Jump to content

Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 1959

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Vava2002 (talk | contribs) at 18:41, 31 July 2018 (At Eurovision). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Eurovision Song Contest 1959
Country Germany
National selection
Selection processInternal Selection
Selected artist(s)Alice & Ellen Kessler
Selected song"Heute Abend wollen wir tanzen geh'n"
Finals performance
Final result8th, 5 points
Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1958 1959 1960►

Germany was represented by twins Alice & Ellen Kessler, with the song '"Heute Abend wollen wir tanzen geh'n", at the 1959 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 11 March in Cannes, France. For the first time, the German entry was chosen internally rather than through a public final.

At Eurovision

On the night of the final the Kesslers performed 6th in the running order, following eventual contest winners the Netherlands and preceding Sweden. Of the eleven entries, only the German and Italian songs had a sound approaching contemporary music styles of 1959, and the Kesslers further livened up their performance with a choreographed instrumental break, a first in Eurovision. However, the criticism which would be made of Eurovision juries for decades to come – that they persistently rejected contemporary-sounding songs in favour of ones in a safer and more traditional style – seemed to apply in 1959, as at the close of voting "Heute Abend wollen wir tanzen geh'n" had received only 5 points, placing Germany 8th. The German jury awarded its highest mark (4) to France.[1]

Points Awarded to Germany

Points Awarded to Germany
10 points 9 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

Points awarded by Germany

10 points
9 points
8 points
7 points
6 points
5 points
4 points  France
3 points  Belgium
2 points  Netherlands
1 point   Switzerland

See also

References