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    • Concours Eurovision de la chanson

      • The Eurovision Song Contest (French: Concours Eurovision de la chanson) was first held in 1956, originally conceived as an experiment in transnational television broadcasting.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › History_of_the_Eurovision_Song_Contest
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  2. Marcel Bezençon (1907–1981) was one of the key figures involved in creating the Eurovision Song Contest. The Eurovision Song Contest (French: Concours Eurovision de la chanson) was first held in 1956, originally conceived as an experiment in transnational television broadcasting.

  3. The Eurovision Song Contest began as a technical experiment in television broadcasting: the live, simultaneous, transnational broadcast that Europe has now been watching for nearly 70 years was in the late 1950s a marvel. The first Eurovision Song Contest was held on May 24, 1956, and saw seven nations compete: the Netherlands, Switzerland ...

  4. May 21, 2024 · The competition, begun in 1956, gathers performers—selected at the national level by each participating country’s public broadcasting service—from across Europe and representing virtually every genre of popular music. The first Eurovision was held on May 24, 1956, in Lugano, Switzerland. First held on May 24, 1956, in Lugano, Switzerland ...

    Year
    Song, Songwriter (performer, Country)
    2023
    "Tattoo," Jimmy Jansson, Jimmy Joker, ...
    2022
    "Stefania," Ivan Klymenko, Oleh Psiuk, ...
    2021
    "Zitti e buoni," Damiano David, Victoria ...
    2020
    Not held because of the COVID-19 ...
  5. The first contests were produced under the name of Grand Prix Eurovision de la Chanson Européenne in French and as the Eurovision Song Contest Grand Prix in English, with similar variations used in the languages of each of the broadcasting countries.

    • Music Competition
    • The First Ever
    • Switzerland Wins!
    • Facts & Figures

    Inspired by the Italian Sanremo Festival, the idea to organise a pan-European competition for light music was born at a meeting of the European Broadcasting Union in Monaco, back in 1955. It was decided that the first ever Eurovision Song Contest would be hosted the following year in the Swiss resort of Lugano. The 1956 Eurovision Song Contest was ...

    The winning song, as announced by the head of the jury, was Refrain, performed by Lys Assia from Switzerland. Lys Assia is the only Swiss contestant to have ever won the Eurovision Song Contest, as Switzerland's other winning song in 1988, Ne Partez Pas Sans Moi, was performed by Céline Dion, who is of Canadian origin.

    The broadcasters from Austria, Denmark and the United Kingdom missed the deadline for participating in the first ever Eurovision Song Contest and only appeared one year later. Only solo artists wer...
    All participating countries sent two jury members to Lugano in order to vote secretly on the songs. The jury members from Luxembourg could not make it to Lugano, so the EBU allowed Swiss nationals...
    The scores of the voting have never been made public, leaving room for lots of speculation. Attempts to reconstruct the voting by interviewing jury members over the past five decades did not lead t...
  6. May 22, 2021 · The first Eurovision Song Contest was duly staged seven months later in Lugano, Switzerland, on 24 May 1956, with Swiss entry Lys Assia winning for her song “Refrain”. The name “Eurovision”...

  7. Jul 19, 2023 · The inaugural contest took place in Lugano, Switzerland, in 1956, with seven countries participating. The first Eurovision was a far cry from the extravagant spectacle we know today. Each country presented two songs, and the voting was done by a jury of experts from each participating country.

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