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Eurovision Song Contest 2000

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Eurovision Song Contest 2000
Dates
Final13 May 2000
Host
VenueGlobe Arena
Stockholm, Sweden
Presenter(s)Kattis Ahlström
Anders Lundin
Directed byMarius Bratten
SupervisorChristine Marchal-Ortiz
Host broadcasterSveriges Television (SVT)
Websiteeurovision.tv/event/stockholm-2000 Edit this at Wikidata
Participants
Number of entries24
Debuting countries Latvia
Returning countries Finland
 Macedonia
 Romania
 Russia
  Switzerland
Non-returning countries Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Lithuania
 Poland
 Portugal
 Slovenia
  • A coloured map of the countries of EuropeBelgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Italy in the Eurovision Song ContestNetherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Switzerland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Monaco in the Eurovision Song ContestLuxembourg in the Eurovision Song ContestSpain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Finland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Portugal in the Eurovision Song ContestSweden in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Greece in the Eurovision Song ContestMalta in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Austria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Turkey in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song ContestMorocco in the Eurovision Song ContestCyprus in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Iceland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Eurovision Song ContestCroatia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Slovenia in the Eurovision Song ContestEstonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Slovakia in the Eurovision Song ContestHungary in the Eurovision Song ContestRomania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Lithuania in the Eurovision Song ContestPoland in the Eurovision Song ContestRussia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Macedonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000Latvia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000
         Participating countries     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2000
Vote
Voting systemEach country awarded 12, 10, 8–1 point(s) to their 10 favourite songs
Winning songDenmark Denmark
"Fly on the Wings of Love"
1999 ← Eurovision Song Contest → 2001

The Eurovision Song Contest 2000 was the 45th Eurovision Song Contest and was held on 13 May 2000 at the Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, following Charlotte Nilsson's victory in Jerusalem the previous year.

It was the first time since 1996 that the contest was held on mainland Europe. The contest was the second to be held in Stockholm, and the fourth held in Sweden. The presenters were Kattis Ahlström and Anders Lundin, and the contest was won by the Olsen Brothers who represented Denmark with the song "Fly on the Wings of Love" (originally: Smuk som et stjerneskud). The song was written by one of the brothers, Jørgen Olsen. The Globe Arena was, at the time, the largest venue chosen to host the contest with a capacity of 16,000 spectators. The postcards used to introduce each country participating involved Swedish themes that incorporated each nation in some respect. All the postcards are filmed in Stockholm, Sweden, however, the only exception is the postcard for Sweden, which is filmed before Expo 2000 in Hanover, Germany. The logo for the contest, a pair of open mouth lips, was chosen by SVT, and was described by its designers as "a sensual, yet stylistically pure mouth representing song, dialogue and speech", and was later one of the possible choices for the generic logo introduced at the 2004 Contest.[1]

The favourite in this year's contest was Estonia, who was also a fan favourite and praised by the press.[1] However, as the voting results came in, Denmark immediately took control of the scoreboard, beating Russia into second place and Latvia into 3rd place. Slovakia, Greece and Hungary decided not to compete for financial reasons.[1] The countries with the five lowest average scores over the previous five contests who had participated in 1999, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal and Slovenia were excluded meaning that five countries could return. These countries were: Finland, Macedonia, Romania, Russia and Switzerland. Latvia also joined contest as the only country to debut.

For the first time, an official CD compilation was released; it contained all of the songs of the participating nations and was available throughout Europe.[1] Such a disc was attempted in the previous year, however it lacked four of the competing songs.

Format

Globe Arena, Stockholm - host venue of the 2000 contest.

SVT announced on July 7, 1999 that the contest would be hosted by the Globe Arena in Stockholm. Other possible candidates had been Scandinavium in Gothenburg and Malmömässan in Malmö. They had previously hosted Eurovision Song Contest 1985 and 1992 respectively. The Globe was said to be chosen because Stockholm hadn't hosted the contest since 1975 and that it would be somewhat cheaper than the other options.[2]

Design

The graphic design programme for this year's contest was developed by Stockholm Design Lab and was centred around a stylised mouth symbol. It was given the Excellent Swedish Design award later that year.[3] The softness of the mouth was contrasted with a pointy typeface, made specifically for the contest.

The intermission during the finale of the ESC was "Once Upon a Time Europe Was Covered With Ice", a movie/song directed, composed and edited by Johan Söderberg and produced by John Nordling.[4] For the film Söderberg had traveled all over Europe to record children performing the score. On stage were violinist Caroline Lundgren, drummer Strängnäs Trumkorps plus street musicians from Stockholm and dancers from the Bounce Street Dance Company.

