Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 explained

Year:2002
Country:Spain
Preselection:Operación Triunfo
Preselection Date:11 March 2002
Entrant:Rosa
Song:Europe's Living a Celebration
Final Result:7th, 81 points

Spain participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 with the song "Europe's Living a Celebration" written by Toni Ten and Xasqui Ten. The song was performed by Rosa. The Spanish entry for the 2002 contest in Tallinn, Estonia was selected through the first series of the reality television music competition Operación Triunfo, organised by the Spanish broadcaster Televisión Española (TVE). Three artists and songs ultimately qualified to compete in the final of the competition's Eurovision selection show where a public televote exclusively selected "Europe's Living a Celebration" performed by Rosa as the winner, receiving 49.9% of the votes.

As a member of the "Big Four", Spain automatically qualified to compete in the Eurovision Song Contest. Performing in position 5, Spain placed seventh out of the 24 participating countries with 81 points.

Background

See main article: Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest. Prior to the 2002 contest, Spain had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest forty-one times since its first entry in .[1] The nation has won the contest on two occasions: in 1968 with the song "La, la, la" performed by Massiel and in 1969 with the song "Vivo cantando" performed by Salomé, the latter having won in a four-way tie with France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. Spain has also finished second four times, with Karina in 1971, Mocedades in 1973, Betty Missiego in 1979 and Anabel Conde in 1995. In 2001, Spain placed sixth with the song "Dile que la quiero" performed by David Civera.

The Spanish national broadcaster, Televisión Española (TVE), broadcasts the event within Spain and organises the selection process for the nation's entry. In 2000 and 2001, TVE organised the national final Eurocanción, which featured a competition among several artists and songs. For their 2002 entry, TVE announced in July 2001 that they would organise a reality television singing competition titled Operación Triunfo (similar in format to Big Brother and The Bus) to select both the artist and song that would represent Spain.[2]

Before Eurovision

Operación Triunfo

The Spanish entry for the 2002 Eurovision Song Contest was selected through Operación Triunfo, a Spanish reality television music competition consisting of training sixteen contestants in a boarding academy in order to find new singing talent. The first series, also known as Operación Triunfo 2001, took place from 22 October 2001 to 11 February 2002 at the Mediapark Studios in Sant Just Desvern, Barcelona, hosted by Carlos Lozano. The competition was broadcast on La Primera and TVE Internacional. The top three contestants qualified to compete in the Eurovision selection show, Gala Eurovisión, which consisted of three shows on 25 February, 4 March and 11 March 2002. Each contestant performed three candidate songs and the winner was decided exclusively through a public televote. The competing songs and the allocations were announced on 21 February 2002.[3]

Contestant qualified to "Gala Eurovisión"

ContestantAgeResidenceEpisode of eliminationPlace finished
(Overall ranking)
Rosa20GranadaGala Final1st
Bisbal22Almería2nd
Bustamante19San Vicente de la Barquera3rd
Chenoa26PalmaGala Final4th
Manu26Seville5th
Verónica23Elche6th
Nuria22NerjaGala 137th
Gisela22BarcelonaGala 128th
Naím21Premià de MarGala 119th
Àlex20Vilassar de MarGala 5 / Gala 1010th
Alejandro23ValenciaGala 811th
Juan28MadridGala 712th
Natalia18Sanlúcar de BarramedaGala 613th
Javián27Dos HermanasGala 414th
Mireia19Vila-secaGala 315th
Geno19Gran CanariaGala 216th

Song selection

The song selection round of Gala Eurovisión consisted of two rounds of voting. In the first round which took place on 25 February 2002, an in-studio jury eliminated one song per contestant.[4] The six members of the in-studio jury were Pilar Tabares (music director of TVE), Narcís Rebollo (CEO of Vale Music), José Luis Uribarri (television presenter and director, commentator of the Eurovision Song Contest for Spain), Marcos Llunas (singer and composer, represented Spain in the 1997 contest), Juan Luis Ayllón Piquero (Eurovision expert) and Daniel Aragay Esteban (Eurovision expert). In the second round which took place on 4 March 2002, a public televote eliminated an additional song per contestant.[5] In addition to the performances of the competing entries, the guest performer in the first show was Lenny Kravitz, while the guest performer in the second show was Operación Triunfo 2001 contestant Natalia.[6]

