Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 1987

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Eurovision Song Contest 1987
Country Netherlands
National selection
Selection processNationaal Songfestival 1987
Selection date(s)25 March 1987
Selected entrantMarcha
Selected song"Rechtop in de wind"
Finals performance
Final result5th, 83 points
Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1986 1987 1988►

The Netherlands was represented by Marcha (Marga Bult), with the song '"Rechtop in de wind", at the 1987 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Brussels on 9 April. The song was the winner of the Dutch national final for the contest, held on 25 March.

Before Eurovision

Nationaal Songfestival 1987

The national final was held at the Koninklijk Conservatorium in The Hague, hosted by Astrid Joosten. Six songs, all performed by Marcha, took part, with the winner being decided by juries in the twelve Dutch provinces, who each awarded a minimum of 5 points and a maximum of 30 points per song. "Rechtop in de wind" emerged an easy victor, the outright choice of nine of the juries, with a winning points margin of almost twice the number separating the other five songs.[1]

Final – 25 March 1987
Draw Song Points Place
1 "Verliefd zijn" 191 4
2 "Big Ben of Nôtre Dame" 213 2
3 "Rechtop in de wind" 296 1
4 "Morgen" 208 3
5 "Het leven is een cadeau" 170 6
6 "Buiten jou" 182 5

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Marcha performed 12th in the running order, following Greece and preceding Luxembourg. Her performance is remembered by Eurovision fans as much for her classic 1980s Dynasty-style appearance (complete with huge shoulder pads and big hair) as for the song itself. At the close of voting "Rechtop in de wind" had received 83 points from 14 countries (including the maximum 12 from France and 10 from Italy and Switzerland), placing the Netherlands 5th of the 22 entries, their first top 5 finish since 1980. The Dutch jury awarded its 12 points to Ireland.[2]

The Dutch conductor at the contest was Rogier van Otterloo for the fifth and last time, only a few months before his death in January 1988.

Points awarded to the Netherlands
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point
Points awarded by the Netherlands
12 points  Ireland
10 points  Germany
8 points  Finland
7 points   Switzerland
6 points  Denmark
5 points  Greece
4 points  Norway
3 points  Israel
2 points  Cyprus
1 point  France

See also

External links

References