Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 1971

Eurovision Song Contest 1971
Country  Spain
National selection
Selection process Artist: Pasaporte a Dublín
Song: Internal Selection
Selection date(s) Introduction show
17 October 1970
Regular shows
24 October-26 December 1970
Final
30 December 1970
Selected entrant Karina
Selected song "En un mundo nuevo"
Selected songwriter(s)
  • Rafael Trabucchelli
  • Tony Luz
Finals performance
Final result 2nd, 116 points
Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1970 • 1971 • 1972►

Spain took part in the Eurovision Song Contest 1971. The country was represented by Karina with the song "En un mundo nuevo". Karina was selected through the competition Pasaporte a Dublín ("Passport to Dublin"), and the song she would sing in Dublin was internally chosen once the national final was over. The music was composed by Rafael Trabucchelli and the lyrics written by Tony Luz.

Pasaporte a Dublín

The national broadcaster TVE decided in 1970 to produce a TV series in which some of the most popular singers in Spain would compete to represent the country at Eurovision. TVE prepared a shortlist of 20 artists that were important at the time for their popularity, sales or quality; some of them refused to participate because of scheduling conflicts or other reasons. Ten candidates participated at the competition: Cristina, Júnior, Karina, Dova, Jaime Morey, Encarnita Polo, Conchita Márquez Piquer, Los Mismos, Nino Bravo and Rocío Jurado.

The series consisted of twelve shows that aired weekly from October 1970 to December 1970. In the first show (17 October), hosted by Massiel and Julio Iglesias, the candidates were introduced to the audience. The ten following shows centered on one contestant each: the protagonist would host the show and sing several songs from their repertoire, while the rest of contestants would sing a song each related to a particular theme. The schedule was the following:[1]

Date Host Theme
17 October 1970 Massiel and Julio Iglesias Introduction show
24 October 1970 Cristina Hits from international festivals
31 October 1970 Los Mismos Songs from the Twenties
7 November 1970 Concha Márquez Piquer Hits from Hispanic America
14 November 1970 Rocío Jurado Movie songs
21 November 1970 Nino Bravo The Beatles' music
28 November 1970 Encarnita Polo Songs from the Forties
5 December 1970 Jaime Morey Operettas from yesterday and today
12 December 1970 Júnior Classical papers with modern beats
19 December 1970 Karina Children's songs
26 December 1970 Dova Christmas songs
30 December 1970 José Luis Uribarri Final

The final was held on 30 December 1970, hosted by José Luis Uribarri. The winner was decided by the audience, by postcard voting. Karina was declared winner, but the position in the ranking of the rest of candidates was not revealed. Some magazines published that Jaime Morey, who would be internally selected to represent Spain at Eurovision the following year, came in second place.[1]

Despite the popularity of the program, the format of Pasaporte a Dublín was not used again by TVE to choose the Spanish entrant, in fact a national final was not organized again until 1976. The format is considered in Spain a precursor to reality singing competitions like Operación Triunfo in the 2000s.[2]

At Eurovision

Karina was the 6th to perform in the running order, following Germany and preceding France. She received 116 points for her performance, coming in second place.

Points awarded to Spain

Points Awarded to Spain[3]
10 points 9 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
  •  France
  •  Monaco
  •  Finland
  •  Ireland
  •  Malta
  •  Norway
  •  Germany
  •  Portugal
  •  United Kingdom
  •  Yugoslavia
  •  Netherlands
  •  Sweden
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point
  •  Italy
  •   Switzerland
  •  Austria
  •  Belgium
  •  Luxembourg

Points Awarded by Spain[3]

10 points Portugal
9 points
8 points Germany
7 points
6 points Italy
 Yugoslavia
5 points France
 Ireland
 Malta
 Netherlands
4 points Luxembourg
3 points Finland
2 points Austria
 Belgium
 Monaco
 Norway
 Sweden
  Switzerland
 United Kingdom

References

  1. 1 2 "Pasaporte a Dublín" (in Spanish). letrasviperinas.com.
  2. del Amor Caballero, Reyes (2004-05-20). "Segunda parte de las preselecciones españolas, 1970-2004" (in Spanish). eurovision-spain.com. Retrieved 2008-03-01.
  3. 1 2 ESC History - Monaco 1971
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.