this contest. Austria and Greece returned to the contest. Liechtenstein attempted to submit an entry to the contest, but as they had no broadcasting service of their own, they were not allowed to. It was won by Brotherhood of Man, singing Save Your Kisses for Me. Brotherhood of Man members – Martin Lee, Lee Sheriden, Nicky Stevens and Sandra Stevens. The entry from Greece was about the Turkish invasion of Cyprus. Romina Power, the daughter of Tyrone Power, represented Italy in 1976 and 1985
1977
Presented by Angela Rippon, the contest was held at the Wembley Conference Centre. Sweden returned to the contest, and Yugoslavia withdrew. The language rule was brought back in this contest, four years after it had been dropped in 1973. The contest was postponed by a month because of a strike of BBC cameramen and technicians. The contest was won by Marie Myriam who represented France, with her song L'oiseau et l'enfant (The Bird and the Child). This was France's fifth victory. Rock Bottom, performed by Lynsey De Paul and Mike Moran, finished as runner-up for the UK
1978
Denmark and Turkey returned to the contest. The contest was won by Izhar Cohen & the Alphabeta who represented Israel, with their song A-Ba-Ni-Bi (I love you), sung in Hebrew. The Bad Old Days, performed by Co-co, finished in eleventh place for the UK. At the time, this was the worst showing yet for the UK in Eurovision. Cheryl Baker was a member of Co-Co. Jahn Teigen debuted on the Eurovision stage, performing the song Mil etter mil (Mile after mile) for Norway, which gained the first’ nul points’ since the current voting system was implemented in 1975
1979
The contest was held in Jerusalem. Turkey withdrew. The winner was Israel with the song Hallelujah, performed by Gali Atari and Milk and Honey. France's representative Anne-Marie David, who finished third, was the winner for Luxembourg in 1973. Mary Ann, performed by Black Lace, finished in fourth place for the UK
1980
Israel, winners in 1979, declined to host the show for the second time in a row, as the Israel Broadcasting Authority could not fund another international production. Netherlands finally agreed to host the show in a small-scale production, and it wsa held in The Hague. Israel and Monaco withdrew, and Turkey returned. Morocco competed for the first and only time, and is the only African country to have competed in the Eurovision Song Contest. Australian-born Johnny Logan representing Ireland was the winner with the song, What's Another Year. This was Ireland’s second win. Love Enough for Two, performed by Prima Donna, finished as runner-up for the UK
1981
Italy and Morocco withdrew, Israel and Yugoslavia returned, and Cyprus made their debut. The contest was won by Bucks Fizz, singing Making Your Mind Up. The dance routine which accompanied the song involved a skirt-rip. Bucks Fizz members – Bobby G, Cheryl Baker, Mike Nolan and Jay Aston. Finn Kalvic scored ‘nul points’ for Norway
1982
Presented by Jan Leeming, the contest was held at Harrogate International Centre. France and Greece withdrew. The German entrant, Nicole, was winner with the song Ein bißchen Frieden (A little peace). This was the first time that Germany won the contest. One Step Further, performed by Bardo, finished in seventh place for the UK. Sally Ann Triplett, who was a member of Prima Donna in 1980, was a member of Bardo
1983
The contest was held in Munich. Ireland withdrew due to a strike at RTE. France, Greece and Italy returned. First contest to be televised in Australia. Corinne Hermes was the winner with the song, Si la vie est cadeau (If life is a gift). This was Luxembourg's fifth victory in the contest. I’m Never Giving Up, performed by Sweet Dreams, finished in seventh place for the UK. Jahn Teigen finished in ninth place for Norway
1984
Greece and Israel withdrew, Ireland returned. Iceland was going to participate but withdrew due to lack of financial support. Herreys were the winners of this contest with the song Diggi-Loo Diggi-Ley, representing Sweden. Love Games, performed by Sweet Dreams, finished in seventh place for the UK
1985
Held in Gothenburg. Netherlands and Yugoslavia withdrew, Greece and Israel returned. Norwegian duo Bobbysocks! (Hanne Krogh and Elisabeth Andreassen) were the winners of the contest with the song La det swinge (Let it swing). Elisabeth Andreassen had represented Sweden in the 1982 contest, and finished second for Norway in 1996. Love Is, performed by Vikki, finished in fourth place for the UK. Izhar Cohen finished in fifth place for Israel
