Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song Contest 1986

Eurovision Song Contest 1986
Country  Yugoslavia
National selection
Selection process Jugovizija 1986
Selection date(s) 7 March 1986
Selected entrant Doris Dragović
Selected song "Željo moja"
Finals performance
Final result 11th, 49 points
Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1984 1986 1987►

Yugoslavia was present at the Eurovision Song Contest 1986, held in Bergen, Norway, after opting out of the previous year's contest in Gothenburg, Sweden.

National final

The Yugoslavian national final to select their entry, Jugovizija 1986, was held on 7 March at the Palace of Youth and Sports in Priština, and was hosted by Enver Petrovci, a renowned Kosovar theatre actor.

Sixteen songs made it to the national final, which was broadcast by JRT to all of the regions of Yugoslavia. The winner was decided by the votes of eight regional juries (Sarajevo, Zagreb, Skopje, Titograd, Belgrade, Ljubljana, Pristina and Novi Sad).

The winning entry was "Željo moja," performed by Croatian singer Doris Dragović and composed by Zrinko Tutić.

DrawArtistSongTV stationPointsTVZgTVPrTVLjTVSaTVSkTVBgTVNsTVTgPlace
1Novi FosiliBoby br. 1TVZg52X7103688102
2Serki Shala, Ivana Vitalić and Shermin ZaimSve u svoje vremeTVPr117X12114
3Božidar WolfandC'est la vieTVLj1423X134113
4Violeta Redžepagić & Milica Milisavljević DugalićNoraTVPr2612X27327
5Hari Mata HariU tvojoj kosiTVSa4285X2101075
6Seid Memić "Vajta"SandraTVSk183164X412
7Dado TopićLjubavTVBg471122125X784
8Lepa BrenaMiki MicoTVNS2053X1210
9Gu-GuGugu gre v HollywoodTVLj3965X745666
10VermomentBel gulabeTVSk1010X15
11Neda UkradenŠaj, rode, šajTVSa2463X16538
12DanielPeggy SueTVTg1944101X11
13Doris DragovićŽeljo mojaTVZg57X41210127121
14Denis & DenisBraća Grimm i AndersenTVNS511088812X53
15Snježana NaumovskaOstani tuTVTg2452764X8
16Mira BeširevićNe idiTVBg108X215

At Eurovision

Dragović was the second performer on the night of the Contest, following Luxembourg and preceding France. At the close of the voting the song had received 49 points, placing 11th in a field of 20 competing countries.

References


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