Eurovision Song Contest 1986

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Eurovision Song Contest 1986
ESC 1986 logo.png
Dates
Final 3 May 1986
Host
Venue Grieghallen
Bergen, Norway
Presenter(s) Åse Kleveland
Conductor Egil Monn-Iversen
Director John Andreassen
Executive supervisor Frank Naef
Host broadcaster Norsk rikskringkasting (NRK)
Opening act Åse Kleveland singing "Welcome to Music"
Interval act Sissel Kyrkjebø and Steinar Ofsdal
Participants
Number of entries 20
Debuting countries  Iceland
Returning countries  Netherlands
 Yugoslavia
Withdrawing countries  Greece
 Italy
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         Participating countries     Countries that participated in the past but not in 1986
Vote
Voting system Each country awarded 12, 10, 8-1 point(s) to their 10 favourite songs
Nul points None
Winning song  Belgium
"J'aime la vie"
Eurovision Song Contest
◄1985 1986 1987►

The Eurovision Song Contest 1986 was the 31st Eurovision Song Contest and was held on 3 May 1986 in the Grieg Hall in Bergen, Norway. It was the first occasion on which Norway played host to the contest. The presenter was Åse Kleveland, a well-known folk guitarist who was President of the Norwegian Association of Musicians (and a former Eurovision entrant, in 1966).

The 1986 contest was a first for Eurovision in that royalty were among the guests—Crown Prince Harald, Crown Princess Sonja, Princess Märtha Louise and Prince Haakon Magnus were all in attendance.

Sandra Kim was the winner of this Eurovision with the song "J'aime la vie", representing Belgium. Aged 13, Kim was the youngest ever Eurovision winner. Current rules require Eurovision Song Contest participants to be at least 16, so unless the rule is changed, Kim's record will never be broken. In the lyrics of her song, Kim claimed to be 15 years of age, but after the contest, it was revealed that she was actually 13. Switzerland, who finished second, appealed for her to be disqualified, but this was to no avail.

Background

By 1985, Norway had received the unwanted distinction of being "the nul points country," receiving 0 points three times and coming in last six times. When they did win the 1985 Contest, it was a source of pride among Norwegian population, and the national broadcaster, NRK, took full advantage of being able to showcase Norway and its achievements in front of over 500 million television viewers. By the autumn of 1985, NRK had decided to hold the next year's contest at the Grieghallen in Bergen, turning down other bids from capital Oslo, and main cities of Stavanger, Sandnes and Trondheim.

Norway first hosts Eurovision

As this was the first time Norway hosted a Eurovision Song Contest, NRK commissioned a lavish budget for the event, turning Grieghallen into a Viking-esque "ice palace" for the live show, complete with white and pastel neon lights for the stage. In addition, NRK also had a special diamond-encrusted dress made for presenter Åse Kleveland for her opening number. The prized dress, which weighed upwards of 15 pounds (6.8 kg), is still available for viewing at NRK's costuming department at Marienlyst in Oslo.

Kleveland sang the multilingual "Welcome to Music" as the opening act, incorporating English and French primarily, in addition to other European languages. BBC commentator Terry Wogan, at the close of Kleveland's number, dryly remarked, "Katie Boyle (a former Eurovision host for the UK) never sang, did she?"

During her opening speech, Kleveland said of Norway's road in the contest, "For those of you who have followed Norway's course through the history of the Eurovision Song Contest, you will know that it has been quite thorny, in fact. So, imagine our joy when last year we finally won, and the pleasure we feel today, being able to welcome 700 million viewers to the top of Europe, to Norway, and to Bergen."

One of the interval acts presented featured Norwegian musicians Sissel Kyrkjebø and Steinar Ofsdal, accompanied by Norwegian national broadcasting orchestra, Kringkastingsorkesteret (KORK). They opened with the traditional song of the city of Bergen, Udsikter fra Ulriken (also known as "Nystemte'n"), and presented a number of familiar tunes while showing the sights and sounds of Bergen area. Ofsdal played a range of traditional Norwegian folk instruments such as accordion, recorder and hardingfele.[1] The presentation launched Kyrkjebø into a career as an internationally recognized artist.

Debuts and withdrawals

Iceland competed for the first time, as the national broadcaster RÚV finally cemented their satellite television connections with the rest of Europe.[2]

Greece withdrew, having been drawn eighteenth in order of presentation. The reason behind the withdrawal, was that the Eurovision contest coincided with Holy Saturday. Their entry would have been "Wagon-lit" (βάγκον λι) performed by Polina.[3][4] The Italian broadcaster, RAI, simply decided not to send any delegation to Bergen.

