Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 1983 explained

Year:1983
Country:Norway
Preselection:Melodi Grand Prix 1983
Preselection Date:25 February 1983
Entrant:Jahn Teigen
Song:Do Re Mi
Final Result:9th, 53 points

Norway was represented by Jahn Teigen, with the song "Do Re Mi", at the 1983 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 23 April in Munich. "Do Re Mi" was chosen as the Norwegian entry at the Melodi Grand Prix on 25 February. This was the third and final Eurovision appearance by Teigen. Although uncredited on this occasion, one of his backing singers was Anita Skorgan, making her fourth appearance in seven years.

Before Eurovision

Melodi Grand Prix 1983

The Melodi Grand Prix 1983 was held at the studios of broadcaster NRK in Oslo, hosted by Ivar Dyrhaug. Ten songs took part in the final, with the winner chosen by voting from 12 regional juries.[1]

Final – 25 February 1983
DrawArtistSongPointsPlace
1Ketil Stokkan"Samme charmeur"1072
2Anita Hegerland"Nå er jeg alene"577
3Elisabeth Berg"Music"2010
4Nissa Nyberget"Du ber meg om evighet"705
5Cathy Ryen"Lengsel"596
6Olav Stedje"Melodi"834
7Jahn Teigen"Do Re Mi"1201
8Inger Lise Rypdal and Freddy Berg"Elegi"379
9Susanne Fuhr"Det fineste jeg vet"458
10Dizzie Tunes"Gjennom ild og vann"983
Detailed Regional Jury Votes
DrawSong
1"Samme charmeur" 10 8 6 5 8 10 1281261012107
2"Nå er jeg alene" 6 3 7 1 3 5 4 6854557
3"Music" 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 1121220
4"Du ber meg om evighet" 3 10 8 4 5 6 7 5446870
5"Lengsel" 5 5 4 3 7 4 5 45103459
6"Melodi" 8 125 2 4 8 10 7677783
7"Do Re Mi" 126 128 6 128 1210121210120
8"Elegi" 2 4 2 122 2 3 2212337
9"Det fineste jeg vet" 4 2 3 6 10 3 2 3335145
10"Gjennom ild og vann" 7 7 10 10 127 6 10788698

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Teigen performed second in the running order, following France and preceding the United Kingdom. At the close of voting "Do Re Mi" had picked up 53 points (the highest being 8s from Denmark and the Netherlands), placing Norway joint 9th (with Austria) of the 20 entries, the country's first top 10 finish since 1973.[2] The Norwegian jury awarded its 12 points to Sweden.[3]

Voting

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://natfinals.50webs.com/70s_80s/Norway1983.html ESC National Finals database 1983
  2. Web site: Final of Munich 1983 . European Broadcasting Union . 15 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210415114600/https://eurovision.tv/event/munich-1983/final . 15 April 2021 . live.
  3. http://www.esc-history.com/details.asp?key=489 ESC History - Norway 1983
  4. Web site: Results of the Final of Munich 1983 . European Broadcasting Union . 15 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210415130845/https://eurovision.tv/event/munich-1983/final/results/norway . 15 April 2021 . live.