1986
The contest was held in the Grieg Hall in Bergen. Members of the Norwegian royal family attended. Greece and Italy withdrew, Netherlands and Yugoslavia returned, and Iceland made their debut. Sandra Kim was the winner of this Eurovision with the song J'aime la vie (I love life), representing Belgium. Aged 13, Kim was the youngest ever Eurovision winner. Current rules (introduced in 1990) require Eurovision Song Contest participants to be at least 16. Runner in the Night, performed by Ryder, finished in seventh place for the UK
1987
22 countries took part, as Italy and Greece returned. Due to the time it took for the contest to be held, the EBU set the limit of competing countries to 22. Johnny Logan was the winner for Ireland with the song Hold Me Now. That made him the first performer to win the contest twice, as he had won also in 1980. Controversy erupted in Israel after their song was selected, Shir Habatlanim by the Lazy Bums – the comedic performance was criticised by the country's culture minister. Only the Light, performed by Rikki, finished in thirteenth place for the UK – the lowest placement the UK had received up to that time. German group Wind were runners- up, having also finished second in 1985
1988
Cyprus were forced to withdraw for submitting a song that had been entered into a previous contest. Celine Dion won the contest for Switzerland with the song Ne partez pas sans moi (Do not leave without me), one point ahead of Scott Fitzgerald with the song Go, which was written and composed by Julie Forsyth, daughter of Bruce Forsyth
1989
The contest was held in Lausanne. Cyprus returned. Riva, representing Yugoslavia, won with the song Rock Me, sung in Croatian. This was the only victory for Yugoslavia as a unified state. Ray Caruana, lead singer with Live Report was outspoken about coming second for the UK with Why Do I Always Get It Wrong? to what he considered a much less worthy song. Celine Dion opened the show with a live performance of her winning song and a mime performance of her first English-language single, Where Does My Heart Beat Now. The song launched her into international success
1990
Held in Zagreb. Malta had wished to return to the contest, but Eurovision rules prevented them from returning due to a maximum of 22 entries allowed to compete. Toto Cutugno was the winner of this contest with the song Insieme: 1992 (Together: 1992). This was the second victory for Italy. Give a Little Love Back to the World, performed by Emma, finished in sixth place for the UK
1991
Due to the Gulf War and mounting tensions in Yugoslavia, RAI decided to move the contest from Sanremo to Rome. The Netherlands did not participate in this contest as it conflicted with the Remembrance of the Dead national holiday, and so Malta was allowed to participate. Carola was the winner of this Contest for Sweden with the song Fångad av en stormvind (Captured by a stormwind). There was a tie between Carola and France's Amina, as both had received 146 points. This necessitated a 'count-back'. Both Sweden and France had received four lots of 12 points, but Sweden had received five lots of 10 points to France's two. A Message to Your Heart, performed by Samantha Janus, finished in tenth place for the UK
1992
Held at the Malmo Ice Stadium. The contest marked the last participation of Yugoslavia, although it was not the same country that has participated from 1961 to 1991, but actually, Serbia and Montenegro. This was the country's last entry until 2004, as it was banned from the contest. Netherlands returned to the contest. Linda Martin, representing Ireland, was the winner with the song Why Me?. The song was written by Johnny Logan. Linda Martin had been runner-up in the 1984 contest. One Step Out Of Time, performed by Michael Ball, finished as runner-up for the UK
1993
For the first time, then, a pre-qualifying round was introduced, but only for countries that had either never participated in the contest at all, or in the case of former republics of Yugoslavia, had not previously competed as nations in their own right. The number of entrants increased to 25, with the debuts of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Slovenia. The contest was held in Millstreet, County Cork. Niamh Kavanagh was the winner for Ireland with the song In Your Eyes. Better the Devil You Know, performed by Sonia, finished as runner-up for the UK
1994
