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EUROVISION SONG CONTEST

EUROVISION

Eurovision’s turkeys and triumphs

As the Eurovision Song Contest celebrates its 60th anniversary watched by some 200 million worldwide, here is a trip down Eurovision memory lane - turkeys, dictators, Mormons, orcs, drag queens and all.

Eurovision's turkeys and triumphs
Winners from the 2015 second Semi-Final on stage. Photo: Andres Putting (EBU)

Love it, hate it or both, Europe's unashamedly over-the-top and enduringly popular annual song contest, which is set to shake up Vienna on Saturday night, is nothing if not entertaining. 

Having failed the previous year to even win their country's nomination, ABBA triumphed in 1974 with Waterloo, sending the Swedish foursome on the way to all-conquering global super stardom.

Most performers though sink back into obscurity — many deservedly so — although Eurovision boosted the careers of Sandie Shaw (1967), Bucks Fizz (1981) and Celine Dion (1988).

Some of the songs themselves have been big hits, like France Gall's Poupee de Cire, Poupee de Son (1965), written by Serge Gainsbourg, and more recently Satellite from Germany's Lena (2010).

Domenico Mudugno's Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu, also known as Volare, has been covered by David Bowie, Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, Barry White and many more — despite only coming third in 1958.

Wadde hadde dudde da?

Being famous already is no guarantee of winning. In 1968 Congratulations by Britain's Cliff Richard was pipped by Spain's entry La La La — allegedly thanks to foul play by dictator Francisco Franco.

That song had “La” 138 times. Other lyrical highlights include Diggi-Loo Diggi-Ley (1984) by golden-booted Swedish Mormon brothers Herreys, Lulu's Boom-Bang-A-Bang (1969) and Germany's Wadde hadde dudde da? (2000).

And who can forget the chorus to Austria's 1977 entry: “Boom boom boomerang, snadderydang. Kangaroo, boogaloo, didgeridoo. Ding dong, sing the song, hear the guitar twang. Kojak, hijack, me and you.”

At least, though, the words were mostly real. Belgium's entries Sanomi (2003) and O Julissi (2008) were in imaginary languages.

Norwegian no-hopers

Votes from viewers and a jury are combined for each country, ranking the favourite ten acts of the 27 in the final. The top ranked song gets 12 points, the 10th one point, from each nation.

Some countries therefore can score nothing — the dreaded “nul points”. Norway holds the record for this, failing to win any points four times, although in 2009 it scored 387, the most ever.

Ireland are overall Eurovision champions, winning seven times, followed by the UK, Luxembourg, Sweden and France on five. The Netherlands have four victories, and Israel, Denmark and Norway three.

Get up, stand up

Armenia's Genealogy. Photo: Ruben Martirosyan, Public Television of Armenia

Geopolitics is never far away, with the annals of Eurovision littered with boycotts — like Armenia's of Azerbaijan in 2012 — and songs with not-so-subtle messages, often involving Russia.

In 1968, the year of the Prague Spring, Austria chose a Czech singer, and in 2009 Georgia tried, and failed, to enter with We Don't Wanna Put In, with Russian President Vladimir Putin clearly in mind.

Last year, tensions over Ukraine saw Russia's entry booed. Israel's 2007 entry Push the Button was taken by some to be about Iran being about to nuke everybody.

Armenia's 2015 entry, initially called Don't Deny but since changed, was widely seen as a reference to the 100th anniversary of the mass killing of its citizens by Ottoman forces, which Turkey — Eurovision no-shows since 2012 — refuses to call genocide.

Girls just want to have fun

Generally though, the songs are about things like love, peace and tolerance — as witnessed by Slovenian cross-dressers Sestre (2002), Israeli transgender Dana International (1998) and bearded Austrian diva Conchita Wurst (2014).

And most importantly, having evolved from its civilised black-and-white beginnings with live orchestras and restrained applause into the riotous carnival of camp it is today, Eurovision is fun.

Recent highlights have included orc-like Finnish rockers Lordi (2006), Ireland's Dustin the Turkey (2008) and silver-star-helmeted Ukrainian drag queen Verka Serduchka (2007).

“I always wanted to be a princess,” said Serduchka, possibly the best act to have come second — except perhaps Sir Cliff Richard.

By Simon Sturdee

We will be reporting live and blogging from the Eurovision Song Contest final on Saturday – check in at 8.50pm! 

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EUROVISION

Sweden among favourites after leaping through to Eurovision final

Cornelia Jakobs, Sweden's entry to the Eurovision Song Contest, burst into tears and jumped onto presenter Mario Acampas, after shooting through to the final on Thursday night.

Sweden among favourites after leaping through to Eurovision final

Jakobs was emotional at the press conference after her victory, telling the story of her progress from an “largely unknown” indie artist to the Eurovision stage. 

“There are a lot of feelings right now in this little body, an extremely large amount of feelings that can’t really fit in, so they’re exploding,” she said, before beginning to cry. “But I’m so happy and overwhelmed by all the support I’ve got from all these fantastic countries.” 

When the time came to pick lots for which half of the final she would appear in, she leapt onto Mario Acampas, the presenter asking questions at the press conference, wrapping her legs around his waist and clasping herself tightly to his torso. 

He then walked her over to the bowl where the lots were lying. 

“I want you to choose the second half,” she said to him. “Imagine that I have a pistol here and on the count of three I’m going to shoot you if you don’t choose.”

He refused to pick for her so she took one herself and got the second half. 

Jakobs, with her song, “Hold me closer”, was the clear favourite to go into the final, and will go through alongside Finland’s The Rasmus, and his song Jezebel, Serbia’s Konstrakta with “In corpore sano”, as well as entries from Belgium, Czechia, Azerbaijan, Poland, Estonia, Australia, and Romania. 

You can see her performance on Thursday in the video below. 

In the final, she will meet the other favourites, which include Ukraine, Italy, and the United Kingdom. 

The final will be shown on Sweden’s state broadcaster SVT at 9pm on Saturday. 

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