Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest




































Norway

Norway


Member station NRK
National selection events


Participation summary
Appearances 57 (54 finals)
First appearance 1960
Best result 1st: 1985, 1995, 2009
Worst result Last: 1963, 1969, 1974, 1976, 1978, 1981, 1990, 1997, 2001, 2004, 2012
Nul points: 1963, 1978, 1981, 1997
External links
NRK page
Norway's page at Eurovision.tv
Song contest current event.png For the most recent participation see
Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2019

Norway has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 57 times since making its debut in 1960 and has only been absent twice since then. In 1970, the country boycotted the contest over disagreements about the voting structure, and in 2002, they were relegated. The contest is broadcast in Norway by NRK, which also broadcasts Norway's national selection competition, the Melodi Grand Prix.


Before 1985, Norway's best result in the contest was Åse Kleveland's third place in 1966. Norway's three victories in the contest were achieved by Bobbysocks in 1985, Secret Garden in 1995 and Alexander Rybak in 2009. Norway also finished second at the 1996 contest, with former Bobbysocks member Elisabeth Andreassen. Norway has the two dubious distinctions of having finished last in more Eurovision finals than any other country and for having the most "nul points", finishing last 11 times and failing to score a point four times. Norway has a total of 11 top five results in the contest.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Contestants


  • 3 Voting history


  • 4 Hostings


  • 5 Other awards


    • 5.1 Marcel Bezençon Awards


    • 5.2 OGAE




  • 6 Commentators and spokespersons


  • 7 Conductors


  • 8 Supervisors


  • 9 Live performances photo gallery


  • 10 See also


  • 11 References


  • 12 External links





History


Norway's first entrant in the contest in 1960 was Nora Brockstedt, who finished fourth. Åse Kleveland then finished third in 1966. Following Kleveland's result, Norway would fail to reach the top ten in 14 out of their next 15 attempts, the exception being Bendik Singers seventh place in 1973.


Before 1985, Norway had only reached the top five in two out of 24 attempts and had finished last six times. In 1985, Bobbysocks gave the country its first victory with the song "La det swinge" (Let It Swing). Norway went on to achieve two more top five results over the next ten years, with both Karoline Krüger in 1988 and Silje Vige in 1993, finishing fifth.


Norway's second victory came in 1995 with Secret Garden's mainly instrumental, Celtic-influenced ethno-piece "Nocturne". In 1996, Elisabeth Andreassen, who had won the contest as one half of Bobbysocks, returned to finish second. In 2003, Jostein Hasselgård was fourth.


Norway won for the third time in 2009, with Alexander Rybak's smash hit "Fairytale". The 2009 winning score of 387 points being the highest ever winning total under the voting system used between 1975 and 2015. It also achieved the biggest ever margin of victory.


In 2012, Norway finished last in the final for the 11th time. Norway has 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, failing to score a point four times, in 1963, 1978, 1981 and 1997. Austria has also scored "nul points" four times.


Since the introduction of the semi-final round in 2004, Norway has finished in the top ten seven times. Wig Wam finished ninth with the song "In My Dreams" in 2005, Maria Haukaas Storeng was fifth in 2008 with "Hold On Be Strong", Alexander Rybak won in 2009, Margaret Berger was fourth in 2013 with "I Feed You My Love", Carl Espen finished eighth in 2014 performing "Silent Storm", Mørland & Debrah Scarlett finished eighth in 2015 with "A Monster Like Me", and JOWST featuring Aleksander Walmann finished tenth with the song "Grab the Moment" in 2017. Norway has a total of 11 top five and 23 top ten results in the contest.



Contestants


Table key


  Winner


  Second place


  Third place


  Last place

































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Year
Artist
Language
Title
Final
Points
Semi
Points