Incidents

There were some controversies concerning some participating countries. Israel, who opened the contest, entered a group who waved Israeli and Syrian flags advocating peace between the two nations. The two male singers in the group also ran up to each other and kissed for a brief moment. The Russian delegation petitioned for the winning Olsen Brothers to be disqualified, after they had used a vocoder to give Jørgen Olsen an electronic sound to his voice, during one of the verses of their performance. This issue was rejected by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU).[1]

In the Netherlands, NOS decided to take the Contest off air halfway through because of the Enschede fireworks disaster that happened earlier that day, so it could use the channel for continuous news broadcasts. Later, NOS declared that it was both for practical reasons as well as because they found it "inappropriate to broadcast a light entertainment programme on the night of such a catastrophic event". As a result, televoting had to be suspended and the Dutch votes were given by a stand-by jury instead.[1]

The contest was also broadcast in Canada, Australia, Japan, the United States and via the internet for the first time.

Returning artists

Artist Country Previous Year(s)
Al Bano (Jane Bogaert's backing vocalist)   Switzerland 1976, 1985 (both for  Italy and both with Romina Power)
Alexandros Panayi (part of Voice)  Cyprus 1995
Serafín Zubiri  Spain 1992
Roger Pontare  Sweden 1994

Results

Draw Country Artist Song Language[5] Place Points
01  Israel PingPong "Sameach" (שמח) Hebrew1 22 7
02  Netherlands Linda Wagenmakers "No Goodbyes" English 13 40
03  United Kingdom Nicki French "Don't Play That Song Again" English 16 28
04  Estonia Ines "Once in a Lifetime" English 4 98
05  France Sofia Mestari "On aura le ciel" French 23 5
06  Romania Taxi "The Moon" English 17 25
07  Malta Claudette Pace "Desire" English, Maltese 8 73
08  Norway Charmed "My Heart Goes Boom" English 11 57
09  Russia Alsou "Solo" English 2 155
10  Belgium Nathalie Sorce "Envie de vivre" French 24 2
11  Cyprus Voice "Nomiza" (Νόμιζα) Greek, Italian 21 8
12  Iceland August & Telma "Tell Me!" English 12 45
13  Spain Serafín Zubiri "Colgado de un sueño" Spanish 18 18
14  Denmark Olsen Brothers "Fly on the Wings of Love" English 1 195
15  Germany Stefan Raab "Wadde hadde dudde da?" German, English 5 96
16   Switzerland Jane Bogaert "La vita cos'è?" Italian 20 14
17  Croatia Goran Karan "Kad zaspu anđeli" Croatian 9 70
18  Sweden Roger Pontare "When Spirits Are Calling My Name" English 7 88
19  Macedonia XXL "100% te ljubam" (100% те љубам) Macedonian, English 15 29
20  Finland Nina Åström "A Little Bit" English 18 18
21  Latvia Brainstorm "My Star" English 3 136
22  Turkey Pınar Ayhan & The SOS "Yorgunum Anla" Turkish, English 10 59
23  Ireland Eamonn Toal "Millennium of Love" English 6 92
24  Austria The Rounder Girls "All to You" English 14 34
1.^ Contains some words in English.

Scoreboard

According to the EBU rules of the 45th Eurovision Song Contest 2000 (published on 23 September 1999), all participating countries should have used televoting, where the top ten most voted for songs were awarded the 12, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 point(s). In the televoting household shall not be permitted to vote more than three times. In exceptional circumstances where televoting was not possible, a jury was used instead:[6] Russia, Macedonia, Turkey and Romania.

The Dutch votes were the votes of the backup jury due to interrupted broadcasting of the contest in the Netherlands because of the fireworks disaster in the Dutch town of Enschede.

Voting procedure used:
Gold: Televote.
Blue: Jury.
Voters
Total Score Israel Netherlands United Kingdom Estonia France Romania Malta Norway Russia Belgium Cyprus Iceland Spain Denmark Germany Switzerland Croatia Sweden Macedonia Finland Latvia Turkey Ireland Austria
Contestants Israel 7 6 1
Netherlands 40 8 2 5 8 5 1 4 1 2 3 1
United Kingdom 28 1 2 3 6 3 4 3 6
Estonia 98 6 7 4 6 7 4 2 6 5 4 5 6 6 8 10 2 7 3
France 5 2 3
Romania 25 6 7 12
Malta 73 3 1 2 1 7 2 8 1 8 1 3 3 8 3 8 4 5 3 2
Norway 57 7 3 3 3 7 7 7 6 10 4
Russia 155 10 8 10 5 12 12 8 7 12 8 5 6 4 2 12 5 7 5 10 7
Belgium 2 2
Cyprus 8 1 3 4
Iceland 45 5 6 7 12 8 7
Spain 18 5 2 10 1
Denmark 195 12 10 12 8 7 1 8 10 12 10 4 12 10 12 10 12 10 12 1 12 10
Germany 96 8 5 10 3 4 6 6 12 2 12 1 2 8 5 12
Switzerland 14 6 5 2 1
Croatia 70 8 8 10 2 6 6 10 6 8 6
Sweden 88 6 5 1 4 5 5 4 6 10 8 3 6 7 12 6
Macedonia 29 10 7 2 10
Finland 18 5 7 4 2
Latvia 136 4 4 7 12 3 12 1 12 1 10 7 8 7 7 10 3 12 8 8
Turkey 59 12 12 1 3 1 10 5 1 5 4 5
Ireland 92 2 3 10 4 4 2 10 6 4 7 2 3 5 8 5 4 1 1 7 4
Austria 34 1 2 3 8 2 4 3 5 4 2

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points in the final:

N. Contestant Voting nation
8 Denmark Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Latvia, Russia, Sweden, United Kingdom
4 Latvia Belgium, Estonia, Finland, Norway
Russia Croatia, Cyprus, Malta, Romania
3 Germany Austria, Spain, Switzerland
2 Turkey France, Netherlands
1 Iceland Denmark
Romania Macedonia
Sweden Turkey

Commentators

Spokespersons

Official album

Untitled

Eurovision Song Contest: Stockholm 2000 was the official compilation album of the 2000 Contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by EMI Records and CMC International on 13 May 2000.[36] The album featured all 24 songs that entered in the 2000 contest, and was the first time that the EBU had produced such merchandise.[37]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Bakker, Sietse (2009-12-21). "The end of a decade: Stockholm 2000". European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 21 December 2009. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 2000 placeras i Stockholm" (Press release). Sveriges Television. July 5, 1999. Archived from the original on 2003-01-14.
  3. ^ "Fin form från webbdesign till tofflor". Sydsvenskan. January 21, 2001.
  4. ^ Johan Söderberg CV at hammarbyartport.com. Archived April 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 2000". The Diggiloo Thrush. Retrieved 5 March 2012.
  6. ^ "Rules of Eurovision Song Contest 2000" (PDF). Myledbury. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  7. ^ "Song Contest mit Stermann & Grissemann". wien ORF.at. 2012-05-01. Retrieved 2012-09-29.
  8. ^ a b Christian Masson. "2000 – Stockholm". Songcontest.free.fr. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  9. ^ "Congratulations: 50 jaar Songfestival!". VRTFansite.be. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  10. ^ "Pogledaj temu – POVIJEST EUROSONGA: 1956–1999 (samo tekstovi)". Forum.hrt.hr. 2009-05-15. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  11. ^ a b Savvidis, Christos (OGAE Cyprus)
  12. ^ a b "Forside". esconnet.dk. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  13. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20110902174838/http://ww.escfans.com/news/read/11322?id=11322&offset=27. Archived from the original on September 2, 2011. Retrieved February 7, 2016. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ "Selostajat ja taustalaulajat läpi vuosien? • Viisukuppila". Viisukuppila.fi. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  15. ^ "Dr. Peter Urban kommentiert – Düsseldorf 2011". Duesseldorf2011.de. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  16. ^ "Thomas Mohr: Mit Dschinghis Khan im Garten". Eurovision.de. 2011-05-14. Retrieved 2012-10-28.
  17. ^ "Η Δάφνη Μπόκοτα και η EUROVISION (1987–2004)". Retromaniax.gr. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  18. ^ "Dagblaðið Vísir – DV, 13 May 2000". Timarit.is. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  19. ^ "RTÉ so lonely after loss of Gerry – Marty". 20 May 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2010. He has been providing commentary for Irish viewers since 2000 and maintains great enthusiasm for the much lampooned contest.
  20. ^ "Welkom op de site van Eurovision Artists". Eurovisionartists.nl. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  21. ^ "Alt du trenger å vite om MGP – Melodi Grand Prix – Melodi Grand Prix – NRK". Nrk.no. 2003-05-27. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  22. ^ "Zobacz temat – Eurowizyjna gra". Eurowizja.Com.Pl. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  23. ^ "Comentadores Do ESC – escportugalforum.pt.vu | o forum eurovisivo português". 21595.activeboard.com. Archived from the original on April 21, 2012. Retrieved 2012-08-09. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  24. ^ "FORO FESTIVAL DE EUROVISIÓN • Ver Tema – Uribarri comentarista Eurovision 2010". Eurosongcontest.phpbb3.es. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  25. ^ a b "Infosajten.com". Infosajten.com. Archived from the original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved 2012-08-09. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  26. ^ "Swedes stay at home with Eurovision fever". The Local. 2009-05-16. Retrieved 2012-09-29.
  27. ^ 2000 Spain televoting results. YouTube. 19 April 2007.
  28. ^ "Nostalgični RTV press clipping". rtvforum.net. Retrieved 2015-09-02.
  29. ^ a b "Concours Eurovision de la Chanson • Consulter le sujet – Porte-paroles des jurys des pays francophones". Eurovision.vosforums.com. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  30. ^ "Pogledaj temu – SPOKESPERSONS". Forum.hrt.hr. 2008-02-29. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  31. ^ [1] Archived August 22, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ "Selostajat ja taustalaulajat läpi vuosien? • Viisukuppila". Viisukuppila.fi. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  33. ^ "פורום אירוויזיון". Sf.tapuz.co.il. 1999-09-13. Archived from the original on October 8, 2011. Retrieved 2012-08-09. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  34. ^ "ESCforum.net". ESCforum.net. Retrieved 2012-08-09.
  35. ^ [2] Archived January 24, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest: Stockholm 2000". allmusic.com. Allmusic. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  37. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 2000". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 2012-08-09.