Eurovision Song Contest 1988
The Eurovision Song Contest 1988 was the 33rd edition of the annual Eurovision Song Contest. The contest took place on 30 April 1988 in Dublin, Ireland, following the country's win at the previous 1987 edition. The presenters were Pat Kenny and Michelle Rocca. The host broadcaster was Radio TelefĂs Ăireann which revamped the show's production style compared to its earlier editions, in order to appeal to a younger audience.
The winner was Switzerland with the song "Ne partez pas sans moi", performed by Canadian singer CĂ©line Dion and composed by Atilla ĆereftuÄ with lyrics in French by Nella Martinetti. Switzerland beat the United Kingdom by just a point in the last vote to win the title. Twenty-one countries took part, after an initial plan of twenty-two, as Cyprus was disqualified for breaching the contest's rules by being published a few years earlier, in an attempt to represent the country at a prior edition of the contest. The Cypriot song had been drawn to be performed 2nd in the running order.
Location
is the capital and largest city of Ireland. Dublin is in the province of Leinster on Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey. Founded as a Viking settlement, the Kingdom of Dublin became Ireland's principal city following the Norman invasion. The city expanded rapidly from the 17th century and was briefly the second largest city in the British Empire before the Acts of Union in 1800. Following independence in 1922, Dublin became the capital of the Republic of Ireland.The contest took place at the Simmonscourt Pavilion of the Royal Dublin Society, which was normally used for agricultural and horse shows. The same venue hosted the 1981 contest.
Format
Graphic design
Host broadcaster RTĂ employed Declan Lowney, who was notable for being a director of music videos and youth programming, as director for this edition, in order to revamp the contest to attract and sustain a younger audience. The traditional scoreboard was replaced with two giant Vidiwalls located on either side of the stage, which also projected live images of the performers from the green room where the competitors set during the votes announcements, and a new computer-generated scoreboard was used.The stage itself, conceived by Paula Farrell under chief production designer Michael Grogan, was also the largest and most elaborate ever constructed for the Eurovision Song Contest. To compensate for the fact that the vast stage took up most of the room in what is really an average size exhibition hall, the director deliberately darkened the hall where the audience was located and refused to use wide angled shots of the audience, in order to create the illusion of the venue being bigger than it actually was.
The Postcards featured the participants doing things in Ireland from culture, to tradition, to sports or sightseeing.
Lowney was also the director of the show's interval act, introduced after the competing songs and before the votes announcement. The interval act was a video of the popular Irish rock group Hothouse Flowers, which was filmed in eleven countries around Europe and was the most expensive music video ever produced in Ireland at the time.
Voting
Each country had a jury who awarded 12, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2 and 1 point for its top ten songs.This edition features one of the closest and most fickle-ending votes in the history of the contest. With three countries left to vote, the UK was well in the lead with 133 points against Switzerland's 118. With the third last country, France, only awarding Switzerland one point, the UK looked certain of victory, as even if Switzerland scooped the two final 12s, the UK would only need to gather eleven points from three juries combined to be unbeatable. However, France didn't award the UK any points, and the following country, Portugal, gave the UK a meagre three points while giving the maximum 12 to Switzerland, making the contest blown open between the two countries until the end of the voting.
With the conclusion of voting from the penultimate jury, the UK was holding a five-point lead over Switzerland. As the final jury, that of Yugoslavia, began to award its points in the customary ascending order, a lot of excitement-sighs were heard from the audience to see how the two rivals for victory would fare. Switzerland was the first to be named with six points, edging it into a one-point lead over the UK. After earlier strong votes from most countries to the UK, it seemed highly likely that the UK would be given one of the higher remaining set of points. However as Yugoslavia announced its seven, eight, ten and twelve points, it transpired that it had awarded the UK no points at all, and Switzerland was left with its one-point lead to savour a dramatic triumph.
Conductors
Each performance had a conductor who was maestro to the orchestra, except for Iceland and Italy. Unlike in most years, the conductors took their bows after each song, not before.- â No conductor
- â Anders Berglund
- â Ossi Runne
- â Ronnie Hazlehurst
- â Turhan YĂŒkseler
- â Javier de Juan
- â Harry van Hoof
- â Eldad Shrem
- â Atilla ĆereftuÄ
- â Noel Kelehan
- â Michael Thatcher
- â Harald Neuwirth
- â Henrik KrogsgĂ„rd
- â Charis Andreadis
- â Arild Stav
- â Daniel Willem
- â RĂ©gis DuprĂ©
- â No conductor
- â Guy Matteoni
- â JosĂ© CalvĂĄrio
- â Nikica Kalogjera
Participants
This was the second victory for Switzerland at the Eurovision Song Contest after winning its first edition in 1956, and the last time a song in French won the contest, the language having dominated the event in earlier years.
The contest helped launch an international career for two artists, the winner for Switzerland CĂ©line Dion and Luxembourgâs representative Lara Fabian. French-Canadian CĂ©line Dion was only famous in the French-speaking world at the time of the contest, shortly afterwards started recording songs in English. Belgian-Canadian Lara Fabian started a successful career after the contest with becoming established in various countries worldwide, with a mainly French-sung repertoire. The UK entry was written and composed by Julie Forsyth, the daughter of the entertainer Bruce Forsyth who was present. When interviewed afterwards he was particularly annoyed at the Dutch jury not having given a vote to the UK, as they had done some work there.
