Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Eurovision Song Contest 1969

International song competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eurovision Song Contest 1969
Remove ads

The Eurovision Song Contest 1969 was the 14th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 29 March 1969 at the Teatro Real in Madrid, Spain, and presented by Laurita Valenzuela. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Televisión Española (TVE), who staged the event after winning the 1968 contest for Spain with the song "La La La" by Massiel. Broadcasters from a total of sixteen countries took part in the contest, with Austria being the only absence from the seventeen that participated the previous year.

Quick Facts Date and venue, Final ...

At the close of voting, four countries were declared joint-winners: the United Kingdom with "Boom Bang-a-Bang" by Lulu, Spain with "Vivo cantando" by Salomé, the Netherlands with "De troubadour" by Lenny Kuhr, and France with "Un jour, un enfant" by Frida Boccara. It was the first time in the history of the contest that a tie for first place had occurred, and as there was no tiebreaker rule in place at the time, all four countries were declared joint winners.[1] France's win was its fourth, thus making it the first country to win the contest four times. The Netherlands' win was its third. Spain and the United Kingdom each won for the second time, with Spain becoming the first country to win the contest twice in a row.

Remove ads

Location

Thumb
Teatro Real, Madrid – host venue of the 1969 contest.

Televisión Española (TVE) staged the 1969 contest in Madrid, after winning the 1968 contest for Spain with the song "La La La" by Massiel. This is the only time that the contest has been held in Spain. The venue selected was the Teatro Real, an opera house opened in 1850. After having to close in 1924 due to damage to the building, the venue reopened in 1966 as a concert hall and the main concert venue of the Spanish National Orchestra and the RTVE Symphony Orchestra.[2] At that time, it also housed the Madrid Royal Conservatory and the Royal Higher College of Performing Arts.[3]

Remove ads

Participants

Summarize
Perspective
Quick Facts – Participation summaries by country ...

Broadcasters from sixteen countries participated in the 1969 contest. Of the seventeen countries that participated in 1968 only Austria was absent,[1] officially because Österreichischer Rundfunk (ORF) could not find a suitable representative,[4] but it was rumoured that the broadcaster refused to participate in a contest staged in Franco-ruled Spain.[5]

Several of the performing artists had previously represented the same country in past editions: Simone de Oliveira had represented Portugal in 1965; Kirsti Sparboe had represented Norway in 1965 and in 1967; and Louis Neefs had represented Belgium in 1967. In addition, Siw Malmkvist representing Germany had represented Sweden in 1960; and Romuald representing Luxembourg had represented Monaco in 1964.

More information Country, Broadcaster ...
Remove ads

Format

Summarize
Perspective

The surrealist artist Salvador Dalí designed the publicity material for the contest. The stage featured a metal sculpture created by surrealist artist Amadeo Gabino [es].[b] The musical director of the event was Augusto Algueró, who made the arrangements and conducted the orchestra during the opening and ending acts. The show opened with a rendition of the Eurovision tune by the Teatro Real organ, followed by the orchestra performing the previous year's winning song, "La, la, la". The interval act consisted of a surrealist documentary titled La España diferente, directed by Javier Aguirre, with music by Luis de Pablo. The show ended with the orchestra performing a medley of previous Eurovision winning songs during the credits.[9]

This was the second contest to be filmed and transmitted in colour, even though TVE did not have the required colour equipment for such a big event. It had to rent colour television cameras from the ARD German network, which was provided by Fernseh and brought to Madrid from Cologne.[10] In Spain itself the broadcast was seen in black and white because the local transmitters did not support colour transmissions. The colour recording equipment did not arrive in time, so TVE only had a black and white copy of the contest, until a colour copy was discovered in the archives of NRK.[11]

It was the first time that the contest resulted in a tie for first place, with four countries each gaining 18 votes. Since there was at the time no rule to cover such an eventuality, all four countries were declared joint winners. This caused an unfortunate problem concerning the medals due to be distributed to the winners as there were not enough to go round, so that only the singers received their medals on the night:[1] the songwriters, to some disgruntlement, were not awarded theirs until some days later[citation needed]. The medals were presented by previous year's winner, Massiel.

Contest overview

Summarize
Perspective
More information R/O, Country ...

Spokespersons

Each participating broadcaster appointed a spokesperson who was responsible for announcing the votes for their respective jury via telephone. Known spokespersons at the 1969 contest are listed below.

Remove ads

Detailed voting results

Thumb
Lenny Kuhr's dress

Every participating broadcaster assembled a jury panel of ten people. Every jury member could give one vote to his or her favourite song, except that representing their own country.

Although neither spokesperson made any errors in their announcements, scrutineer Clifford Brown asked both the Spanish and the Monegasque spokespersons to repeat their scores. No adjustments were made to the scoring as a result of the repetition.

More information Total score, Yugoslavia ...
Remove ads

Broadcasts

Summarize
Perspective

Each participating broadcaster was required to relay the contest live via its networks after receiving it through the Eurovision network. Non-participating EBU member broadcasters were also able to relay the contest as "passive participants". Broadcasters were able to send commentators to provide coverage of the contest in their own native language and to relay information about the artists and songs to their television viewers.[20] In addition to the participating countries, the contest was also reportedly broadcast in 26 countries including Tunisia; in Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and the Soviet Union received via Intervision; and in Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Panama, and Puerto Rico.[7][21][22] 30 radio and television commentators are reported to be present at the contest,[23] with an estimated global audience of 250 to 400 million viewers.[24]

Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below.

More information Country, Broadcaster ...
More information Country, Broadcaster ...
Remove ads

Notes

  1. On behalf of the German public broadcasting consortium ARD[8]
  2. After the contest, TVE moved the sculpture to the garden at its premises in Prado del Rey, where it has remained ever since.
  3. Deferred broadcast on NRK at 22:30 (CET)[38]
  4. The connection between the commentary booth in Madrid and the NRK studios in Oslo was disabled partway through the broadcast, resulting in the Norwegian commentary provided by Sverre Christophersen [no] not being relayed to Norwegian viewers and listeners. Commentary was temporarily provided by Janka Polanyi [no] before the Swedish feed was rerouted to also cover the Norwegian broadcasts, with the original connection to Christophersen ultimately fixed before the start of the voting sequence.[39]
  5. Deferred broadcast on TVE Canarias the following day at 22:35 (WET)[42]
  6. Simulcast on Radio Barcelona [es],[45] Radio Castellón [es],[48] Radio Girona [ca],[49] Radio Lérida,[50] Radio Murcia [es],[51] Radio Orense,[47] Radio Pamplona,[52] Radio Rioja,[53] Radio San Sebastián,[54] Radio Sevilla [es],[55] Radio Tarragona [ca],[56] Radio Valladolid [es],[57] and Radio Zaragoza.[58]
  7. Delayed broadcast on 5 April at 21:30 (BRT)[76]
  8. Delayed broadcast on 29 March 1969 at 20:15 (CLT)[77]
  9. Delayed broadcast in a shortened format on 1 May 1969 at 16:00 (COT)[79]
  10. Delayed broadcast on 4 May 1969 at 21:00 (CST)[81]
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads