Eurovision Song Contest 1965

International song competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eurovision Song Contest 1965

The Eurovision Song Contest 1965 was the 10th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 20 March 1965 in the Sala di Concerto della RAI in Naples, Italy and presented by Renata Mauro. Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI), the contest was held in Italy following the country's victory at the 1964 contest with the song "Non ho l'età" by Gigliola Cinquetti. Eighteen countries were represented at the contest  a new record number of participants. Joining the sixteen countries which had participated in the previous year's event were Sweden, who returned after a one-year absence, and Ireland, in its first-ever contest entry.

Quick Facts Dates, Final ...
Eurovision Song Contest 1965
Thumb
Dates
Final20 March 1965 (1965-03-20)
Host
VenueSala di Concerto della RAI
Naples, Italy
Presenter(s)Renata Mauro
DirectorRomolo Siena
Musical directorGianni Ferrio
EBU scrutineerMiroslav Vilček
Host broadcasterRadiotelevisione italiana (RAI)
Websiteeurovision.tv/event/naples-1965
Participants
Number of entries18
Debuting countries Ireland
Returning countries Sweden
Non-returning countriesNone
  • Thumb
         Participating countries
Vote
Voting systemEach country awarded 5, 3 and 1 points (or combinations thereof) to their three favourite songs
Winning song Luxembourg
"Poupée de cire, poupée de son"
1964 Eurovision Song Contest 1966
Close

The winner was Luxembourg with the song "Poupée de cire, poupée de son", written by Serge Gainsbourg, and performed by the French singer France Gall. It was Luxembourg's second contest victory, following the nation's win in 1961. The United Kingdom finished in second place for the fifth time, France placed third, Austria achieved its best-ever result with a fourth-place finish, and four countries received nul points and finished in joint last place. It was the first time that a pop song had won the contest, and marked the beginning of a sea change in the contest that saw it develop from an event dominated by chansons and ballads in its early years to one more greatly associated with schlager and pop music for the remainder of the 1960s and into the 1970s and 1980s.

Location

Thumb
Sala di Concerto della RAI, Naples – host venue of the 1965 contest

The 1965 contest took place in Naples, Italy, following the country's victory at the 1964 contest with the song "Non ho l'età" performed by Gigliola Cinquetti. It was the first time that Italy had hosted the event.[1] The chosen venue was the Sala di Concerto della RAI, in the Fuorigrotta suburb of the city.[2][3][4] Part of RAI's production centre in Naples, the auditorium was built between 1958 and 1963 and had space for an audience of around 1,000 people.[5][6] Naples had been chosen by RAI as the host city due to the availability of the necessary equipment within the city's production facilities, as well as to honour Naples' history as a center for music in Europe, including the prestige which the canzone napoletana holds.[4]

Participants

Summarize
Perspective
Quick Facts – Participation summaries by country ...
Eurovision Song Contest 1965  Participation summaries by country
Close

A new record number of 18 countries submitted entries for the contest. Sweden returned after a one-year absence, and Ireland made its first ever appearance.[2] For the first time in the contest's history a competing entry was performed entirely in a language which was not the official language of that country, namely the Swedish entry which was performed entirely in English.[7][8]

Three of the competing artists at this year's event represented their countries for the second time: Conchita Bautista had represented Spain in 1961, Vice Vukov had represented Yugoslavia in 1963, and Udo Jürgens had represented Austria in 1964.[9][10][11]

More information Country, Broadcaster ...
Eurovision Song Contest 1965 participants[12][13]
Country Broadcaster Artist Song Language Songwriter(s) Conductor
 Austria ORF Udo Jürgens "Sag ihr, ich lass sie grüßen" German
Gianni Ferrio
 Belgium BRT Lize Marke "Als het weer lente is" Dutch
  • Jaak Dreesen [nl]
  • Jef Van den Berg [nl]
Gaston Nuyts [nl]
 Denmark DR Birgit Brüel "For din skyld" Danish Arne Lamberth [sv]
 Finland YLE Viktor Klimenko "Aurinko laskee länteen" Finnish George de Godzinsky
 France ORTF Guy Mardel "N'avoue jamais" French Franck Pourcel
 Germany NDR[a] Ulla Wiesner "Paradies, wo bist du?" German
Alfred Hause [de]
 Ireland Butch Moore "I'm Walking the Streets in the Rain" English
  • Teresa Conlon
  • Joe Harrigan
  • George Prendergast
Gianni Ferrio
 Italy RAI Bobby Solo "Se piangi, se ridi" Italian Gianni Ferrio
 Luxembourg CLT France Gall "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" French Serge Gainsbourg Alain Goraguer
 Monaco TMC Marjorie Noël "Va dire à l'amour" French
  • Raymond Bernard [de]
  • Jacques Mareuil [fr]
Raymond Bernard
 Netherlands NTS Conny Vandenbos "Het is genoeg" Dutch
  • Johnny Holshuyzen [nl]
  • Joke van Soest
Dolf van der Linden
 Norway NRK Kirsti Sparboe "Karusell" Norwegian Jolly Kramer-Johansen Øivind Bergh
 Portugal RTP Simone de Oliveira "Sol de inverno" Portuguese
  • Jerónimo Bragança [pt]
  • Carlos Nóbrega e Sousa [pt]
Fernando de Carvalho [pt]
 Spain TVE Conchita Bautista "Qué bueno, qué bueno" Spanish Antonio Figueroa Egea Adolfo Ventas Rodríguez
 Sweden SR Ingvar Wixell "Absent Friend" English William Lind [sv]
  Switzerland SRG SSR Yovanna "Non, à jamais sans toi" French
  • Bob Calfati
  • Jean Charles
Mario Robbiani
 United Kingdom BBC Kathy Kirby "I Belong" English Eric Robinson
 Yugoslavia JRT Vice Vukov "Čežnja" (Чежња) Serbo-Croatian
  • Julio Marić
  • Žarko Roje
Radivoje Spasić
Close

Production and format

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
The stage of the Sala di Concerto (pictured in 1963 at its inauguration); the auditorium's pipe organ was prominently featured during the contest.

The contest was organised and broadcast by the Italian public broadcaster Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI).[2] Romolo Siena [it] served as director, Francesco De Martino served as designer, and Gianni Ferrio served as musical director, leading 48 musicians of the RAI Orchestra.[6][15][16][17] Each country was allowed to nominate their own musical director to lead the orchestra during the performance of their country's entry, with the host musical director also conducting for those countries which did not nominate their own conductor.[17][13] The event was presented by Renata Mauro and was overseen on behalf of the contest organisers, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), by Miroslav Vilček as scrutineer.[2][16][18][19]

The stage design within the venue had the orchestra situated in the centre, on top a transparent dais which allowed for special lighting effects to be made during the performances.[6] Stage left was a performance area which the majority of artists used for their performances, with a backdrop featuring the Eurovision logo, while stage right was the scoreboard. The performance area was also used by Mauro in her opening and closing remarks, and introduce the competing acts.[15] The large pipe organ within the RAI auditorium, with over 9,000 pipes, featured prominently behind the orchestra during the contest, as well as during the voting sequence when Mauro was pictured standing in front of it.[5][6][15]

Each country, participating through a single EBU member broadcaster, was represented by one song performed by up to two people on stage.[2][20] No entry was allowed to be commercially published before 10 February 1965; this caused an issue for the Italian entry, "Se piangi, se ridi" by Bobby Solo, which had won the 15th Sanremo Music Festival on 30 January, as around 240,000 copies of the single release had been available in Italy by the cut-off date. Although a small number of the other broadcasters participating in the event raised objections to the song competing, given that RAI was hosting the event, with disqualification of the host broadcaster considered impossible, and an understanding that there was little time available to select a new song, "Se piangi, se ridi" was ultimately allowed to compete.[17][21]

The results of the event were determined through jury voting, with the same voting system introduced for the previous year's event retained. Each jury comprised ten individuals representing the average television viewer and radio listener; as such no individuals in the music industry, including composers, music publishers, and people employed by record companies, were able to sit on the jury. Each jury comprised twenty members, who each had three votes to award in total, which could be given to one song or divided across two or three songs. Jurors could not vote for their own country, and no abstentions were allowed. The song which was awarded the most votes received five points, the second-highest three points, and the third-highest one point. If only two songs had been awarded votes they would receive six and three points for first and second respectively, and if only one song was awarded votes they would receive nine points.[22][23][24][25]

The draw to determine the running order took place on 9 February 1965 in Geneva, Switzerland. Each country's delegation was provided a 45-minute slot to rehearse with the orchestra in the contest venue.[6] Rehearsals commenced on 17 March 1965, kicking-off with Switzerland, with the UK, Spain, Italy, Germany and Austria also rehearsing on the first day. Rehearsals continued on 18 March for Norway, Portugal, Monaco, Sweden, France and Belgium, and on 19 March for Ireland, Denmark, Luxembourg, Finland, Yugoslavia and the Netherlands.[3][6] Technical rehearsals were held on 20 March, followed by two full dress rehearsals ahead of the live broadcast that evening; the second dress rehearsal was also heard by the national juries.[6]

