Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 1991
Eurovision Song Contest 1991 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Country | Germany | |||
National selection | ||||
Selection process | Ein Lied für Rom | |||
Selection date(s) | 21 March 1991 | |||
Selected artist(s) | Atlantis 2000 | |||
Selected song | "Dieser Traum darf niemals sterben" | |||
Finals performance | ||||
Final result | 18th, 10 points | |||
Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest | ||||
|
Germany was represented by six-member group Atlantis 2000, with the song "Dieser Traum darf niemals sterben", at the 1991 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 4 May in Rome. "Dieser Traum darf niemals sterben" was the winner of the German national final, held on 21 March.
Before Eurovision
Ein Lied für Rom
The final was held at the Friedrichstadtpalast in Berlin, hosted by Hape Kerkeling. Ten songs took part and the winner was chosen by a panel of 1,000 people, selected as providing a representative cross-section of the German public, who were telephoned and asked to choose their favourite song. One of the other participants was Cindy Berger, who had represented Germany at Eurovision in 1974 as half of duo Cindy & Bert.[1]
The choice of "Dieser Traum darf niemals sterben" was widely criticised, as many felt that not only was the song itself not particularly strong, but that also the anthemic 'peace, love and hope for the future' style of song was at the time becoming something of a Eurovision cliché (the 1990 contest had seen a plethora of such lyrically-themed entries).
Final – 21 March 1991 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Draw | Artist | Song (English translation) | Songwriter(s) | Percentage | Place |
1 | Tanja Jonak | "Hand in Hand in die Sonne" (Hand in hand towards the sun) | Jean Frankfurter, Irma Holder | 9.5% | 6 |
2 | Susan Schubert | "Du bist mehr" (You are more) | Willy Klüter, Anna Rubach | 10.8% | 5 |
3 | Cindy Berger | "Nie allein" (Never alone) | Rainer Pietsch, Werne Schüler | 6.4% | 7 |
4 | Barbara Cassy | "Hautnah ist nicht nah genug" (Skin to skin is not close enough) | Luis Rodriguez, Peter Zentner | 14.1% | 4 |
5 | Connie & Komplizen | "Jedesmal" (Every time) | Dirk Schiller | 2.8% | 10 |
6 | Vox & Vox | "Tief unter der Haut" (Deep under the skin) | Andreas Lebbing | 14.9% | 3 |
7 | Stefan de Wolff | "Herz an Herz" (Heart to heart) | Stefan de Wolff, Andreas Bärtles | 3.7% | 9 |
8 | Ziad & Sandrina | "Die Wächter der Erde" (The guardians of earth) | Walter J.W. Schmid, Alf Schwegeler | 15.2% | 2 |
9 | Atlantis 2000 | "Dieser Traum darf niemals sterben" (This dream must never die) | Alfons Weindorf, Helmut Frey | 18.5% | 1 |
10 | Strandjungs | "Junge Herzen" (Young hearts) | Marco Junger, Bernd Morawitz, Bernd Morawitz | 4.1% | 8 |
At Eurovision
On the night of the final Atlantis 2000 performed 17th in the running order, following Finland and preceding Belgium. At the close of voting "Dieser Traum darf niemals sterben" had received only 10 points (6 from Denmark, 3 from Cyprus and 1 from Spain), placing Germany 18th of the 22 entries, the country's lowest Eurovision finish to that date. The German jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners Sweden.[2]
Atlantis 2000 had been set up specifically to participate at Eurovision and following the bad result in Rome, and the song's failure to achieve significant sales success in Germany, they disbanded soon after.
Voting
Points awarded by Germany
Final
|
Points awarded to Germany
12 points | 10 points | 8 points | 7 points | 6 points |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 points | 4 points | 3 points | 2 points | 1 point |
See also
References
- ^ ESC National Finals database 1991 Archived 7 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ ESC History - Germany 1991