1960

Nora Brockstedt

Norwegian[a]
"Voi Voi"
4
11
No semi-finals

1961

Nora Brockstedt
Norwegian
"Sommer i Palma"
7
10

1962

Inger Jacobsen
Norwegian
"Kom sol, kom regn"
10
2

1963

Anita Thallaug
Norwegian
"Solhverv"
13
0

1964

Arne Bendiksen
Norwegian
"Spiral"
8
6

1965

Kirsti Sparboe
Norwegian
"Karusell"
13
1

1966

Åse Kleveland
Norwegian
"Intet er nytt under solen"
3
15

1967

Kirsti Sparboe
Norwegian
"Dukkemann"
14
2

1968

Odd Børre
Norwegian
"Stress"
13
2

1969

Kirsti Sparboe
Norwegian
"Oj, oj, oj, så glad jeg skal bli"
16
1

1970
Did not participate

1971

Hanne Krogh
Norwegian
"Lykken er"
17
65

1972

Grethe Kausland & Benny Borg
Norwegian
"Småting"
14
73

1973

Bendik Singers

English, French[b]
"It's Just a Game"
7
89

1974

Anne-Karine Strøm & Bendik Singers
English
"The First Day of Love"
14
3

1975

Ellen Nikolaysen
English
"Touch My Life (With Summer)"
18
11

1976

Anne-Karine Strøm
English
"Mata Hari"
18
7

1977

Anita Skorgan
Norwegian
"Casanova"
14
18

1978

Jahn Teigen
Norwegian
"Mil etter mil"
20
0

1979

Anita Skorgan
Norwegian
"Oliver"
11
57

1980

Sverre Kjelsberg & Mattis Hætta
Norwegian[c]
"Sámiid ædnan"
16
15

1981

Finn Kalvik
Norwegian
"Aldri i livet"
20
0

1982

Jahn Teigen & Anita Skorgan
Norwegian
"Adieu"
12
40

1983

Jahn Teigen
Norwegian
"Do Re Mi"
9
53

1984

Dollie de Luxe
Norwegian
"Lenge leve livet"
17
29

1985

Bobbysocks
Norwegian
"La det swinge"
1
123

1986

Ketil Stokkan
Norwegian
"Romeo"
12
44

1987

Kate Gulbrandsen
Norwegian
"Mitt liv"
9
65

1988

Karoline Krüger
Norwegian
"For vår jord"
5
88

1989

Britt Synnøve
Norwegian
"Venners nærhet"
17
30

1990

Ketil Stokkan
Norwegian
"Brandenburger Tor"
21
8

1991

Just 4 Fun
Norwegian
"Mrs. Thompson"
17
14

1992

Merethe Trøan
Norwegian
"Visjoner"
18
23

1993

Silje Vige
Norwegian
"Alle mine tankar"
5
120

Kvalifikacija za Millstreet

1994

Elisabeth Andreassen & Jan Werner Danielsen
Norwegian
"Duett"
6
76
No semi-finals

1995

Secret Garden[d]
Norwegian
"Nocturne"
1
148

1996

Elisabeth Andreassen
Norwegian
"I evighet"
2
114

1997

Tor Endresen
Norwegian
"San Francisco"
24
0

1998

Lars A. Fredriksen
Norwegian
"Alltid sommer"
8
79[e]

1999

Stig Van Eijk
English
"Living My Life Without You"
14
35

2000

Charmed
English
"My Heart Goes Boom"
11
57

2001

Haldor Lægreid
English
"On My Own"
22
3

2002
Did not participate

2003

Jostein Hasselgård
English
"I'm Not Afraid To Move On"
4
123

2004

Knut Anders Sørum
English
"High"
24
3
Top 11 Previous Year[f]

2005

Wig Wam
English
"In My Dreams"
9
125
6
164

2006

Christine Guldbrandsen
Norwegian
"Alvedansen"
14
36
Top 11 Previous Year[f]

2007

Guri Schanke
English[g]
"Ven a bailar conmigo"
Failed to qualify
18
48

2008

Maria Haukaas Storeng
English
"Hold On Be Strong"
5
182
4
106

2009

Alexander Rybak
English
"Fairytale"
1
387
1
201

2010

Didrik Solli-Tangen
English
"My Heart Is Yours"
20
35
Host country[h]

2011

Stella Mwangi
English, Swahili
"Haba Haba"
Failed to qualify
17
30

2012

Tooji
English
"Stay"
26
7
10
45

2013

Margaret Berger
English
"I Feed You My Love"
4
191
3
120

2014

Carl Espen
English
"Silent Storm"
8
88
6
77

2015

Mørland & Debrah Scarlett
English
"A Monster Like Me"
8
102
4
123

2016

Agnete
English
"Icebreaker"
Failed to qualify
13
63

2017

JOWST[i]
English
"Grab the Moment"
10
158
5
189

2018

Alexander Rybak
English
"That's How You Write a Song"
15
144
1
266

2019








Notes




  1. ^ Although the song was performed in Norwegian, the title and sentence in the lyrics "Voi Voi" is in Northern Sami.


