Eurovision Song Contest 2001

Eurovision Song Contest 2001
Dates
Final 12 May 2001 (2001-05-12)
Host
Venue Parken Stadium, Copenhagen, Denmark
Presenter(s)
Directed by Jan Frifelt
Executive supervisor Christine Marchal-Ortiz
Executive producer Jørgen Ramskov
Host broadcaster Danmarks Radio (DR)
Opening act "Fly on the Wings of Love" and "Walk Right Back" performed by the Olsen Brothers
Interval act Medley of Aqua hits performed by Aqua feat. Safri Duo
Participants
Number of entries 23
Debuting countries None
Returning countries
Withdrawing countries
Vote
Voting system Each country awarded 12, 10, 8-1 points to their 10 favourite songs.
Nul points None
Winning song

The Eurovision Song Contest 2001 was the 46th edition of the annual Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Copenhagen, Denmark, following the Olsen Brothers' win at the 2000 contest in Stockholm, Sweden with the song "Fly on the Wings of Love". The hosting marked the second time the contest was held on Danish soil, after the 1964 contest - 37 years earlier. 23 countries took part in the contest, which was held on 12 May 2001. The host venue was the Parken Stadium - the largest venue to ever host the contest as of 2018. A total of 35,000 spectators saw the show live from within the stadium, breaking the record of 16,000 held by the previous year's hosts Sweden.[1]

The show was opened by the Olsen Brothers, with a snippet from their winning song "Fly on the Wings of Love", followed by their latest single "Walk Right Back", which was already a smash hit in Denmark at the time. The presenters were Danish journalist and TV-show presenter Natasja Crone Back and the famous Danish actor Søren Pilmark who spoke most of their announcements in rhyming couplets.

France, Greece and Slovenia were the heavy favourites to win the contest; however, as the voting progressed it became a two-horse race between Estonia and the host country Denmark.[2] The contest was won by Estonia, represented by Tanel Padar, Dave Benton & 2XL with the song "Everybody", written by Ivar Must and Maian-Anna Karmas, which scored a total of 198 points. The host nation, Denmark, finished in 2nd place with 177 points - beaten by 21 points. Coming 3rd were Greece with 147 points - giving the country their best result up till this point. France came 4th with 142 points, and in 5th place were Sweden with 100 points.

Dave Benton, who was born and raised in Aruba, was the first black person and, at the age of 50 years and 101 days, the oldest contestant at the time to win the contest.[1]

Location

Parken Stadium, Copenhagen - host venue of the 2001 contest.

Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark was the host city for the 46th edition of Eurovision. The venue choice for the contest was Parken Stadium, a football stadium in the Indre Østerbro district of Copenhagen, Denmark, built from 1990–1992.

Format

The logo of the 2001 Eurovision Song Contest was made out of four circles, placed in the shape of a heart. The four circles were also present in the stage design, with the light construction was made of the same four rings.[2]

The Danish national broadcaster faced some problems whilst organising the contest such as the lack of funds and the search for a suitable venue. The event was eventually located in the football stadium Parken, after the company running the stadium agreed to add a retractable roof to the building. This solution made it the biggest venue ever to host a Eurovision Song Contest, but the scale of it wasn't entirely a success: many of the 38,000 people in the audience could not see the stage, and for many entries the hall appeared to be too big.[2]

Changes occurred in the qualification process for the 2002 Contest: along with the "Big 4" countries, the top 15 placed countries would qualify for next year's competition. The other spots for 2002 would be filled by countries that were excluded from the 2001 contest because of their low point average for the years 1996–2000.[2]

