Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 1985

Eurovision Song Contest 1985
Country  Belgium
National selection
Selection process Internal Selection
Selection date(s) 1 April 1985
Selected entrant Linda Lepomme
Selected song "Laat me nu gaan"
Finals performance
Final result 19th, 7 points
Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1984 1985 1986►

Belgium was represented by Linda Lepomme, with the song '"Laat me nu gaan", at the 1985 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Gothenburg, Sweden on 4 May. Flemish broadcaster BRT was responsible for selection of the 1985 Belgian entrant and, unusually for BRT at the time, opted for internal selection rather than a public final. The selection process was fraught with problems before the last-minute announcement of singer and song was made.

Selection

BRT selected singer Mireille Capelle as their entrant, to perform a tango-flavoured song with music by Frédéric Devreese. The song was chosen in an unfinished state, without lyrics. Capelle and Devreese subsequently submitted a set of lyrics by one of Flanders' best-known and respected authors Hugo Claus. BRT were not impressed however, and proposed a different set of lyrics by Bert Vivier. Capelle and Devreese refused to have anything to do with the Vivier lyrics, and gave BRT an ultimatum that they would disassociate themselves from the selection unless their lyrics of choice were approved. When BRT refused to back down, Capelle and Devreese were as good as their word and withdrew their participation.

This left BRT facing a race against time to find an alternative song and performer: several singers and songs were put forward and found unsuitable before BRT finally settled on singer/actress Lepomme with a completely new song "Laat me nu gaan". The song was presented publicly at the last minute, very close to the EBU deadline for song submission, on 1 April 1985 (the date was noted with some irony by observers aware of the to-ing and fro-ing which had gone on).

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Lepomme performed 8th in the running order, following Turkey and preceding Portugal. At the close of the voting "Laat me nu gaan" had received only 7 points (all from Turkey), placing Belgium last of the 19 entries, the sixth time the country had finished the evening at the bottom of the scoreboard. The Belgian jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners Norway.[1]

Points Awarded by Belgium[2]

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

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.