Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 1977

Eurovision Song Contest 1977
Country  Norway
National selection
Selection process Melodi Grand Prix 1977
Selection date(s) 19 February 1977
Selected entrant Anita Skorgan
Selected song "Casanova"
Finals performance
Final result 14th=, 18 points
Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1976 1977 1978►

Norway was represented by Anita Skorgan, with the song '"Casanova", at the 1977 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 7 May in London. "Casanova" was chosen as the Norwegian entry at the Melodi Grand Prix on 28 February. This was the first of three Eurovision appearances (and a further uncredited fourth) for Skorgan.


Final

The MGP was held at the studios of broadcaster NRK in Oslo, hosted by Vidar Lønn-Arnesen. Six songs took part in the final, with the winner chosen by voting from six regional juries. Other participants included former Norwegian representatives Kirsti Sparboe (1965, 1967 and 1969), Odd Børre (1968) and Benny Borg (1972).[1]

MGP - 19 February 1977
Draw Artist Song Points Place
1 Rune Larsen "Robåt rock" 59 2
2 Dag Spantell "Jonathan" 42 5
3 Odd Børre "Make Love Not War" 25 6
4 Anita Skorgan "Casanova" 91 1
5 Axel Gran "Ikke mitt bord" 55 4
6 Kirsti Sparboe & Benny Borg "Sang" 58 3

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Skorgan performed 5th in the running order, following Austria and preceding Germany. Like the previous year's Norwegian entry "Mata Hari", "Casanova" was an uptempo song with a disco-style arrangement, but for a second year the national juries showed that this was not the type of song they were looking for. At the close of voting "Casanova" had picked up only 18 points (the highest being 5s from Belgium and Italy), placing Norway joint 14th (with Portugal) of the 18 entries. The Norwegian jury awarded its 12 points to Ireland.[2]

Postcards controversy

On the night of the broadcast, many viewers wondered why they were merely shown panning shots over the audience in between the songs, rather than the postcard-style clips of the next performers which had become traditional in the 1970s. It later transpired that the planned postcards had been filmed by the BBC during a night out for all the performers at a London nightclub, but when they were previewed NRK had objected as in several of the clips Skorgan could be seen drinking alcohol at 18 years old she was below the age for legal alcohol consumption in Norway (although not in the United Kingdom) and behaving in a manner which NRK deemed inappropriate. The Swedish delegation also complained that their performers had been caught on film conducting themselves in a less than exemplary way. As there was insufficient time or opportunity left to film a different set of postcards for all the participating countries, the BBC was left with no option but to scrap them completely.


See also

References

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