Incidents

Controversy was again rife in the contest: the United Kingdom TV commentator Terry Wogan repeatedly made critical comments about the hosts and dubbed them "Doctor Death and the Tooth Fairy/The Little Mermaid" after providing their entire commentary in rhyming couplets.[3] The Danes were so offended that the BBC was obliged to issue an apology on Wogan's comments.[3] Controversy also surrounded the Swedish song, "Listen To Your Heartbeat", which was repeatedly accused as a plagiarism of the Belgian entry for the 1996 Contest, "Liefde is een kaartspel".[4] Eventually the EBU decided for the matter to be settled in court, with the song allowed to compete as long as the courts did not declare the song as plagiarism.[2][5] At first this was denied by the Swedish songwriters, one of whom was Thomas G:son, but after the Belgian songwriters and the author's organisation SABAM pressed for legal action, a cash settlement was agreed.[6][7]

During the voting the Danish band Aqua performed with a medley of their singles, with percussion ensemble Safri Duo performing in the medley.[2] Although enjoyable, people complained about it being a little bit "rude" as there was some swearing during the performance, both at the beginning and end of "Barbie Girl".

Participating countries

Due to the EBU's relegation rule of the lowest ranked countries from the contest had to miss the follow year's contest, meant several countries had to withdraw, while relegated countries from the 1999 contest were able to return this year. Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, and Slovenia returned, while Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Finland, Macedonia, Romania, and Switzerland, the seven countries with the lowest average result in the past five contests, were relegated. This brought the total number of participating countries to twenty-three.[1]

Returning artists

Tanel Padar was a backing vocalist for Ines in 2000.

Results

Draw Country Artist Song Language[8] Place Points
01  Netherlands Michelle "Out On My Own" English 18 16
02  Iceland Two Tricky "Angel" English 22 3
03  Bosnia and Herzegovina Nino Pršeš "Hano" Bosnian, English 14 29
04  Norway Haldor Lægreid "On My Own" English 22 3
05  Israel Tal Sondak "En Davar" (אין דבר) Hebrew 16 25
06  Russia Mumiy Troll "Lady Alpine Blue" English 12 37
07  Sweden Friends "Listen to Your Heartbeat" English 5 100
08  Lithuania SKAMP "You Got Style" English, Lithuanian 13 35
09  Latvia Arnis Mednis "Too Much" English 18 16
10  Croatia Vanna "Strings of My Heart" English 10 42
11  Portugal MTM "Só sei ser feliz assim" Portuguese 17 18
12  Ireland Gary O'Shaughnessy "Without Your Love" English 21 6
13  Spain David Civera "Dile que la quiero" Spanish 6 76
14  France Natasha St-Pier "Je n'ai que mon âme" French, English 4 142
15  Turkey Sedat Yüce "Sevgiliye Son" Turkish, English 11 41
16  United Kingdom Lindsay Dracass "No Dream Impossible" English 15 28
17  Slovenia Nuša Derenda "Energy" English 7 70
18  Poland Piasek "2 Long" English 20 11
19  Germany Michelle "Wer Liebe lebt" German, English 8 66
20  Estonia Tanel Padar, Dave Benton & 2XL "Everybody" English 1 198
21  Malta Fabrizio Faniello "Another Summer Night" English 9 48
22  Greece Antique "Die for You" Greek, English 3 147
23  Denmark Rollo & King "Never Ever Let You Go" English 2 177

Scoreboard

The majority of participating countries held a televote, where the top ten most voted for songs were awarded the 12, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 points. This year the EBU introduced for the first time a mix of voting systems (50% televoting and 50% jury) for those countries that didn't want to use 100% televoting. Only three votes were allowed per household.[9] According to the EBU rules (published on 05/10/00), every broadcaster was free to make a choice between the full televoting system and the mixed 50-50 system. In exceptional circumstances, where televoting was not possible at all, only a jury was used: Bosnia & Herzegovina, Turkey and Russia. Only a few countries are confirmed to have used the mixed voting system: Croatia, Greece and Malta.

