Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 1970 explained

Year:1970
Country:Germany
Preselection:Ein Lied für Amsterdam
Preselection Date:16 February 1970
Entrant:Katja Ebstein
Song:Wunder gibt es immer wieder
Final Result:3rd, 12 points

Germany was represented by Katja Ebstein, with the song "Wunder gibt es immer wieder", at the 1970 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 21 March 1970 in Amsterdam. "Wunder gibt es immer wieder" was the winner of the German national final, held on 16 February. This was the first of Ebstein's three appearances for Germany at Eurovision; she returned in 1971 and 1980.

Before Eurovision

Ein Lied für Amsterdam

The final was held at the TV studios in Frankfurt, hosted by Marie-Louise Steinbauer. Six songs took part and were voted on in two stages by a 7-member jury. In the first round each judge awarded 1 point to their three favourite songs, and the lowest-scoring three were eliminated. The judges were then asked to award 1 point to their favourite of the three remaining songs, and "Wunder gibt es immer wieder" was the unanimous choice. Other participants included future German representative Mary Roos and three-time Norwegian performer Kirsti Sparboe.[1]

DrawArtistSongRound 1Round 2Place
1Mary Roos"Bei jedem Kuß"502=
2Roberto Blanco"Auf dem Kurfürstendamm sagt man "Liebe""1-5
3Kirsti Sparboe"Pierre, der Clochard"3-4
4Peter Beil"Blaue Augen, rote Lippen und kastanienbraunes Haar"0-6
5Katja Ebstein"Wunder gibt es immer wieder"771
6Reiner Schöne"Allein unter Millionen"502=

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Ebstein performed 11th in the running order, following Monaco and preceding eventual contest winners Ireland. Along with the Dutch entry, the song was the most contemporary of the evening and Ebstein gave a strong, confident performance which was enthusiastically received by the audience. At the close of voting "Wunder gibt es immer wieder" received 12 points (the highest being 4 from Spain), placing Germany third of the 12 entries, albeit well behind Ireland and runners-up the United Kingdom who had scored 32 and 26 points respectively. This was at the time Germany's highest placement at Eurovision. The German jury awarded its highest mark of 4 to the United Kingdom.[2]

Voting

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://natfinals.50webs.com/70s_80s/Germany1970.html ESC National Finals database 1970
  2. http://www.esc-history.com/details.asp?key=265 ESC History - Germany 1970
  3. Web site: Results of the Final of Amsterdam 1970 . Eurovision Song Contest . 8 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210408115520/https://eurovision.tv/event/amsterdam-1970/final/results/germany . 8 April 2021 . live.