Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song Contest 1961
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Yugoslavia was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1961 with the song "Neke davne zvezde", composed by Jože Privšek, with lyrics by Miroslav Antić, and performed by Ljiljana Petrović. The Yugoslavian participating broadcaster, Jugoslavenska radiotelevizija (JRT), selected its entry through the first edition of Jugovizija. This was the first-ever entry from Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song Contest, and the first-ever entry performed in Serbo-Croatian in the contest.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2019) |
Remove ads
Before Eurovision
Summarize
Perspective
Jugovizija 1961
Jugoslavenska radiotelevizija (JRT) held the first edition of Jugovizija on 16 February at the Ljubljana Slovene National Theatre Drama in Ljubljana to select its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1961. The show was staged by RTV Ljubljana and hosted by Milanka Bavcon. There were nine songs in the final, from three JRT subnational affiliates: RTV Ljubljana, RTV Zagreb, and RTV Belgrade. The winner was chosen by the votes of an eight-member jury of experts, one juror for each of the six Yugoslavian republics and the two autonomous provinces. The winning entry was "Neke davne zvezde", composed by Jože Privšek, with lyrics by Miroslav Antić, and performed by Serbian singer Ljiljana Petrović.
Remove ads
At Eurovision
The contest was broadcast on Televizija Beograd, Televizija Ljubljana (with commentary by Saša Novak) and Televizija Zagreb.[1][2][3][4] It was also broadcast on radio stations Radio Beograd 1 and Radio Ljubljana 2.[1][2]
Ljiljana Petrović performed "Neke davne zvezde" 5th on the evening of the contest following Finland and preceding Netherlands. At the close of the voting the song had received 9 points, placing 8th equal in a field of 16 competing countries.[5]
Voting
The Yugoslav jury was made up of 3 members each from the Belgrade, Ljubljana and Zagreb studios.[6]
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads