Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 1997 explained

Year:1997
Country:Norway
Preselection:Melodi Grand Prix 1997
Preselection Date:8 February 1997
Entrant:Tor Endresen
Song:San Francisco
Final Result:24th, 0 points

Norway participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 1997 with the song "San Francisco" written by Tor Endresen and Arne Myksvoll. The song was performed by Tor Endresen. The Norwegian broadcaster Norsk rikskringkasting (NRK) organised the national final Melodi Grand Prix 1997 in order to select the Norwegian entry for the 1997 contest in Dublin, Ireland. Eight entries competed in a show that took place on 8 February 1997 and the winner, "San Francisco" performed by Tor Endresen, was determined by the votes from a six-member jury panel and a public televote.

Norway competed in the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 3 May 1997. Performing during the show in position 3, Norway placed twenty-fourth (joint last) out of the 25 participating countries and failed to score any points.

Background

See main article: Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest. Prior to the 1997 contest, Norway had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 36 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 1997 in order to select the 1997 Norwegian entry.[2]

Before Eurovision

Melodi Grand Prix 1997

Melodi Grand Prix 1997 was the 36th edition of the Norwegian national final Melodi Grand Prix and selected Norway's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 1997. Eight songs, selected for the competition by a three-member jury panel from 350 received submissions, competed during the final which was televised on NRK1 on 8 February 1997 and hosted by Tande-P.[3] [4] A live orchestra conducted by Geir Langslet accompanied each performance in varying capacities and the combination of votes from public televoting (60%) and an expert jury (40%) led to the victory of "San Francisco" performed by Tor Endresen.[5] The jury consisted of H.C. Andersen (NRK P3 radio host), Elisabeth Andreassen (singer), Kari Gjærum (singer), Ole Evenrud (producer), Leif Erik Forberg (TV3 presenter) and Frode Viken (composer).[6] The national final was watched by 1.308 million viewers in Norway.[7]

70,000 votes were registered by the televote during the show, however Telenor later revealed that at least 400,000 additional votes were unable to be registered due to technical issues, which led to strong dissatisfaction from viewers that failed to cast their votes during the 15-minute window.[8] There was also criticism of Tor Endresen's victory as several of the jury members were friends of Endresen; Elisabeth Andreassen told the press that "Endresen deserved to win" regardless of what song he participated with.[9]

Final – 8 February 1997
DrawArtistSongSongwriter(s)PercentagePlace
1Marianne E. Olsen"Min egen superstar"Marianne Elstad Olsen, Henning Hoel Eriksen, Fredrik Friis11.3%5
2Angela Kim Lewis"So ro lille tull"Torstein Bieler, Chris Påhlman, Nora Skaug14.3%3
3Guro Håvik"Consensus"Gunnar Lorentzen10.6%6
4Penthouse Playboys"Om du elsket meg"Kjetil Rolness, Jørn Mortensen12.6%4
5Geir Rønning"Venter på deg"Are Selheim7.0%7
6Beate Olsen"Rolig"Beate Olsen2.9%8
7Tor Endresen"San Francisco"Tor Endresen, Arne Myksvoll23.9%1
8Manjari"Lys"Rune Lindstrøm18.0%2

At Eurovision

According to Eurovision rules, the twenty-four countries which had obtained the highest average number of points over the last four contests competed in the final on 3 May 1997.[10] On 28 November 1996, an allocation draw was held which determined the running order and Norway was set to perform in position 3, following the entry from Turkey and before the entry from Austria.[11] Heading into the final of the contest, Norway was considered by bookmakers to be the seventeenth most likely country to win the competition.[12] The Norwegian conductor at the contest was Geir Langslet and Norway finished in twenty-fourth (joint-last) place failing to score any points.[13]

In Norway, the contest was broadcast on NRK1 with commentary by Jostein Pedersen as well as broadcast via radio on NRK P1 with commentary by Kristian Lindeman.[14] [15] The Norwegian spokesperson, who announced the Norwegian votes during the show, was Ragnhild Sælthun Fjørtoft.

Voting

Norway did not receive any points at the 1997 Eurovision Song Contest. The nation awarded its 12 points to France in the contest with the full breakdown of points awarded by Norway displayed below.[16]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Norway Country Profile. EBU. 9 November 2014.
  2. Web site: Norway: Melodi Grand Prix 1997 . 2024-05-20 . Eurovisionworld . en-gb.
  3. Web site: Jacobsen . Hasse Christian . MGP 1997 - . 2024-05-20 . nb-NO.
  4. News: 1992-02-07 . 8. Februar . 2024-05-20 . Sarpsborg Arbeiderblad . 35 . no.
  5. http://natfinals.50webs.com/90s_00s/Norway1997.html ESC National Finals database 1997
  6. Melodi Grand Prix 1997 - norsk finale . 2023-01-13 . nb-NO . 2024-05-20 . tv.nrk.no.
  7. News: Brunmark . Kristine . 1997-02-11 . Nedover med GP . Verdens Gang . no.
  8. News: 1997-02-09 . Endelig, Tor! . 2024-05-20 . Verdens Gang . no.
  9. Kato M. Hansen. "Norway national final 1997" in OGAE News 56/57, 1997:19.
  10. Web site: Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest (Part 1) . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/19990202163833/http://events.rte.ie/eurovision97/Facts/rules.html . 2 February 1999 . 29 June 2022 . Radió Telefís Éireann.
  11. Web site: Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest (Part 1) . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/19990202163833/http://events.rte.ie/eurovision97/Facts/rules.html . 2 February 1999 . 29 June 2022 . Radió Telefís Éireann.
  12. Web site: What are the Odds? . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/19990224192111/http://events.rte.ie/eurovision97/odds.html . 24 February 1999 . 20 November 2022 . Radio Telefís Éireann.
  13. Web site: Final of Dublin 1997 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210414084557/https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1997/final . 14 April 2021 . 14 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  14. News: 3 May 1997 . Radio- og TV-Programmene – Lørdag 3. mai 1997 . Radio and TV Programmes – Saturday 3 May 1997 . 26 June 2022 . . 38–40 . no . National Library of Norway.
  15. Web site: 3 May 1997 . Norgeskanalen NRK P1 – Kjøreplan lørdag 3. mai 1997 . The Norwegian channel NRK P1 – Schedule Saturday 3 May 1997 . 20 June 2022 . . 16–17 . no . National Library of Norway.
  16. Web site: Results of the Final of Dublin 1997 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210414113945/https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1997/final/results/portugal . 14 April 2021 . 14 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  17. Web site: Results of the Final of Dublin 1997 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210414091523/https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1997/final/results/norway . 14 April 2021 . 14 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.