Eurovision Young Dancers 1999 Explained

Eurovision Young Dancers
Year:1999
Semi:4 July 1999
Final:10 July 1999
Presenters:Alex Taylor
Director:Guy Darmet
Venue:Opéra de Lyon, Lyon, France
Windance:
Stegli Yohan and Katja Wünsche
Vote:A professional jury chose the finalists and the top 3 performances
Entries:16
Green:Y
Red:Y
Yellow:Y

The Eurovision Young Dancers 1999 was the eighth edition of the Eurovision Young Dancers, held at the Opéra de Lyon, in Lyon, France, on 10 July 1999.[1] Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster France 3, dancers from ten countries participated in the televised final. A total of sixteen countries took part in the competition. made their début while host country,, and returned. and decided not to participate.[1]

Both single dancers and couples younger than 20 could enter the competition, male or female. Single dancers had to perform 2 pieces of maximum 10 minutes in total, while couples could choose to perform 1 or 2 dances, but in total no longer than 10 minutes as well. The semi-final that took place in the same venue 6 days before the final (4 July 1999).[1]

The non-qualified countries were,,,, Switzerland and United Kingdom. Katja Wünsche and Stegli Yohan of Germany won the contest, with Sweden and Spain placing second and joint third respectively.[2]

Location

Opéra de Lyon, in Lyon, France, was the host venue for the 1999 edition of the Eurovision Young Dancers.[1]

The Opéra Nouvel (Nouvel Opera House) in Lyon, France, is the home of the Opéra National de Lyon. The original opera house was re-designed by the distinguished French architect, Jean Nouvel between 1985 and 1993 in association with the agency of scenography dUCKS scéno and the acoustician Peutz. Serge Dorny was appointed general director in 2003.

Format

The format consists of dancers who are non-professional and between the ages of 16–21, competing in a performance of dance routines of their choice, which they have prepared in advance of the competition. All of the acts then take part in a choreographed group dance during 'Young Dancers Week'.[3]

Jury members of a professional aspect and representing the elements of ballet, contemporary, and modern dancing styles, score each of the competing individual and group dance routines. The overall winner upon completion of the final dances is chosen by the professional jury members.[3]

The interval act was a performance by the hip-hop dance group "Kä-fig".[1]

Results

Preliminary round

A total of sixteen countries took part in the preliminary round of the 1999 contest, of which ten qualified to the televised grand final. The following countries failed to qualify.[1]

Country Participant Dance Choreographer
Dafni Mouyiassi "The Sleeping Beauty" M. Petipa
Lara Glew "La Bayadère" M. Petipa
Attila Bongar "Le Corsaire" M. Petipa
Lukas Slavicky and Zuzana Zahradnikova "Don Quixote" M. Petipa
Ana Klasnja "Variation of Giselle" J. Coralli and J. Perrot
Laetitia Guggi "La Bayadère" M. Petipa

Final

Awards were given to the top three countries. The table below highlights these using gold, silver, and bronze. The placing results of the remaining participants is unknown and never made public by the European Broadcasting Union.[2]

Draw Country Participant Dance Choreographer Result
01 Maria Boubouli "Don Quixote" M. Petipa -
02 "La fille mal gardée" J. Dauberval -
03 "Variation of Giselle" J. Coralli and J. Perrot 3
04 Emmanuel Eggermont and Juliette Roudet "Les Chiens" J. Bouvier and R. Obadia -
05 Marta Wojtaszewska and Marcin Krajewski "Stars & Stripes" G. Balanchine -
06 "Esmeralda" J. Perrot -
07 Aarne Ruutu "La Sylphide" (James variation) A. Bournonville -
08 Katja Wünsche and Stegli Yohan "Cinderella" J. Neumeier 1
09 Frederik Deberdt "La Sylphide" A. Bournonville -
10 Nathalie Nordquist "Flower Festival in Genzano" A. Bournonville 2

Jury members

The jury members consisted of the following:[1]

Broadcasting

A total of 20 countries broadcast the 1999 event, including,, and .

+ Broadcasters in participating countries
CountryBroadcaster(s)Commentator(s)
RTBF
CyBC
ČT
Yle
France 3Agnes Letestu
Mezzo
ZDF
ERT
MTV
LTV
NPS
TVP
RTVSLO
TVE
SVT1
DRS
TSR
TSI
BBC[4]
+ Broadcasters in non-participating countries
CountryBroadcaster(s)
HRT
RTÉ
NRK
RTR

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Eurovision Young Dancers 1999: About the show. European Broadcasting Union. 5 October 2014.
  2. Web site: Eurovision Young Dancers 1999: Participants. youngmusicians.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 5 October 2014.
  3. Web site: Eurovision Young Dancers - Format. youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 8 March 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150211202304/http://www.youngdancers.tv/page/pilsen-2015/about/format. 11 February 2015. dead.
  4. Web site: Summer Dance. 14 August 1999. 10 October 2022. BBC Genome.