Contest overview

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
France Gall, the winning artist of the 1965 contest, during her Eurovision performance
Thumb
Mario Del Monaco (right) presenting the winners' medallions to Gall (center) and Serge Gainsbourg (left)
Thumb
A colourised photo of Gall with her winner's medallion in front of the scoreboard

The contest was held at 20 March 1965 at 22:00 (CET) and lasted 1 hour and 38 minutes.[13][26] The interval act was a performance by the Italian operatic tenor Mario Del Monaco, who gave a rendition of "O sole mio", although rather than singing live he mimed his performance to a previously recorded version.[4][16][17] The prize for the winning artist and songwriters, a medallion engraved with the Eurovision logo designed by Hans Mettel [de], was presented by Del Monaco.[16][23][27]

The winner was Luxembourg represented by the song "Poupée de cire, poupée de son", written by Serge Gainsbourg and performed by the French singer France Gall.[28][29] It was Luxembourg's second contest win, following victory at the 1961 contest.[30] The United Kingdom came in second for the fifth time, while France placed third.[2][25] Austria, in fourth place, achieved its best-ever result,[11] while four countries, namely Belgium, Finland, Germany and Spain, finished in joint last place with nul points.[2]

The contest was a tumultuous experience for Gall who, at 17 years old, was the youngest competitor at this year's event. During rehearsals the musicians in the orchestra were less than impressed at Gall and the song, resorting to booing and whistling as a form of disrespect and protest at how fast the song was.[31][32][33] This infuriated Gainsbourg, who insulted the orchestra and stormed out while threatening to leave Naples entirely and return to Paris, leaving Gall alone with an angry orchestra to finish the rehearsal.[31][34][35] While the fractious relationship between Gainsbourg and the orchestra was eventually settled, this experience led to self-doubt creeping in for Gall; as Gall recounted in 2015, this led to a shaky and nervy performance during the contest itself, which she believed had tanked her chances of doing well in the contest.[33][34][35] When she looked for support over the telephone from her then-boyfriend, the French singer Claude François, he supposedly reinforced her doubts, telling her she sang out-of-key.[34] Ultimately, however, Gall would take the lead from the first round of votes, and retain the lead until the very end, beating the UK's Kathy Kirby by six points.[25][34] Upon her victory, before going out on stage for the award presentation and reprise performance of the winning song, Gall called François again, who broke up with her over the phone;[33][35] Kirby meanwhile, who had been the pre-contest favourite to win, was upset at losing to the young Gall and supposedly stormed into the Luxembourgish delegation's dressing room, claiming the contest had been rigged in Gall's favour, and slapped her.[33][34][35] Gall was subsequently in tears as she went back on stage, which were interpreted as tears of joy by the assembled press.[31][33][35]

More information R/O, Country ...
Results of the Eurovision Song Contest 1965[36]
R/O Country Artist Song Points Place
1  Netherlands Conny Vandenbos "Het is genoeg" 5 11
2  United Kingdom Kathy Kirby "I Belong" 26 2
3  Spain Conchita Bautista "Qué bueno, qué bueno" 0 15
4  Ireland Butch Moore "I'm Walking the Streets in the Rain" 11 6
5  Germany Ulla Wiesner "Paradies, wo bist du?" 0 15
6  Austria Udo Jürgens "Sag ihr, ich lass sie grüßen" 16 4
7  Norway Kirsti Sparboe "Karusell" 1 13
8  Belgium Lize Marke "Als het weer lente is" 0 15
9  Monaco Marjorie Noël "Va dire à l'amour" 7 9
10  Sweden Ingvar Wixell "Absent Friend" 6 10
11  France Guy Mardel "N'avoue jamais" 22 3
12  Portugal Simone de Oliveira "Sol de inverno" 1 13
13  Italy Bobby Solo "Se piangi, se ridi" 15 5
14  Denmark Birgit Brüel "For din skyld" 10 7
15  Luxembourg France Gall "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" 32 1
16  Finland Viktor Klimenko "Aurinko laskee länteen" 0 15
17  Yugoslavia Vice Vukov "Čežnja" 2 12
18   Switzerland Yovanna "Non, à jamais sans toi" 8 8
Close

Spokespersons

Each participating broadcaster appointed a spokesperson, connected to the contest venue via telephone lines and responsible for announcing, in English or French, the votes for its respective country.[37][38] Known spokespersons at the 1965 contest are listed below.