First Round – 25 February 2002
DrawArtistSongSongwriter(s)Result
1Bustamante"Urgente"Javi Mota, Lidia Guevara, Sergio MedranoEliminated
2Bisbal"El alma en pie"José AbrahamAdvanced
3Rosa"Un sueño especial"Toni Ten, Xasqui TenAdvanced
4Bustamante"Más de mil noches"Jesús María Pérez, Amaya MartínezAdvanced
5Rosa"Hay que vivir"Rubén BladesEliminated
6Bisbal"Corazón Latino"Jordi CubinoAdvanced
7Bustamante"La magia del corazón"David DeMaría, Pablo Pinilla, David SantistebanAdvanced
8Rosa"Europe's Living a Celebration"Toni Ten, Xasqui TenAdvanced
9Bisbal"Miénteme"José Gaviria, Ossa Bernardo, Ximena MuñozEliminated
Second Round – 4 March 2002
DrawArtistSongTelevoteResult
1Bisbal"El alma en pie"18%Eliminated
2Bustamante"Más de mil noches"35%Eliminated
3Rosa"Un sueño especial"30%Eliminated
4Bisbal"Corazón Latino"82%Advanced
5Bustamante"La magia del corazón"65%Advanced
6Rosa"Europe's Living a Celebration"70%Advanced

Final

The final of Gala Eurovisión took place on 11 March 2002. The winner, "Europe's Living a Celebration" performed by Rosa, was selected exclusively through a public televote which ran between 4 and 11 March 2002. In addition to the performances of the competing entries, guest performers included the Pet Shop Boys and the eliminated contestants of Operación Triunfo 2001.[7] [8]

Final – 11 March 2002
DrawArtistSongTelevotePlace
1Bustamante"La magia del corazón"17.3%3
2Bisbal"Corazón latino"32.8%2
3Rosa"Europe's Living a Celebration"49.9%1

At Eurovision

As a member of the "Big Four", Spain automatically qualified to compete in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 on 25 May 2002. During the allocation draw on 9 November 2001, Spain was drawn to perform in position 5, following the entry from Greece and before the entry from Croatia.[9] [10] At the contest, Rosa was joined on stage by five backing vocalists who were contestants from Operación Triunfo 2001 David Bisbal, David Bustamante, Chenoa, Gisela (who would go on to represent Andorra in the Eurovision Song Contest 2008) and Geno Machado, and Spain placed seventh at the conclusion of the final scoring 81 points.[11]

In Spain, the show was broadcast on La Primera with commentary by José Luis Uribarri and on Radio 1 with commentary by Nieves Herrero and José María de Juana.[12] [13] [14] The Spanish spokesperson, who announced the Spanish votes during the final, was Anne Igartiburu; the Spanish votes consisted of 50 percent public televoting and 50 percent from a jury deliberation.

Voting

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

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Spain Country Profile. EBU. 12 February 2015.
  2. Web site: Bakker . Sietse . 2001-07-29 . Spanish national final just like Big Brother . 2023-10-25 . Esctoday.
  3. Web site: Vliet . Wouter van . 2002-02-21 . Spanish songs to compete . 2023-10-25 . Esctoday.
  4. Web site: 2002-03-11 . GALA: 11/03/2002 . 2008-11-22 . . es.
  5. Web site: 2002-02-23 . Rosa, Bisbal y Bustamante interpretarán las 9 canciones candidatas a representarnos en Eurovisión . 2023-10-25 . Vertele . es.
  6. Web site: 2002-04-02 . Lunes 4/3/2002 . 2023-10-25 . portalmix.com . es.
  7. Web site: Bakker . Sietse . 2002-03-11 . Last meters to run before all songs are available . 2023-10-25 . Esctoday.
  8. Web site: 2002-03-11 . Lunes 11/3/2002 . 2023-10-25 . portalmix.com . es.
  9. Web site: Tallinn 2002–Eurovision Song Contest . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210102233622/https://eurovision.tv/event/tallinn-2002 . 2 January 2021 . 14 March 2021 . European Broadcasting Union (EBU).
  10. Web site: 28 September 2001 . Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 . 30 August 2022 . European Broadcasting Union (EBU) . myledbury.co.uk.
  11. Web site: Final of Tallinn 2002 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210408182851/https://eurovision.tv/event/tallinn-2002/final . 8 April 2021 . 8 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  12. News: 23 May 2002 . Samedi 25 mai . fr . 15–20 . TV8 . . Zofingen, Switzerland . 6 December 2022 . Scriptorium Digital Library.
  13. News: 25 May 2002 . Televisión . es . 8 . . subscription . 6 December 2022.
  14. News: 23 May 2002 . El festival, en directo por RNE . es . . live . 6 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221206141232/https://www.abc.es/espana/abci-festival-directo-200205230300-101542_noticia.html . 6 December 2022.
  15. Web site: Results of the Final of Tallinn 2002 . European Broadcasting Union . 8 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210408183824/https://eurovision.tv/event/tallinn-2002/final/results/spain . 8 April 2021 . live.