Voting procedure used:
Red: Televote.
Blue: Jury.
Purple: 50/50
Voters
Netherlands 165164
Iceland 312
Bosnia and Herzegovina 29410717
Norway 33
Israel 2561072
Russia 3753108425
Sweden 1007328226458528857810
Lithuania 3551241015142
Latvia 1688
Croatia 4271053107
Portugal 18612
Ireland 615
Spain 7672541254735631138
France 14284127212677612731661061046
Turkey 4137774103
United Kingdom 2823333241223
Slovenia 704610614748221645
Poland 112351
Germany 66138111061063241514
Estonia 1981210410668121221088121212121012128
Malta 48315731421312312
Greece 1476888105125254512357888675
Denmark 1771012127106101281274410107121266

12 points

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

N.ContestantVoting nation
9EstoniaGreece, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, Turkey, United Kingdom
6DenmarkIceland, Croatia, Estonia, Germany, Ireland, Norway
3FranceBosnia & Herzegovina, Portugal, Russia
2GreeceSpain, Sweden
1 SpainIsrael
MaltaDenmark
PortugalFrance

International broadcasts and voting

The table below shows the order in which votes were cast during the 2001 contest along with the spokesperson who was responsible for announcing the votes for their respective country. Each national broadcaster also sent a commentator to the contest, in order to provide coverage of the contest in their own native language. Details of the commentators and the broadcasting station for which they represented are also included in the table below.[1]

Voting order Country Spokespersons Commentator Broadcaster
01  Netherlands
Willem van Beusekom Nederland 2[10]
Hijlco Span Nederlands Radio 2
02  Iceland Eva María Jónsdóttir Gísli Marteinn Baldursson Sjónvarpið[11]
03  Bosnia and Herzegovina Segmedina Srna Ismeta Dervoz-Krvavac BHT1
04  Norway Roald Øyen Jostein Pedersen NRK1[12]
Stein Dag Jensen NRK P1[13]
05  Israel Yoav Ginai[14] No commentator IBA
Daniel Pe'er Reshet Gimel
06  Russia Larisa Verbitskaya Alexandr Anatolievich & Konstantin Mikhailov Public Russian Television
Vadim Dolgachev Voice of Russia
07  Sweden Josefine Sundström[15] Henrik Olsson SVT1[15]
Carolina Norén SR P3[16]
08  Lithuania Loreta Tarozaitė[17] Darius Užkuraitis LTV
09  Latvia
Kārlis Streips Latvijas Televīzija
10  Croatia Danijela Trbović[18] Ante Batinović HRT 1[19]
Draginja Balaš HR 2
11  Portugal Margarida Mercês de Mello[20] Eládio Clímaco RTP1[20]
12  Ireland Bláthnaid Ní Chofaigh Marty Whelan RTÉ One[21]
Larry Gogan RTÉ Radio 1
13  Spain Jennifer Rope José Luis Uribarri TVE1[22]
14  France Marc-Olivier Fogiel & Dave France 3[24]
Olivier Chiabodo France Bleu
15  Turkey Meltem Ersan Yazgan Ömer Önder TRT 1
Ümit Tunçağ TRT Radyo 3
16  United Kingdom Colin Berry Terry Wogan BBC One
Ken Bruce BBC Radio 2
17  Slovenia Mojca Mavec Andrea F SLO1
18  Poland Maciej Orłoś Artur Orzech TVP1[25]
19  Germany Axel Bulthaupt Peter Urban Das Erste[26]
Thomas Mohr Deutschlandfunk/NDR 2[27]
20  Estonia Ilomai Küttim "Elektra" Marko Reikop Eesti Televisioon[28]
Vello Rand ERR Raadio 2
21  Malta Marbeck Spiteri[29] Alfred Borg TVM
22  Greece Alexis Kostalas[30] Dafni Bokota ET1[31]
Giorgos Mitropoulos ERA1
23  Denmark
Hans Otto Bisgaard and Hilda Heick DR1[32]
-  Australia1 (non-participating country) Terry Wogan
Effie
SBS
-  Austria (non-participating country) Andi Knoll ORF1
Stermann & Grissemann FM4[33]
-  Belgium (non-participating country) André Vermeulen and Anja Daems VRT TV1[34]
Jean-Pierre Hautier RTBF La Une[24]
Julien Put and Michel Follet VRT Radio 2
Laurent Daube and Éric Russon RTBF La Première
-  Belarus (non-participating country) Alex Krugliyakov BT
-  Cyprus (non-participating country) Evi Papamichail RIK 1[35]
-  Finland Jani Juntunen and Asko Murtomäki YLE TV1[36]
Iris Mattilalähde and Tarja Närhi YLE Radio Suomi
-  Macedonia (non-participating country) Milanka Rašik MTV 2
-  Romania (non-participating country) Andreea Marin & Leonard Miron TVR2
-   Switzerland (non-participating country) Sandra Studer SF2
Phil Mundwiller TSR 1
Jonathan Tedesco TSI 1
-  Yugoslavia2 (non-participating country) Unknown YU Info[37]
1.^ Although Australia is not itself eligible to enter, the event was broadcast on SBS. As is the case each year, it did not however broadcast it live due to the difference in Australian time zones. This year, the broadcast contained a locally produced addition of a studio audience of young representatives from the competing countries. However, a number of complaints saw the United Kingdom's broadcast, including commentary from Terry Wogan, shown a few weeks later.[38]
2.^ After the breakup of Yugoslavia, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was last participated in 1992. YU Info channel broadcast the show, although Yugoslavia did not participate.