To cope with the increasing number of countries wishing to participate in the contest, for 1994 the European Broadcasting Union ruled that the five lowest-placed countries from the preceding year's contest would not participate. Luxembourg withdraw from Eurovision indefinitely. For the first time in Eurovision history, voting was done via satellite instead of by telephone. Held in the Point Theatre in Dublin. Paul Harrington and Charlie McGettigan from Ireland were the winners with the song Rock 'N' Roll Kids. This was a record sixth victory for Ireland and the only time that the contest had been won by the same country in three consecutive years. Poland were runners-up on their debut in Eurovision. We Will Be Free (Lonely Symphony), performed by Frances Ruffelle, finished in tenth place for the UK
1995
Held in the Point Theatre in Dublin. The EBU decreased the number of participants back to 23 to make sure the show would not last longer than 3 hours. Secret Garden, representing Norway, was the winner with the song Nocturne. Rap song Love City Groove, performed by Love City Groove, finished in tenth place for the UK
1996
An audio-only pre-qualification round, which was never televised, was used by the EBU in order to shortlist the number of participating nations that would compete in the televised final. Eimear Quinn from Ireland was the winner with the song The Voice. The song was written by Brendan Graham, who also composed the 1994 winner Rock 'n' Roll Kids. It was also a record seventh win for Ireland. Ooh Aah... Just a Little Bit, performed by Gina G, finished in tenth place for the UK
1997
The European Broadcasting Union introduced a new system: countries with the lowest average scores over the previous four years would be excluded from the 1997 contest, and those with the lowest averages over the previous five years would be excluded from future contests (but every country so excluded for one year would automatically be allowed to participate the following year). Televoting was tested in five countries. Ronan Keating was co-presenter of the contest, held in the Point Theatre in Dublin. Katrina & The Waves won the contest for the UK with the song Love Shine a Light, giving the UK a fifth win in Eurovision
1998
Held at the National Indoor Arena, Birmingham. 25 countries participated in the contest with Macedonia making their official debut. This was the first year in which televoting was used en masse. Dana International won the contest for Israel with the song Diva. Dana International was first openly transgender performer to enter the competition. Where are You?, performed by Imaani, finished as runner-up for the UK
1999
Rules that each country had to sing in one of their national languages were abolished for the first time since 1977. Live music became optional for the first time in the Contest's history. All entries used backing track during their performances. In was announced that, as of the 2000 Contest, the four biggest financial contributors to the EBU – Germany, Spain, France and the United Kingdom – would all be given automatic entry into the Contest, regardless of their average scores over the past five years. Charlotte Nilsson won for Sweden, with the song Take Me to Your Heaven. Presenting the trophy to the winners, Dana International fell to the stage, bringing down the winning composers with her. Say It Again, performed by Precious, finished in twelfth place for the UK
2000
The contest was won by the Olsen Brothers who represented Denmark with the song Fly on the Wings of Love. Latvia made their debut, and finished in third place. Don’t Play That Song Again, performed by Nicki French, finished in sixteenth place for the UK
2001
The contest was won by Estonia who were represented by Tanel Padar, Dave Benton & 2XL with the song Everybody. Dave Benton, who was born and raised in Aruba, was the first black person and, at the age of 50 years and 101 days, the oldest contestant at the time to win the contest. Terry Wogan repeatedly made critical comments about the Danish hosts and dubbed them "Doctor Death and the Tooth Fairy/The Little Mermaid". No Dream Possible, performed by Lindsay Dracass, finished in fifteenth place for the UK
2002
Held at the at the Saku Suurhall Arena in Tallinn. The contest was won by Latvia's Marie N and her song I Wanna. Malta were runners-up. Come Back, performed by Jessica Garlick, tied for third place (with Estonia) for the UK
2003
