Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 explained

Year:2001
Country:Norway
Preselection:Melodi Grand Prix 2001
Preselection Date:24 February 2001
Entrant:Haldor Lægreid
Song:On My Own
Final Result:22nd, 3 points
Next:2003

Norway participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 with the song "On My Own" written by Ole Henrik Antonsen, Tom-Steinar Hanssen and Ole Jørgen Olsen. The song was performed by Haldor Lægreid. The Norwegian broadcaster Norsk rikskringkasting (NRK) organised the national final Melodi Grand Prix 2001 in order to select the Norwegian entry for the 2001 contest in Copenhagen, Denmark. Twelve entries competed in a show that took place on 24 February 2001 and the winner was determined over two rounds of voting from a five-member jury panel and a regional televote. The top four entries in the first round of voting advanced to the competition's second round—the superfinal. In the second round of voting, "On My Own" performed by Haldor Lægreid was selected as the winner.

Norway competed in the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 12 May 2001. Performing during the show in position 4, Norway placed twenty-second (joint last) out of the 23 participating countries, scoring 3 points.

Background

See main article: Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest. Prior to the 2001 contest, Norway had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 40 times since its first entry in .[1] Norway had won the contest on two occasions: in 1985 with the song "La det swinge" performed by Bobbysocks!, and in 1995 with the song "Nocturne" performed by Secret Garden. Norway also had the two dubious distinctions of having finished last in the Eurovision final more than any other country and for having the most "nul points" (zero points) in the contest, the latter being a record the nation shared together with Austria. The country had finished last seven times and had failed to score a point during four contests.

The Norwegian national broadcaster, Norsk rikskringkasting (NRK), broadcasts the event within Norway and organises the selection process for the nation's entry. The broadcaster has traditionally organised the national final Melodi Grand Prix, which has selected the Norwegian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest in all but one of their participation. The broadcaster organized of Melodi Grand Prix 2001 in order to select the 2001 Norwegian entry.

Before Eurovision

Melodi Grand Prix 2001

Melodi Grand Prix 2001 was the 40th edition of the Norwegian national final Melodi Grand Prix and selected Norway's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2001. The show took place on 24 February 2001 at the Oslo Spektrum in Oslo, hosted by Hans Christian Andersen and was televised on NRK1 as well as streamed online at NRK's official website nrk.no.[2] [3] The national final was watched by 1.309 million viewers in Norway.[4]

Competing entries

Artists and composers were directly invited by NRK to compete in the national final.[5] Twelve songs were selected for the competition and the competing acts and songs were revealed on 2 February 2001. Short clips of the competing entries were also released alongside the announcement, while the songs in their entirety were premiered between 19 and 22 February during the NRK P1 radio programmes Musikkrevyen and Nitimen.[6] [7]

ArtistSongSongwriter(s)
Are Sigvardsen"Is She the One"Are Sigvardsen
BIAZ"Your Heart Belongs to Me"Lars Berg
Camilla Fagerås"Free"Ken Ingwersen, Jon-Willy Rydningen, Svein Finneide
Elin Torset"Brighter than Light"Elin Torset
Haldor Lægreid"On My Own"Ole Henrik Antonsen, Tom-Steinar Hanssen, Ole Jørgen Olsen
Lars-Fredrik"Show Me the Way"Elias Muri, Bottolf Lødemel, Lars Aass
Marianne Ligaard"Every Night Is Saturday Night"Bottolf Lødemel, Lars Aass
Mocci"You've Got the Motion"Stein Johan Grieg Halvorsen, Erlend Klarholm Nilsen, Mocci Ryen
Rasmus Høgset"Looking for Love"Jan Johansen, Thomas Heinonen, Brad Johnson
Rebecca"U Ain't Seen the Best of Me Yet"Rebecca Wolsdal
Remy"Still an Angel"Øivind Madsen, Leif Johansen
Rune Rudberg"Without You"Rune Rudberg

Final

Twelve songs competed during the final on 24 February 2001 and the winner was selected by a combination of votes from regional televoting (5/7) and an expert jury (2/7) over two rounds. In the first round, the results of the public televote were divided into Norway's five regions and each region distributed points as follows: 1–10, 12 and 14 points. The jury then distributed points that had a weighting equal to the votes of two televoting regions and the top four entries were selected to proceed to the second round, the superfinal. In the superfinal, each televoting region distributed points as follows: 8, 10, 12 and 14 points. The jury then distributed points that again had a weighting equal to the votes of two televoting regions, leading to the victory of "On My Own" performed by Haldor Lægreid.[8] The jury panel consisted of Jostein Pedersen (Eurovision Song Contest commentator for Norway), Cecilie Bjelke (international promoter for artists at Universal Music), Inger Beate Jacobsen (NRK P1 radio host), Jarl Aanestad (songwriter and music producer) and Hege Tepstad (NRK P1 radio host).

In addition to the performances of the competing entries, the interval act featured performances of several past Eurovision entries: Jahn Teigen performed the 1978 Norwegian entry "Mil etter mil", Carola Häggkvist performed the 1983 Swedish entry "Främling" and the Swedish 1991 winning entry "Fångad av en stormvind", and Charmed performed the 2000 Norwegian entry "My Heart Goes Boom". Teigen also performed his 1989 Melodi Grand Prix entry "Optimist" and together with Häggkvist performed the Israeli 1979 Eurovision winning entry "Hallelujah".