  •  Finland  Poppe Berg [fi][39]
  •  Netherlands  Dick van Bommel[40]
  •  Sweden  Edvard Matz [sv][41]

Detailed voting results

Summarize
Perspective

Jury voting was used to determine the points awarded by all countries. The announcement of the results from each country was conducted in the order in which they performed, with the spokespersons announcing their country's points in English or French in ascending order.[15][25] The detailed breakdown of the points awarded by each country is listed in the tables below, with voting countries listed in the order in which they presented their votes.

More information Total score, Netherlands ...
Detailed voting results of the Eurovision Song Contest 1965[42][43]
Total score
Netherlands
United Kingdom
Spain
Ireland
Germany
Austria
Norway
Belgium
Monaco
Sweden
France
Portugal
Italy
Denmark
Luxembourg
Finland
Yugoslavia
Switzerland
Contestants
Netherlands 55
United Kingdom 265163155
Spain 0
Ireland 11353
Germany 0
Austria 163553
Norway 11
Belgium 0
Monaco 7511
Sweden 633
France 2213135315
Portugal 11
Italy 153113331
Denmark 1055
Luxembourg 325135531153
Finland 0
Yugoslavia 211
Switzerland 835
Close

5 points

The below table summarises how the maximum points available were awarded from one country to another. The winning country is shown in bold. Luxembourg and the UK each received the maximum score from four of the voting countries; Austria, Denmark and France received two sets of maximum scores each; and Ireland, Monaco, the Netherlands and Switzerland each received one maximum score.[42][43]

More information N., Contestant ...
Distribution of 5 points awarded at the Eurovision Song Contest 1965[42][43]
N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 5 points
4  Luxembourg  Austria,  Finland,  Germany,  Netherlands
 United Kingdom  Belgium,[b]  Denmark,  Spain,   Switzerland
2  Austria  Ireland,  Portugal
 Denmark  Luxembourg,  Sweden
 France  Monaco,  Yugoslavia
1  Ireland  Italy
 Monaco  United Kingdom
 Netherlands  Norway
  Switzerland  France
Close

Broadcasts

Summarize
Perspective

Each participating broadcaster was required to relay the contest via its networks. Non-participating EBU member broadcasters were also able to relay the contest as "passive participants". Broadcasters were able to send commentators to provide coverage of the contest in their own native language and to relay information about the artists and songs to their television viewers.[44] Broadcasters competing in the event were required to relay the contest via its networks; non-participating EBU member broadcasters were also able to relay the contest.[37] Broadcasters were able to send commentators to provide coverage of the contest in their own native language and to relay information about the artists and songs to their television viewers. These commentators were typically sent to the venue to report on the event, and were able to provide commentary from small booths constructed at the back of the venue, with 20 booths ultimately constructed for the event.[6][45][46]

For the first time the contest was broadcast by members of the International Radio and Television Organisation (OIRT), the counterpart of the EBU within Eastern European countries, via its Intervision network.[2][6][31] In addition to the participating countries, the contest was reportedly broadcast in Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania and the Soviet Union, with an expected global audience of 100 to 200 million.[6][47][48][49] Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators, are shown in the tables below.

More information Country, Broadcaster ...
Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Austria ORF ORF [50]
 Belgium BRT BRT [51]
RTB RTB, Premier Programme
 Denmark DR DR TV [52]
 Finland YLE TV-ohjelma 1 Aarno Walli [fi] [53][54]
Yleisohjelma [fi] Erkki Melakoski [fi]
Ruotsinkielinen ula-ohjelma Jerker Sundholm
 France ORTF Première Chaîne, France Inter Pierre Tchernia [55][56]
 Germany ARD Deutsches Fernsehen Hermann Rockmann [de] [57]
 Ireland Telefís Éireann Bunny Carr [58]
Radió Éireann Kevin Roche
 Italy RAI Programma Nazionale TV, Secondo Programma Renato Tagliani [it] [26][59]
 Luxembourg CLT Télé-Luxembourg [55]
 Netherlands NTS Nederland 1 Teddy Scholten [60][61]
NRU Hilversum 2 [62]
 Norway NRK NRK Fjernsynet, NRK Erik Diesen [63]
 Portugal RTP RTP [64]
 Spain TVE TVE, TVE Canarias[c] Federico Gallo [es] [65][66][67]
RNE RNE [66]
 Sweden SR Sveriges TV, SR P1 Berndt Friberg [sv] [68][69]
  Switzerland SRG SSR TV DRS [70]
TSR Jean Charles [fr] [71]
TSI, Radio Monte Ceneri [72]
Radio Sottens [56]
 United Kingdom BBC BBC1 David Jacobs [73]
BFBS BFBS Radio Ian Fenner [74]
 Yugoslavia JRT Televizija Beograd [75]
Televizija Ljubljana [sl] [76]
Televizija Zagreb [77]
Close
More information Country, Broadcaster ...
Broadcasters and commentators in non-participating countries
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Czechoslovakia ČST ČST [78]
 East Germany DFF DFF[d] [79]
 Hungary MTV MTV[e] [80]
 Malta MBA MTV Victor Aquilina [81]
 Poland TP TV Polska [82]
Close