This was the last contest to take place on one evening. The EBU revealed that it would be adding a semi-final show to the competition in order to accommodate the growing number of interested countries wishing to take part in the contest. This was also the last contest in which a relegation system was used to determine which countries would participate in the following year's contest. Ukraine made their debut. Turkey won for the first time, with the song Everyway That I Can sung by Sertab Erener. t.A.T.u. represented Russia, finishing in third place. The UK achieved their worst result to date, coming in last place (26th) and scoring no points, with the song Cry Baby, performed by Jemini (Chris Crosby and Gemma Abbey)
2004
36 counties competed, with debuts for Albania, Andorra, Belarus, and Serbia and Montenegro. Monaco returned after a 25 year absence. A semi-final was held on the Wednesday before the final. Held in Istanbul. Ukrainian singer Ruslana won the contest with Wild Dances. Hold On to Our Love, performed by James Fox, finished in sixteenth place for the UK
2005
Thirty-nine countries participated, including the debuts of Bulgaria and Moldova and the return of Hungary, which was last represented in 1998. Because the show overran so badly, the EBU changed the way the votes were announced in 2006 into a much shorter method, where only the top 3 scores were read out. Greece won for the first time with the song My Number One performed by Helena Paparizou. The "Big Four" countries (France, Germany, Spain and United Kingdom) all placed in the bottom four positions, with the UK finishing 22nd. Javine Hylton won Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up, singing Touch My Fire. The other contestants included Gina G and Katie Price
2006
Armenia made their debut. The Finnish band Lordi won the contest with the song Hard Rock Hallelujah, the first ever hard rock song to win the contest and the first ever win for Finland. Teenage Life, performed by Daz Sampson, finished in nineteenth place for the UK. Congratulations, sung by Silvia Night for Iceland, was distributed on the Internet before the competition, which should have led to the song being banned. Silvia Night called journalists “Fucking amateurs”, and claimed the only reason Swedish singer Carola qualified for the Grand Final was that she had sex with the head of the EBU in a car before the competition
2007
A record number of 42 countries participated, as Czech Republic, Georgia, Montenegro, and Serbia made their debuts. Serbia won the Contest on their first appearance as in independent country, with the song Molitva (Prayer), performed by Marija Šerifović. Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up ended in controversy as the final result was announced. Fearne Cotton revealed the winner to be Scooch while, simultaneously in a much louder voice, co-host Terry Wogan announced the winner to be fellow entry Cyndi. After several seconds of confusion it was revealed that Scooch were the actual winners. They finished in 22nd place in the final with the song Flying the Flag (for You)
2008
Azerbaijan and San Marino made their debuts. This year was the first contest to have two semi-finals. Russia won the Contest for the first time, with the song Believe, performed by Dima Bilan. Bilan had represented Russia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 with Never Let You Go, finishing second. Dustin the Turkey represented Ireland with the song Irelande Douze Pointe, though he did not progress past the first semi-final stage. Even If, performed by Andy Abraham, finished in 25th and last place for the UK
2009
Changes in the voting procedure were made with the re-introduction of a national jury alongside televoting. The EBU rejected the Georgian song We Don’t Wanna Put In due to perceived political connotations within its lyrics relating to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. After the first semi-final, representatives for Azerbaijan complained to the EBU over the introductory "postcard" preceding the Armenian entry, since the video clip had included a depiction of We Are Our Mountains, a monumental statue located in the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic. The contest was won by Norway's Alexander Rybak with Fairytale, which received a record-breaking 387 points out of 492, the highest total score in the history of the contest at that time. Graham Norton took over from Terry Wogan as UK presenter. It’s My Time, performed by Jade Ewen and written by Andrew Lloyd Webber, finished in fifth place for the UK.
