Eurovision Song Contest 1986
The Eurovision Song Contest 1986 was the 31st Eurovision Song Contest and was held on 3 May 1986 in Grieghallen 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.
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 it was not successful.
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.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, 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 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. They opened with the traditional song of the city of Bergen, Udsikter fra Ulriken, 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. The presentation launched Kyrkjebø into a career as an internationally recognized artist.
Changes in participation
competed for the first time, as the national broadcaster RÚV had finally cemented their satellite television connections with the rest of Europe.withdrew, having been drawn eighteenth in the running order, as the contest coincided with Holy Saturday. Their entry would have been "Wagon-lit", performed by Polina. Italian broadcaster RAI decided not to send any delegation to Bergen.
Conductors
- - Rolf Soja
- - Nikica Kalogjera
- - Jean-Claude Petit
- - Egil Monn-Iversen
- - no conductor
- - Gunnar Þórdarsson
- - Harry van Hoof
- - Melih Kibar
- - Eduardo Leiva
- - Atilla Şereftuğ
- - Yoram Zadok
- - Noel Kelehan
- - Jo Carlier
- - Hans Blum
- - Martyn Ford
- - Richard Österreicher
- - Anders Berglund
- - Egil Monn-Iversen
- - Ossi Runne
- - Colin Frechter
Results
Voting
The winning song, Belgium's "J'aime la vie," received points from every jury. 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 number of 176 points, an average of 9.26 points per voting nation. Kim received 77.2% of the maximum possible score, which, as of 2019, still ranks 8th among all Eurovision winners.
Score sheet
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 |
5 | Switzerland | Belgium, Israel, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Sweden |
3 | Ireland | Austria, Denmark, Spain |
2 | Luxembourg | Germany, Norway |
2 | Sweden | Iceland, Switzerland |
1 | Germany | United Kingdom |
1 | Turkey | Yugoslavia |
1 | Yugoslavia | Cyprus |
Returning artists
Commentators
Television
Participating countries
- – Valérie Sarn, Matthias Krings
- – Mladen Popović, Ksenija Urličić, Miša Molk
- – Patrice Laffont
- – Knut Bjørnsen
- – Terry Wogan
- – Þorgeir Ástvaldsson
- – Leo van der Goot
- – Gülgün Baysal
- – Antonio Gómez Mateo
- – German: Bernard Thurnheer, French: Serge Moisson, Italian: Ezio Guidi
- – No commentator
- – Brendan Balfe
- – French: Jacques Mercier, Dutch: Luc Appermont
- – Ado Schlier
- – Neophytos Taliotis
- – Ernst Grissemann
- – Ulf Elfving
- – Jørgen de Mylius
- – Heikki Harma and Kari Lumikero
- – Fialho Gouveia
Non-participating countries
- - N/A
- – Mako Georgiadou
- – István Vágó
Radio
- – André Torrent
- – Julien Lepers
- – Erik Diesen and Sverre Christophersen
- – Ray Moore
- – Fatih Orbay and Bülent Osma
- – Daniel Pe'er
- – Larry Gogan
- – French: TBC, Dutch: Julien Put and Herwig Haes
- – Peter Urban
- – Pavlos Pavlou
- – Hans Leitinger
- – Jacob Dahlin
- – Poul Birch Eriksen
- – TBC
- – Fialho Gouveia
Spokespersons
- - Frédérique Ries
- - Enver Petrovci
- - Patricia Lesieur
- - Nina Matheson
- - Colin Berry
- - Guðrún Skúladóttir
- – Joop van Zijl
- - Ümit Tunçağ
- - Matilde Jarrín
- - Michel Stocker
- - Yitzhak Shim'oni
- - John Skehan
- - Jacques Olivier
- - Christoph Deumling
- - Anna Partelidou
- - Tilia Herold
- - Agneta Bolme-Börjefors
- -
- - Solveig Herlin
- - Margarida Andrade
National jury members
- - Berglind Orradóttir, Davíð Scheving Thorsteinsson, Elsa Björnsdóttir, Guðjón Vigfússon, Guðlaug Þorsteinsdóttir, Karl Þorsteins, Margrét Stefánsdóttir, Ríkharður Ríkharðsson, Salóme Þorkelsdóttir, Sigurdór Sigurdórsson, Svanhildur Kristjónsdóttir
- - Ayça Eren, Ziya Anadol, Kaan Bozoğlu, Ayşegül Soyalp, Özlem Budakoğlu, Fatma Dikmen, Alaaddin Torun, İlhan Aslanboğan, Zahide Azılı, Saadet Aktemel, Suhal Eriş
- – José María Tío, Carolina Conejero, Rosario Cabanas, Rafael Camino, Marta Cantón, Emilio Aragón, María Cuadra, Javier Escrivá, Blanca Fernández Ochoa, Antonio Imízcoz, Pablo Pérez
- - David Elder, Gary Speirs, Sue Lloyd , Mr T Smith, Mr A Brown, Miss M Chapman , Mrs M Heathcote, Mr P Jenkinson, Mrs T O'Shea, Quentin Smith
Note