Year: | 1978 |
Broadcaster: | French: [[RTBF|Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française]]|i=no (RTBF) |
Country: | Belgium |
Preselection: | French: Avant-première Eurovision |
Preselection Date: | 8 February 1978 |
Entrant: | Jean Vallée |
Song: | French: L'amour ça fait chanter la vie|i=no |
Final Result: | 2nd, 125 points |
Belgium was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1978 with the song "French: L'amour ça fait chanter la vie|i=no", written and performed by Jean Vallée. The Belgian participating broadcaster, Walloon French: [[RTBF|Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française]]|i=no (RTBF), selected its entry through a national final.
Walloon broadcaster French: [[RTBF|Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française]]|i=no (RTBF) had the turn to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest 1978 representing Belgium. Eight songs participated in the selection and the winner was chosen by a 12-member expert jury. The jury was chaired by Henri Billen and consisted of three members from SABAM, three journalists, three people in the radio industry, and three people in the television industry.[1] [2]
French: Avant-première Eurovision was broadcast on 8 February 1978 at 20:00 CET until 20:30 CET on RTBF 1. The jury were then given two hours to vote, and the winner was announced in a short programme at 22:35 CET.[3] The voting was done in three rounds, in the first round three songs qualified to the second round. In the second round two songs qualified to the third and final round, where each jury member had one vote to give to either song.
Jean Vallée was the winner of the national final with seven votes in the final round. He had previously represented in Amsterdam, where he had finished fifth. Another previous Belgian entrant Jacques Hustin also took part.
Draw | Artist | Song | Songwriter(s) | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Henri Seroka | "L'Odyssée" | Christian Arabian, Henri Seroka | Out | |
2 | Frank Michael | "À qui parler d'amour" | Frank Michael, Jos Vanesse, Pepitchkou | Out | |
3 | Jean Vallée | "L'amour ça fait chanter la vie" | Jean Vallée | Advanced | |
4 | Jacques Hustin | "L'an 2000 c'est demain" | Jacques Hustin, Alain Y. Guilldou | Advanced | |
5 | "Le vieux marin" | Paul Louka, Jacques Viesvil | Advanced | ||
6 | Délizia | "Qui viendra réinventer l'amour" | Salvatore Adamo | Out | |
7 | Marc Farell | "Confidence pour confidence" | Vincent Farrauto, L. Savary | Out | |
8 | Franck Olivier | "La fête" | Roland Verlooven, Pol Forest | Out |
Artist | Song | Result | |
---|---|---|---|
Jean Vallée | "L'amour ça fait chanter la vie" | Advanced | |
Jacques Hustin | "L'an 2000 c'est demain" | Advanced | |
Paul Louka | "Le vieux marin" | Out |
Artist | Song | Result | |
---|---|---|---|
Jean Vallée | "L'amour ça fait chanter la vie" | 7 | |
Jacques Hustin | "L'an 2000 c'est demain" | 5 |
On the evening of the final Vallée performed 10th in the running order, following and preceding the . At the close of the voting "French: L'amour ça fait chanter la vie|i=no" had received 125 points with votes from all other participating countries apart from and, and including five first-place 12 points votes from,,,, and the . This ranked Belgium second of the 20 competing countries, the highest position achieved by a Belgian entry in Eurovision to that date, which has since only been bettered by Sandra Kim's and matched by Urban Trad in .[4] The Belgian jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners .[5]