Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 1982 explained

Year:1982
Country:Germany
Preselection:Ein Lied für Harrogate
Preselection Date:20 March 1982
Entrant:Nicole
Song:Ein bißchen Frieden
Final Result:1st, 161 points

West Germany (performing as Germany) took part in the Eurovision Song Contest 1982, held in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom.

Before Eurovision

807 songs were submitted for the German selection.[1] A jury composed of 13 members chose 24 of them which then were presented on ARD's radio stations. A jury of 500 members then chose twelve entries for the national final.

Ein Lied für Harrogate

The German national final to select their entry, Ein Lied für Harrogate, was held on 20 March at Bayerischer Rundfunk Studio 4 in Unterföhring, and was hosted by Carolin Reiber and Rudolf Rohlinger.

Twelve songs made it to the national final, which was broadcast by Bayerischer Rundfunk to ARD broadcasters across West Germany. The winner was decided by a sampling of 507 viewers who were meant to symbolize a fair representation of the country's population. Each person gave every song a vote, from 1 (for worst) to 12 (for best). Therefore, the theoretical "worst score" a song could receive would be 500, and the "best score" would be 6000. Three of the competitors previously represented other countries: French singer Séverine won the 1971 contest on behalf of Monaco, Paola previously represented her native Switzerland at two different contests (1969 and 1980), and Jürgen Marcus previously represented Luxembourg at the 1976 contest. Additionally, Mary Roos had represented Germany in 1972, and would return as the German representative two years later.

The winning entry was "Ein bißchen Frieden," performed by Nicole and composed by Ralph Siegel with lyrics by Bernd Meinunger.

+ Ein Lied für Harrogate – 20 March 1982Artist Song Votes Place
Nicole "Ein bißchen Frieden" 5116 1st
"Peter Pan" 4318 2nd
Hannes Schöner "Nun sag' schon adieu" 3914 3rd
Denise "Die Nacht der Lüge" 3799 4th
"Ich würde gerne bei Dir sein" 3439 5th
Mary Roos and David Hanselmann "Lady" 3358 6th
Mel Jersey "Schenk mir eine Nacht" 3227 7th
"Blue-Jeans-Kinder" 2862 8th
Gaby Baginsky "So wie Du bist" 2802 9th
"Ich glaub' an meine Träume" 2717 10th
"Der Ohrwurm" 2029 11th
Jennifer Kemp "Wie Phönix aus der Asche" 1965 12th

At Eurovision

Nicole was the eighteenth and final performer on the night of the Contest, following Ireland. At the close of the voting the song had received 161 points, placing first in a field of 18 competing countries.[2] A 61-point gap was recorded between Nicole and the second-place finisher, Avi Toledano from Israel, setting a then record for the largest gap between first and second place. Only Luxembourg did not award Germany any points, awarding 12 points to host nation the United Kingdom who finished 7th.

Known members of the German jury were Siegfried Doppler[3] and Horst Senker.[4]

The show was watched by 13.81 million viewers in Germany.[5]

Voting

Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest

See main article: Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest. "Ein bißchen Frieden" was one of fourteen Eurovision songs chosen by fans and the EBU to participate in Congratulations, the fiftieth-anniversary contest. It was the only German entry in the contest. Unlike the majority of other living entrants, Nicole was unable to attend, so the performance simply combined a dance troupe with footage of Nicole's 1982 performance. It was followed by a pre-taped greeting from Nicole. "Ein bißchen Frieden" was performed fifth, following "Eres tú" and preceding "Nel blu dipinto di blu." After the first round, "Ein bißchen Frieden" was not one of the five songs chosen to proceed to the next round. It was later revealed that the song finished seventh, with 106 points. Notably, in spite of it being a major international hit and their only winning entry at the time (they would later win again five years later with Lena's "Satellite" at the contest), Germany only awarded "Ein bißchen Frieden" three points in the first round, with their twelve going instead to ABBA's "Waterloo." Their twelve points in the second round were awarded to "Nel blu dipinto di blu."

Voting

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Feddersen, Jan . Ein Lied kann eine Brücke sein. Die deutsche und internationale Geschichte des Grand Prix Eurovision . Hoffmann und Campe . 2002 . 3-455-09350-7 . Hamburg . 188–189 . de . 48966334.
  2. Web site: Final of Harrogate 1982 . European Broadcasting Union . 14 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210414065752/https://eurovision.tv/event/harrogate-1982/final . 14 April 2021 . live.
  3. Web site: Kuhnert . Volker . 22 May 2020 . Mit den Stars bestens bekannt . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201022065942/https://www.rheinpfalz.de/lokal/ludwigshafen_artikel,-mit-den-stars-bestens-bekannt-_arid,5067434.html . 22 October 2020 . 15 October 2023 . Die Rheinpfalz . de.
  4. News: Kinkel . Sandra . 12 May 2018 . Eine Plattform, die Menschen verbindet . de . 13 . Aachener Nachrichten. Dürener Nachrichten . 644256886.
  5. Web site: Quotenmeter . AGF . GfK . TV-Reichweite des Eurovision Song Contests in den Jahren 1976 bis 2023 nach der Anzahl der Zuschauer . subscription . 18 August 2023 . Statista.
  6. Web site: Results of the Final of Harrogate 1982 . European Broadcasting Union . 14 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210414083008/https://eurovision.tv/event/harrogate-1982/final/results/germany . 14 April 2021 . live.
  7. Web site: Congratulations: Results from the voting (Round 1) . Eurovision Song Contest . 6 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060520203928/http://a1679.g.akamai.net/7/1679/9896/v001/esc.download.akamai.com/9896/press_pictures/results_1.pdf . 20 May 2006 . PDF.