Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 1984

Eurovision Song Contest 1984
Country  Belgium
National selection
Selection process Eurosong
Selection date(s) 2 March 1984
Selected entrant Jacques Zegers
Selected song "Avanti la vie"
Finals performance
Final result 5th=, 70 points
Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1983 1984 1985►

Belgium was represented by Jacques Zegers, with the song '"Avanti la vie", at the 1984 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 5 May in Luxembourg City. Zegers was the winner of the Belgian national final for the contest, held on 2 March.

Final

French-language broadcaster RTBF was in charge of the selection of the Belgian entry for the 1984 Contest. The final was held at the RTBF studios in Brussels with ten songs participating. Voting was by a 50/50 split between an expert jury and 500 randomly chosen TV viewers. Only the top four placings were announced, with "Avanti la vie" being declared the winner.[1]

Final - 2 March 1984
Draw Artist Song Place
1 Marianne Croix "En écoutant Mahler" -
2 Albert Delchambre "Trainer en ville" -
3 Anne-Marie du Bru "Voyage" -
4 Formule II "Merci à la vie" 3
5 Martine Laurent "Y'a des amours heureux" 2
6 Jo Lemaire "Hymne à l'amour" -
7 Léonil McCormick "Donnez-moi des ailes" -
8 Nightforce "Lance un SOS" -
9 Franck Olivier "L'amour est fort" 4
10 Jacques Zegers "Avanti la vie" 1

Marianne Croix would go on to the German semi-final of 1987 with the song "Ich fliege zu dir"

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Zegers performed 8th in the running order, following Cyprus and preceding Ireland. At the close of the voting "Avanti la vie" had received 70 points from 11 countries (including maximum 12s from France and Luxembourg), placing Belgium joint fifth (with Italy) of the 19 competing entries. The Belgian jury awarded its 12 points to Ireland.[2]

Points awarded by Belgium

12 points Ireland
10 points France
8 points Denmark
7 points Sweden
6 points Germany
5 points  Switzerland
4 points Turkey
3 points Spain
2 points United Kingdom
1 point Norway

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.