Sweden in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003
Country  Sweden
National selection
Selection process Lilla Melodifestivalen 2003
Selection date(s) 4 October 2003
Selected entrant Honeypies
Selected song "Stoppa mig"
Finals performance
Final result 15th, 12 points
Sweden in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest
2003 2004►

Sweden entered the first Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003, represented by the Honeypies - 10-year-old Rebecca Laakso and eleven-year-old Julia Urban - with the song "Stoppa mig".

Lilla Melodifestivalen 2003

Sveriges Television (SVT) held a national final to select the Swedish entry to the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003. Lilla Melodifestivalen 2003 was held on 4 October, and was hosted at the SVT Television Centre in Stockholm by children's TV host Victoria Dyring.[1]

Ten songs competed in the contest, with the winner decided by jury and televoting.

Draw Artist Song Translation Jury Televote Points Place
1 Wednesday "Det är så det ska va" That's how it should be 28 40 68 3
2 Vera & Vendela "Vänner" Friends 22 - 22 9
3 Daniel & Lukas "Data-hop" Computer hop 44 - 44 6
4 Sofie Ljungberg "Du finns i mitt hjärta" You exist within my heart 38 30 68 4
5 V.Ä.N.N.E.R "För att du är min vän" Because you are my friend 30 - 30 8
6 Sebbe "Om jag gillar någon" If I like somebody 32 - 32 7
7 Honeypies "Stoppa mig" Stop me 32 50 82 1
8 Dragonheartz "Om du" If you 22 - 22 10
9 Patrik Olsson "Sommarsol" Summer sun 42 10 52 5
10 Felix Hvit "För den jag är" For the one I am 20 60 80 2

At Junior Eurovision

On the night of the contest, held in Copenhagen in Denmark, the Honeypies performed 14th in the running order of the contest, following Denmark and preceding Malta. At the close of the voting the duo received 12 points, placing 15th of the 16 competing entries.

Voting

Points awarded to Sweden

12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

Points awarded by Sweden

12 points Denmark
10 points United Kingdom
8 points Croatia
7 points Belarus
6 points Spain
5 points Belgium
4 points Norway
3 points Greece
2 points Malta
1 point Macedonia

See also

External links

References

  1. Ringby, Daniel (2003-09-10). "Songs for Swedish children's final announced!". ESCToday. Retrieved 2009-06-09.
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