2010
The EBU announced that the voting system used in the semi-finals would change from previous years to balance jury voting with televoting. A return of accompaniment by orchestra was also proposed, but did not happen. The contest was won by Germany’s Lena with Satellite. That Sounds Good to Me, performed by Josh Dubovie and written by Pete Waterman and Mike Stock, finished in 25th and last place for the UK
2011
Held in the Esprit Arena in Dusseldorf. 43countries participated in the contest, with those returning including Austria, Hungary, and San Marino. Italy also returned to the Contest, marking its first participation since 1997. On 31 December 2010, it was announced that Italy would also automatically qualify for the final, joining the other four qualifiers to become the "Big Five". The winner was Azerbaijan with the song Running Scared performed by Ell & Nikki. Italy finished second. Dana International failed to qualify for the final. Jedward finished in eighth place for Ireland, singing Lipstick. Last year’s winner, Lena, finished in tenth place, one place ahead of Blue singing I Can for the UK. It was the first time in Eurovision Song Contest history that the British entry has been decided internally by the BBC
2012
Held at the newly constructed Baku Crystal Hall. Armenia withdrew due to security concerns in relation to ongoing conflicts with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The contest was won by Loreen from Sweden with the song Euphoria. Jedward finished in nineteenth place for Ireland singing Waterline. Love Will Set You Free, performed by Engelbert Humperdinck, finished in 25th place (out of 26) for the UK
2013
Hosted by Petra Mede, the event was held in Malmo. For the first time since 1985, no country of the former Yugoslav federation participated in the final. The contest was won by Emmelie de Forest from Denmark with the song Only Teardrops. Believe in Me, performed by Bonnie Tyler, finished in nineteenth place for the UK. Only Love Survives, sung by Ryan Dolan, finished in 26th and last place for Ireland
2014
San Marino and Montenegro both qualified for the final for the first time. The winner was Conchita Wurst with the song Rise Like a Phoenix, for Austria. This was Austria's first win in the competition since 1966. Wurst is a drag queen portrayed by Thomas "Tom" Neuwirth. Children of the Universe, sung by Molly (Smitten-Downes), finished in seventeenth place for the UK
2015
The contest was won by Mans Zelmerlow from Sweden, singing Heroes. This was Sweden's sixth win in the competition. Australia made their debut as a guest entrant, with Guy Sebastian singing Tonight finishing fifth. Austria became the first host country to score no points. Germany also scored no points. Still in Love with You, sung by Electro Velvet, finished in 24th place for the UK
Ireland holds the record for the highest number of wins, having won the contest seven times – including three times in a row in 1992, 1993, and 1994. Sweden are second with six wins. France, Luxembourg, and the United Kingdom are joint third with five wins. Netherlands has won four times
Germany has officially participated in every Eurovision Song Contest since its beginning in 1956, except in 1996 when its entry did not qualify past the audio-only pre‐selection round, and consequently was not seen in the broadcast final. France and the United Kingdom have only missed two contests each
The United Kingdom holds the record for the highest number of runner-up placings, coming in second on no less than 15 occasions as of 2014
Portugal has never won the contest, and holds the record for most appearances in the contest without a win
Malta is the most successful country without a win, achieving two second places and two third places
Marcel Bezençon Awards were first handed out during the Eurovision Song Contest in 2002 honoring the best competing songs in the final. The awards are divided into 3 categories: Press Award, Artistic Awar d, and Composer Award
Barbara Dex Award is an annual fan award for the worst dressed artist in the Eurovision Song Contest. It is named after Barbara Dex, who represented Belgium in the 1993 contest
Junior Eurovision Song Contest has been organized by the EBU annually since 2003. Each participating broadcaster sends an act, the members of which are aged 10 to 15 on the day of the contest. The UK entered for the first three years, and Cory Spedding finished as runner-up in 2004
Ronnie Hazlehurst was the musical director when the event was hosted by the United Kingdom in 1974, 1977 and 1982. He also conducted the British entry on seven occasions
Between 1957 and 1966, David Jacobs presented A Song for Europe and provided the UK commentary at Eurovision Song Contests
Pete Murray hosted the UK heat of the Eurovision Song Contest in 1959 and provided the UK commentary for the contest itself both on radio and television on a number of occasions between 1959 and 1977
In 1971 and from 1974 until 1977, Terry Wogan provided the BBC's radio commentary for the Eurovision Song Contest. He became better known for his television commentary, which he handled first in 1973 and then again in 1978. From 1980 until 2008, he provided the BBC's television commentary every year
Eurovision: Your Country Needs You was a BBC TV show broadcast annually to select the United Kingdom's entry into the Eurovision Song Contest. The show had previously gone under several other names, including Festival of British Popular Songs, Eurovision Song Contest British Final, The Great British Song Contest, Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up and Eurovision: Your Decision but was known, for most of its history, as A Song for Europe
The short clips before each contestant’s performance are known as ‘postcards’