Legacy

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
A colourised photo of Gall (right) and Gainsbourg (left) the day after the contest
Thumb
Ingvar Wixell, the Swedish entrant, performing at the Svensk sångfestival

The 1965 contest, and in particular its winner, has since been viewed as a monumental moment in the event's history. Although pop music had been present in the contest in past editions, the vast majority of songs and winners had fit more into the "chanson", "canzone" or ballad categories. "Poupée de cire, poupée de son", considered emblematic of the yé-yé genre, is thus commonly referred to as the contest's first pop winner, as well as the first winner which was more reflective of European popular music at the time, and its win had a big impact on the types of songs and performers which would be selected to compete in future contests.[22][83][84] Following another pop winner in 1967, the UK's Sandie Shaw and "Puppet on a String", pop songs, and in particular schlager music, would go on to become a staple of future editions of the contest, with several winners from the 1970s onwards fitting into this genre.[84][85][86]

Although past contest entries had achieved commercial success outside of their countries of origin, no previous winner had achieved the chart success that "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" went on to accomplish in the weeks and months after the contest,[87] reaching the top 10 in singles charts in Belgium, Finland, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland and West Germany, as well as in Argentina, French-speaking Canada, Japan and Singapore.[88][89][90][91][92] Gall became one of Eurovision's first breakthrough stars, and the commercial success of "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" helped pave the way for the contest to be seen as a platform to drive forward professional careers and achieve commercial success across Europe and worldwide.[34][87][93]

Gall and Gainsbourg, who had first developed a creative partnership in 1964 with "N'écoute pas les idoles" ("English: Don't listen to idols"), continued to work together after the contest, spawning further hits including the controversial "Les sucettes ("English: Lollipops"); although on the surface a song about a girl who likes lollipops, just as with "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" Gainsbourg's lyrics were laced with subtext, in this case double meanings about fellatio. Although Gall claimed that she was too young to understand this when she recorded it, it dented her artistic image and led to a rift between herself and Gainsbourg and her career soon dipped. Upon meeting her future husband, the French singer Michel Berger her career had a resurgence, and she only performed songs written by him in future years. This partnership led to her most successful album, Babacar, in 1987, which featured "Ella, elle l'a", which became a worldwide hit the same year.[29][34][94] The ending of her previous relationship with Claude François would serve as inspiration for his 1967 song "Comme d'habitude"; Paul Anka would subsequently buy the rights to adapt the song into English, which would eventually become "My Way", a hit song for Frank Sinatra in 1969.[29]

Gainsbourg returned to the contest two times as a songwriter: in 1967 he contributed another yé-yé song, "Boum-Badaboum", which represented Monaco at that year's contest where it was performed by Minouche Barelli and finished in fifth place; and in 1990 his song "White and Black Blues" performed by Joëlle Ursull came second for France.[22] Also a singer, Gainsbourg gained notoriety himself in 1969 with his song "Je t'aime... moi non plus", a duet with his then-girlfriend Jane Birkin, which although a commercial success was controversial for its overly sexual content, leading it to be banned from radio play in several countries and denounced by the Vatican.[95][96]

"Poupée de cire, poupée de son" was subsequently nominated in 2005 to compete in Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest, a special broadcast to determine the contest's most popular entry of its first 50 years as part of the contest's anniversary celebrations. One of 14 entries chosen to compete, "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" ultimately finished in fourteenth place.[97][98]

Although the contest had no specific rules about the language in which a song should be performed in, there was an implicit understanding that each country should perform in the language, or one of the languages of that country.[31] While some previous entries had been partly performed in a foreign language to that country, e.g. the 1960 and 1961 German entries, which had one verse each in French,[99][100] and the 1963 Austrian entry, which had one verse in English,[101] the Swedish entry at this year's entry was the first song to be performed entirely in a language other than that of the country it represented, in this case completely in English.[7][8] This led to protest from several of the other broadcasters following the event, which led to a rule change being implemented for the 1966 contest, explicitly stating that all countries had to be represented by a song in one of that country's official languages.[2][7] This language rule would remain until 1973, when freedom of language was once again permitted, only to be reintroduced ahead of the 1977 contest; the rule was finally abolished indefinitely for the 1999 edition and all future contests.[7]

Notes and references

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.