Final – 24 February 2001
DrawArtistSongJuryTelevoteTotalPlace
1Marianne Ligaard"Every Night Is Saturday Night"1222348
2Rasmus Høgset"Looking for Love"844526
3Mocci"You've Got the Motion"2050703
4Remy"Still an Angel"2827554
5Camilla Fagerås"Free"1022329
6Rune Rudberg"Without You"1637535
7Are Sigvardsen"Is She the One"14132710
8Rebecca"U Ain't Seen the Best of Me Yet"4162011
9Elin Torset"Brighter than Light"1864822
10Lars-Fredrik"Show Me the Way"25712
11BIAZ"Your Heart Belongs to Me"639457
12Haldor Lægreid"On My Own"2466901
DrawSongTromsøTrondheimBergenKristiansandOsloTotal
1"Every Night Is Saturday Night" 4 3 5 4 6 22
2"Looking for Love" 9 9 9 9 8 40
3"You've Got the Motion" 10 10 10 10 10 50
4"Still an Angel" 5 5 6 6 5 27
5"Free" 6 4 4 5 3 22
6"Without You" 7 7 7 7 9 37
7"Is She the One" 2 2 2 3 4 13
8"U Ain't Seen the Best of Me Yet" 3 6 3 2 2 16
9"Brighter than Light" 12 14 14 12 12 64
10"Show Me the Way" 1 1 1 1 1 5
11"Your Heart Belongs to Me" 8 8 8 8 7 39
12"On My Own" 14 12 12 14 14 66
Superfinal – 24 February 2001
DrawArtistSongJuryTelevoting RegionsTotalPlace
TromsøTrondheimBergenKristiansandOslo
1Mocci"You've Got the Motion"2488888644
2Remy"Still an Angel"161010101010663
3Elin Torset"Brighter than Light"201214141212842
4Haldor Lægreid"On My Own"281412121414941

Controversy

Following Melodi Grand Prix 2001, several viewers complained that they were unable to vote through SMS as they were provided with the wrong instructions for the voting.[9] Marketing director of NRK aktivum, Lene Hordvik, later confirmed that a number of SMS votes were not counted towards the final result due to heavy traffic but they were not enough to change the winner.[10]

At Eurovision

The Eurovision Song Contest 2001 took place at Parken Stadium in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 12 May 2001.[11] The relegation rules introduced for the 1997 contest were again utilised ahead of the 2001 contest, based on each country's average points total in previous contests. The 23 participants were made up of the host country, the "Big Four" (France, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom), and the 12 countries with the highest average scores between the 1996 and 2000 contests competed in the final.[12] On 21 November 2000, an allocation draw was held which determined the running order and Norway was set to perform in position 4, following the entry from Bosnia and Herzegovina and before the entry from Israel.[13] Norway finished in twenty-second (joint last) place with 3 points.[14]

In Norway, the show was broadcast on NRK1 with commentary by Jostein Pedersen as well as broadcast via radio on NRK P1.[15] The Norwegian spokesperson, who announced the Norwegian votes during the show, was Roald Øyen.

Voting

Below is a breakdown of points awarded to Norway and awarded by Norway in the contest. The nation awarded its 12 points to Denmark in the contest.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Norway Country Profile. EBU. 9 November 2014.
  2. Web site: Norsk Melodi Grand Prix 2001 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120302115259/http://poplight.zitiz.se/norsk-melodi-grand-prix/2001 . 2 March 2012 . 2010-01-23 . Poplight.
  3. Web site: 2001-02-26 . Knekte Telenors server . 2023-04-22 . NRK . nb-NO.
  4. News: 27 February 2001 . Laveste GP-tall siden 1993 . no . 47 . Verdens Gang.
  5. Web site: Jacobsen . Hasse Christian . MGP 2001 - . 2023-04-22 . nb-NO.
  6. Web site: 2001-02-02 . Lytt til årets MGP-finalister! . 2023-04-22 . NRK . nb-NO.
  7. Web site: 2001-02-19 . Elin kan redde Norges GP-ære . 2023-04-22 . dagbladet.no . no.
  8. Web site: 2001-02-24 . Satser på artistkarriere . 2023-04-22 . bt.no . nb.
  9. Web site: 2001-02-25 . Stemmekaos ga feil vinner? . 2023-04-22 . vg.no . nb.
  10. Web site: 2001-02-26 . En riktig vinner . 2023-04-22 . NRK . nb-NO.
  11. Web site: Copenhagen 2001–Eurovision Song Contest . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210102233622/https://eurovision.tv/event/copenhagen-2001 . 2 January 2021 . 14 March 2021 . European Broadcasting Union (EBU).
  12. Web site: Rules of the 2001 Eurovision Song Contest . 10 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  13. Web site: Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 . 19 March 2022 . Myledbury.co.uk . PDF.
  14. Web site: Final of Copenhagen 2001 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210410142841/https://eurovision.tv/event/copenhagen-2001/final . 10 April 2021 . 10 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  15. News: 12 May 2001 . Lørdag 12. mai . 35–36 . . 2 December 2022 . National Library of Norway.
  16. Web site: Results of the Final of Copenhagen 2001 . European Broadcasting Union . 10 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210410075551/https://eurovision.tv/event/copenhagen-2001/final/results/norway . 10 April 2021 . live.