Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 1976 explained

Year:1976
Broadcaster:Dutch; Flemish: [[Nederlandse Omroep Stichting]]|i=no (NOS)
Country:Netherlands
Preselection:Dutch; Flemish: [[Nationaal Songfestival]] 1976|i=no
Preselection Date:18 February 1976
Entrant:Sandra Reemer
Song:The Party's Over
Final Result:9th, 56 points

The Netherlands was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1976 with the song "The Party's Over", written by Hans van Hemert, and performed by Sandra Reemer. The Dutch participating broadcaster, Dutch; Flemish: [[Nederlandse Omroep Stichting]]|i=no (NOS), selected its entry through a national final. In addition, NOS was also the host broadcaster and staged the event at the Dutch; Flemish: [[World Forum (The Hague)|Nederlands Congresgebouw]]|i=no in The Hague, after winning the with the song "Ding-a-dong" by Teach-In. This was the second of Reemer's three Eurovision appearances for the Netherlands: she had sung in the in a duo with Dries Holten (Andres), and would also take part in the under the name of Xandra.

Prior to the contest, there was controversy when some other national delegations laid accusations that "The Party's Over" plagiarised the 1968 Mary Hopkin hit "Those Were the Days". The allegations of plagiarism were considered and rejected by contest organisers the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), who conceded that the songs were very similar in style and structure, but did not find any similarity between the actual melodies.

Before Eurovision

Nationaal Songfestival 1976

Dutch; Flemish: [[Nederlandse Omroep Stichting]]|i=no (NOS) held the national final at the Dutch; Flemish: [[World Forum (The Hague)|Nederlands Congresgebouw]]|i=no in The Hague (the same venue where the Eurovision final was to take place) on 18 February 1976, hosted by Willem Duys.

Five songs took part, with the winner being decided by eleven regional juries who each had 10 points to allocate between the songs. All the acts were well-known hitmakers in the Netherlands, and an extra point of interest for viewers was that one of the other participants was Reemer's former singing partner Holten, now performing with his new partner Rosy: reportedly by 1976 Reemer and Holten were no longer on the best of terms, so there was much anticipation to see them competing against each other. In the event, "The Party's Over" emerged the winner while Holten's song "I Was Born to Love" could only manage fourth place.[1]

Final – 18 February 1976
DrawArtistSongPointsPlace
1Spooky & Sue"Do You Dig It"55
2Bolland & Bolland"Souvenir"302
3Sandra Reemer"The Party's Over"351
4Rosy & Andres"I Was Born to Love"174
5Lucifer"Someone Is Waiting for You"233

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Reemer performed 8th in the running order, following and preceding . At the close of voting "The Party's Over" had received 56 points from 14 countries, placing the Netherlands 9th of the 18 entries.[2] The Dutch jury awarded its 12 points to .[3]

The Dutch conductor at the contest was Harry van Hoof.

Voting

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://natfinals.50webs.com/70s_80s/Netherlands1976.html ESC National Finals database 1976
  2. Web site: Final of The Hague 1976 . European Broadcasting Union . 11 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210411063744/https://eurovision.tv/event/the-hague-1976/final . 11 April 2021 . live.
  3. http://www.esc-history.com/details.asp?key=363 ESC History - Netherlands 1976
  4. Web site: Results of the Final of The Hague 1976 . European Broadcasting Union . 11 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210411064050/https://eurovision.tv/event/the-hague-1976/final/results/the-netherlands . 11 April 2021 . live.