Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2013


The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2013 was the 11th edition of the annual Junior Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Kiev, Ukraine on 30 November 2013. The venue for the contest was announced on 10 April 2013, as the Palace "Ukraine". Ukrainian broadcaster National Television Company of Ukraine was the host broadcaster for the event. It was the second time the contest was held in Kiev, the first being the. It was also the second time in the history of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest that the event took place in last year's winning country, as well as the first time that the event was held in the same city twice. A total of twelve countries participated, with and making a return, and, and choosing to withdraw. made their debut in the contest. was originally the thirteenth country to take part but pulled out the last minute.
On the evening of the contest Ruslana withdrew from appearing in the contest because of the violence shown by the Ukrainian authorities against those who were peacefully protesting in the country's capital. Gaia Cauchi representing won the contest with the song "The Start". This was Malta's first Junior Eurovision victory as well as their first victory in any Eurovision Contest. It also marked the first time in the history of the contest that a winning entry was sung entirely in English. This was also the first contest to introduce a new awards system: The winning country along with the second and third place countries each received a trophy. Sofia Tarasova, representing the host nation, took second place and Ilya Volkov singing for took the third-place trophy.

Location

On 17 April 2013, the Ukrainian national broadcaster NTU and the European Broadcasting Union announced that the venue for the 2013 contest would take place in the Palace "Ukraine", in Kiev. The venue which is also known as the National Palace of Arts "Ukraine", which is a state company administered by the State Directory of Affairs, is one of the main venues for official events along with Palace of Sports in Kiev, Ukraine, which hosted the 2009 contest.
It was opened in 1970 as the biggest centre of culture and arts. The building was designed by a group of architects P. Zhylytskyi, I. Vayner, under the directorship of the project's author the distinguished architect of Ukrainian SSR Yevhenia Marychenko. All of the architects were awarded Shevchenko National Prize for its design and construction. The building is trapezoidal, twenty eight meters tall and consists of over 300 rooms.

Format

The executive supervisor of the Junior Eurovision steering group, Vladislav Yakovlev, announced on 17 July 2013 that there would be some changes being introduced to the contest from 2013 onwards. The contest would no longer focus on just the winning entry, but would also award prizes to the top three entries in acknowledgement of the talents of the young performers.
It was also announced that the winner of Junior Eurovision 2013 would be at the Eurovision Song Contest 2014, however the role that they would play had not been revealed at that time.
On 7 October 2013, it was announced that the executive supervisor managed to maintain the participation of thirteen countries for the contest in Kiev, Ukraine. The name of the thirteenth country was expected to be announced by the European Broadcasting Union on 29 October 2013. It was later confirmed on 1 November 2013 that Cyprus were going to be the thirteenth country but withdrew at the last minute. The running order draw took place on 25 November 2013 during the contest's opening party.

Graphic design

Designer Elias Ledakis, who was responsible for the stage design of the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 in Athens, Greece, was announced on 7 October 2013 as also being the designer for the 2013 Junior Eurovision stage.

Radio broadcast

The official Junior Eurovision Twitter account revealed on 9 October that the contest was planned to be broadcast online and by national broadcasters, however the details were still being worked on. On 21 November 2013, it was revealed that 98.8 Castle FM in Scotland would be the only radio station broadcasting the ceremony in the. Radio Ukraine International would also be broadcasting the contest live.

Participating countries

Awards were given to the top three countries, after all the votes were cast; these were Malta, Ukraine and Belarus.
DrawCountryArtistSongLanguagePlacePoints
01Eliias"Det är dit vi ska"Swedish946
02Rustam Karimov"Me and My Guitar"Azerbaijani, English766
03Monica Avanesyan"Choco Factory"Armenian, English669
04Michele Perniola"O-o-O Sole intorno a me"Italian1042
05Barbara Popović"Ohrid i muzika" Macedonian1219
06Sofia Tarasova"We Are One"Ukrainian, English2121
07Ilya Volkov"Poy so mnoy" Russian3108
08Rafael Bobeica"Cum să fim"Romanian, English1141
09The Smile Shop"Give Me Your Smile"Georgian, English591
10Mylène and Rosanne"Double Me"Dutch, English859
11Gaia Cauchi"The Start"English1130
12Dayana Kirillova"Dream On"Russian4106

Scoreboard

12 points

N.ContestantVoting nation
5MaltaKids' jury, Macedonia, Moldova, Netherlands, Ukraine
3RussiaArmenia, Azerbaijan, Sweden
3UkraineBelarus, Malta, San Marino
1ArmeniaGeorgia
1BelarusRussia

Voting and spokespersons

The order in which each country announced their votes was in the order of performance. The running order draw took place on 25 November 2013 during the contest's opening party. The spokespersons from all of the participating countries are shown below alongside their respective country.
  1. Anastasiya Petryk
  2. – Lova Sönnerbo
  3. – Lyaman Mirzalieva
  4. – David Vardanyan
  5. – Giovanni
  6. – Sofija Spasenoska
  7. – Liza Arfush
  8. – Sasha Tkach
  9. – Denis Midone
  10. – Elene Megrelishvili
  11. – Alessandro Wempe
  12. – Maxine Pace
  13. – Mariya Bakhireva

    Commentators

Most countries sent commentators to Kiev or commentated from their own country, to add insight to the participants and, if necessary, provide voting information. For the first time, JuniorEurovision.tv featured commentary online during the broadcast with commentary from the website's editor Luke Fisher and radio broadcaster Ewan Spence.

Participating countries

Official album

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2013: Kyiv a compilation album put together by the European Broadcasting Union, was released by Universal Music Group on 22 November 2013. The album features all the songs from the 2013 contest, along with karaoke versions.