The contest saw the return of seven artists who had participated in its previous editions: Denmark's Kirsten & SÞren represented the country in 1984 and 1985, Finland's Boulevard represented the country in 1987 as Vicky Rosti's backing group, Israel's Re'uven Gvirtz and Yehuda Tamir, winners of the contest in 1979 as part of Milk and Honey returned to Eurovision as backing singers for Yardena Arazi, who represented the country in 1976 as part of the group Chocolat, Menta, Mastik. Arazi had hosted the contest in 1979, Portugal's Dora represented the country in 1986, Sweden's Tommy Körberg represented the country in 1969, and Turkey's MFà represented the country in 1985.
Results
Score sheet
12 points
Below is a summary of all 12 points in the final:N. | Contestant | Voting nation |
3 | Denmark | Austria, France, Netherlands |
3 | Luxembourg | Finland, Ireland, Switzerland |
3 | Switzerland | Germany, Portugal, Sweden |
3 | United Kingdom | Belgium, Italy, Turkey |
3 | Yugoslavia | Denmark, Iceland, Israel |
2 | Netherlands | Greece, Luxembourg |
1 | France | Yugoslavia |
1 | Ireland | Spain |
1 | Norway | United Kingdom |
1 | Sweden | Norway |
Commentators
Television
Participating countries
- â Hermann Gunnarsson
- â Bengt Grafström
- â Erkki Pohjanheimo
- â Terry Wogan
- â BĂŒlend Ăzveren
- â Beatriz PĂ©cker
- â Willem van Beusekom
- â No commentator
- â German: Bernard Thurnheer, French: Serge Moisson, Italian: Ezio Guidi
- â Mike Murphy
- â Nicole and Claus-Erich Boetzkes
- â Ernst Grissemann
- â JĂžrgen de Mylius
- â Dafni Bokota
- â John Andreassen
- â French: Pierre Collard-Bovy, Dutch: Luc Appermont
- â French: ValĂ©rie Sarn, German: Oliver Spiecker
- â Daniele Piombi
- â Lionel Cassan
- â Margarida MercĂȘs de Mello
- â Mladen PopoviÄ, Oliver Mlakar, Marjeta KerĆĄiÄ Svetel
Non-participating countries
- â N/A
- - Dafni Bokota
- - Unknown
Radio
- â Kalle Oldby
- â TBC
- â Ken Bruce
- â Ćebnem SavaĆçı
- â Ben Cramer
- â Yigal Ravid
- â Larry Gogan
- â Peter Urban
- â Hans Leitinger
- â Poul Birch Eriksen
- â Dimitris Konstantaras
- â Leif Erik Forberg
- â French: StĂ©phane Dupont & Patrick Duhamel, Dutch: Julien Put & Herwig Haes
- â AndrĂ© Torrent
- â Antonio De Robertis
- â Julien Lepers
Spokespersons
- - GuĂ°rĂșn SkĂșladĂłttir
- - Maud Uppling
- - Solveig Herlin
- - Colin Berry
- - Canan Kumbasar
- - Matilde JarrĂn
- â Joop van Os
- - Yitzhak Shim'oni
- - Michel Stocker
- - John Skehan
- - Corry von Kiel
- - Tilia Herold
- -
- - Fotini Giannoulatou
- - Andreas Diesen
- - Jacques Olivier
- - Jean-Luc Bertrand
- - Mariolina Cannuli
- - Catherine Ceylac
- - Maria Margarida Gaspar
- - MiĆĄa Molk
National jury members
- - Ărni Gunnarsson, Ăsgeir GuĂ°nason, DavĂĂ° Sveinsson, ElĂn ĂĂłra StefĂĄnsdĂłttir, EllĂœ ĂorĂ°ardĂłttir, Erla Björk JĂłnasdĂłttir, GuĂ°rĂșn KristmannsdĂłttir, HĂłlmfrĂĂ°ur JĂłnsdĂłttir, JĂłnas Engilbertsson, JĂłnĂna Bachmann, Kjartan Ăor Kjartansson, Ălafur Egilsson, SigrĂșn KristjĂĄnsdĂłttir, SigurĂ°ur Fanndal, SigurĂ°ur Ăgisson, ĂĂłrdĂs GarĂ°arsdĂłttir
- â Ilpo Hakasalo
- â Nicola Chapman, Terry Clarke, Alfred Collet, Geoff Dennis, James Douglas, Alison Fox, Mike Goss, Carol Holroyd, Muir Johnson, Karen Marsden, Mavis Masters, Molly Roberts, Andrew Sidell, Renate Smith, Paul Tunnicliffe, Robert Unsworth
- â Pepe Barroso, Paquita Torres, Mario Pardo, Lola Forner, JosĂ© Coronado, AnalĂa GadĂ©, Miguel BĂĄez "El Litri", Laura Valenzuela, Antonio de Senillosa, Cyra Toledo, JosĂ© Oneto, MarĂa Vidaurreta, Jorge Sanz, Emma SuĂĄrez, Caty Arteaga, Jaime Andrada
- â Hans van den Berg, Bert Tuk
- â Anni Thorslund Larsen
- â Alexandros Roussos