Official album

Eurovision Song Contest: Copenhagen 2001
Compilation album by Eurovision Song Contest
Released 5 May 2001
Genre Pop
Length 70:09
Label EMI / CMC
Eurovision Song Contest chronology
Eurovision Song Contest: Stockholm 2000
(2000)
Eurovision Song Contest: Copenhagen 2001
(2001)
Eurovision Song Contest: Tallinn 2002
(2002)

Eurovision Song Contest: Copenhagen 2001 was the official compilation album of the 2001 Contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by EMI Records and CMC International on 5 May 2001. The album featured all 23 songs that entered in the 2001 contest.[39]

Track listing
No.TitleArtistLength
1."Out On My Own" (Netherlands)Michelle Courtens3:21
2."Angel" (Iceland)Two Tricky3:06
3."Hano" (Bosnia and Herzegovina)Nino Pršeš3:00
4."On My Own" (Norway)Haldor Lægreid3:04
5."En Davar" (Israel)Tal Sondak3:03
6."Lady Alpine Blue" (Russia)Mumiy Troll3:00
7."Listen To Your Heartbeat" (Sweden)Friends3:04
8."You Got Style" (Lithuania)SKAMP2:58
9."Too Much" (Latvia)Arnis Mednis2:52
10."Strings of My Heart" (Croatia)Vanna2:58
11."Só sei ser feliz assim" (Portugal)MTM3:02
12."Without Your Love" (Ireland)Gary O'Shaughnessy3:00
13."Dile que la quiero" (Spain)David Civera2:56
14."Je n'ai que mon âme" (France)Natasha St-Pier2:50
15."Sevgiliye Son" (Turkey)Sedat Yüce3:00
16."No Dream Impossible" (United Kingdom)Lindsay Dracass3:02
17."Energy" (Slovenia)Nuša Derenda2:58
18."2 Long" (Poland)Piasek3:03
19."To Live For Love" (Germany)Michelle4:06
20."Everybody" (Estonia)Tanel Padar, Dave Benton, 2XL2:56
21."Another Summer Night" (Malta)Fabrizio Faniello2:54
22."Die for You" (Greece)Antique2:56
23."Never Ever Let You Go" (Denmark)Rollo & King3:00
Total length:70:09

Charts

Chart (2001) Peak
position
German Compilation Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[40] 4

References

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  3. 1 2 Evensen, Geir (16 May 2001). "Wogan i hardt vær". NRK (in Norwegian). Retrieved 16 September 2014.
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  5. "Swedish song cleared for Copenhagen by EBU". Eurovision Song Contest. Archived from the original on 18 April 2001. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  6. ESCtoday.com, Swedish entry 2001 now officially plagiarism
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