Conductors

Host conductor in bold

Results

Draw Country Language[5] Artist Song English translation Place Points
01  Luxembourg French Sherisse Laurence "L'amour de ma vie" The love of my life 3 117
02  Yugoslavia Croatian Doris Dragović "Željo moja" My desire 11 49
03  France French Cocktail Chic "Européennes" European girls 17 13
04  Norway Norwegian Ketil Stokkan "Romeo" 12 44
05  United Kingdom English Ryder "Runner in the Night" 7 72
06  Iceland Icelandic ICY "Gleðibankinn" The bank of fun 16 19
07  Netherlands Dutch Frizzle Sizzle "Alles heeft ritme" Everything has rhythm 13 40
08  Turkey Turkish Klips ve Onlar "Halley" 9 53
09  Spain Spanish Cadillac "Valentino" 10 51
10   Switzerland French Daniela Simmons "Pas pour moi" Not for me 2 140
11  Israel Hebrew Moti Giladi & Sarai Tzuriel "Yavo Yom" (יבוא יום) A day shall come 19 7
12  Ireland English Luv Bug "You Can Count On Me" 4 96
13  Belgium French Sandra Kim "J'aime la vie" I love life 1 176
14  Germany German Ingrid Peters "Über die Brücke geh'n" Crossing the bridge 8 62
15  Cyprus Greek Elpida "Tora Zo" (Τώρα ζω) Now I live 20 4
16  Austria German Timna Brauer "Die Zeit ist einsam" Time is lonely 18 12
17  Sweden Swedish Lasse Holm & Monica Törnell "E' de' det här du kallar kärlek?" Is this what you call love? 5 78
18  Denmark Danish Lise Haavik "Du er fuld af løgn" You are full of lies 6 77
19  Finland Finnish Kari Kuivalainen "Never The End" 15 22
20  Portugal Portuguese Dora "Não sejas mau para mim" Don't be bad to me 14 28

Voting

The winning song, Belgium's "J'aime la vie," received points from every jury (Belgium received five sets of 12 points; every country awarded Belgium at least five points except for Germany, which gave them just one point). Belgium was the winner in the voting from the results of the second jury out of twenty, in the longest winning stretch during voting since 1974. Switzerland was behind Belgium in nearly every part of the voting, but Belgium had a commanding lead from the very beginning. Traditionally some juries give high points to the host country's entrant, but this did not happen this year; no jury gave Norway's song "Romeo" more than six points out of a possible 12.

Belgium scored an absolute record at the time, with Sandra Kim earning a never seen before amount of 176 points (that record remained until 1993, with Ireland scoring 187 points). Kim received an average of 9,26 points per voting nation, which, as of 2015, still ranks 7th among all Eurovision winners.

Score sheet

Juries
Total Score Luxembourg Yugoslavia France Norway United Kingdom Iceland Netherlands Turkey Spain Switzerland Israel Ireland Belgium Germany Cyprus Austria Sweden Denmark Finland Portugal
Contestants Luxembourg 117 5 8 12 8 1 8 2 4 7 10 12 8 10 10 2 4 6
Yugoslavia 49 2 7 5 7 3 3 1 3 4 12 1 1
France 13 3 7 3
Norway 44 4 4 2 6 6 5 6 6 5
United Kingdom 72 4 10 6 6 2 4 2 5 2 3 8 8 10 2
Iceland 19 5 2 6 4 2
Netherlands 40 1 2 7 1 8 10 1 3 7
Turkey 53 6 12 2 6 8 3 6 8 2
Spain 51 7 4 6 1 2 8 1 5 3 7 3 1 3
Switzerland 140 12 6 7 5 5 3 12 10 4 12 10 12 5 4 12 4 7 10
Israel 7 1 1 5
Ireland 96 3 8 3 2 8 5 12 6 2 12 7 12 8 8
Belgium 176 10 10 12 8 10 10 10 12 10 10 5 12 1 10 6 6 10 12 12
Germany 62 8 1 12 8 7 8 5 7 2 4
Cyprus 4 3 1
Austria 12 2 1 2 6 1
Sweden 78 5 7 2 7 3 12 3 7 12 4 5 6 5
Denmark 77 5 10 6 7 4 5 3 10 4 7 7 4 5
Finland 22 6 1 1 8 3 3
Portugal 28 4 4 4 8 7 1

As the free language rule was still cancelled, all songs were performed in native languages to the country they represented. All songs however, with the exception of the song from Cyprus, have had studio versions recorded by the original Eurovision artists in English as well as their own languages.

12 points

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

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

Returning artists

Artist Country Previous year(s)
Elpida  Cyprus 1979 (for Greece)

Commentators

Spokespersons

National jury members

References

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  8. Eurovision Song Contest 1986 BBC Archives
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  11. https://eksisozluk.com/1986-eurovision-sarki-yarismasi--878663
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  14. Adriaens, Manu & Loeckx-Van Cauwenberge, Joken. Blijven kiken!. Lannoo, Belgium. 2003 ISBN 90-209-5274-9
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  16. 16.0 16.1 Savvidis, Christos (OGAE Cyprus)
  17. [1] Archived October 24, 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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  23. Dyrseth, Seppo (OGAE Norway)
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  25. Baumann, Peter Ramón (OGAE Switzerland)
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  28. "Halley'in büyük başarısı, Erhan Güner, Milliyet, 4 May 1986
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