  2. ^ Also contains some lyrics in Spanish, Italian, Dutch, German, Irish, Hebrew, Serbo-Croatian, Finnish, Swedish and Norwegian.


  3. ^ Although the song was performed in Norwegian, the title and sentence in the lyrics "Sámiid ædnan" is in Northern Sami.


  4. ^ "Nocturne" features unaccredited vocals from Norwegian singer Gunnhild Tvinnereim.


  5. ^ Spain originally gave its 12 points to Israel and 10 to Norway. After the broadcast it was announced that Spanish broadcaster wrongly tallied the votes and Germany should have got the top mark - 12 points - instead of being snubbed, as it happened. The mistake was corrected and so Germany was placed 7th over Norway. Israel and Norway both received 2 points less than originally and Croatia, Malta, Portugal, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Belgium, Estonia and Turkey all received one point less than indicated during the broadcast.


  6. ^ ab According to the then-Eurovision rules, the top ten non-Big Four countries from the previous year along with the Big Four automatically qualified for the Grand Final without having to compete in semi-finals. For example, if Germany and France placed inside the top ten, the 11th and 12th spots were advanced to next year's Grand Final along with all countries ranked in the top ten.


  7. ^ Although the song was performed in English, the title and sentence in the lyrics "Ven a bailar conmigo" is in Spanish.


  8. ^ If a country had won the previous year, they did not have to compete in the semi-finals the following year.


  9. ^ "Grab the Moment" features unaccredited vocals from Norwegian singer Aleksander Walmann.




Voting history


As of 2018, Norway's voting history is as follows:











Hostings



























Year
Location
Venue
Presenters

1986

Bergen

Grieghallen

Åse Kleveland

1996

Oslo

Oslo Spektrum

Ingvild Bryn and Morten Harket

2010

Bærum

Telenor Arena

Nadia Hasnaoui, Haddy N'jie and Erik Solbakken


Other awards



Marcel Bezençon Awards



Press Award



















Year
Song
Performer
Final Result
Points
Host city

2009
"Fairytale"

Alexander Rybak
1st
387

Moscow

Composer Award





















Year
Song
Composer(s)
Lyrics (l) / Music (m)
Performer
Final
Result
Points
Host city

2015
"A Monster Like Me"
Kjetil Mørland (m & l)

Mørland & Debrah Scarlett
8
102

Vienna


OGAE




















Year
Song
Performer
Final Result
Points
Host city

2009
"Fairytale"

Alexander Rybak
1st
387

Moscow


Commentators and spokespersons



















































































































































































































































Year(s)
Commentator
Spokesperson
1960 Erik Diesen
Kari Borg Mannsåker
1961 Leif Rustad
Mette Janson
1962 Odd Grythe
Kari Borg Mannsåker
1963 Øivind Johnsen
Roald Øyen
1964 Odd Grythe
Sverre Christophersen
1965
Erik Diesen
1966 Sverre Christophersen
Erik Diesen
1967 Erik Diesen
Sverre Christophersen
1968
Roald Øyen
1969 Sverre Christophersen
Janka Polanyi
1970 No commentator Did not participate
1971 Sverre Christophersen No spokesperson
1972
Roald Øyen
1973
John Andreassen
1974
Sverre Christophersen

1975
1976
Jo Vestly
1977
John Andreassen
1978 Bjørn Scheele
Egil Teige
1979 Egil Teige
Sverre Christophersen
1980 Knut Aunbu
Roald Øyen
1981
Sverre Christophersen
1982 Bjørn Scheele
Erik Diesen
1983
Ivar Dyrhaug
1984 Roald Øyen
Egil Teige
1985 Veslemøy Kjendsli
Erik Diesen
1986 Knut Bjørnsen Nina Matheson
1987
John Andreassen and Tor Paulsen

Sverre Christophersen
1988 John Andreassen
Andreas Diesen
1989
Sverre Christophersen
1990
Leif Erik Forberg
1991
John Andreassen and Jahn Teigen
1992
John Andreassen
1993
Leif Erik Forberg
1994
Jostein Pedersen
1995
Annette Groth
1996 Jostein Pedersen
Ragnhild Sælthun Fjørtoft

1997

1998

1999
2000
Marit Åslein
2001
Roald Øyen
2002 Did not participate
2003
Roald Øyen
2004
Ingvild Helljesen

2005

2006
2007 Per Sundnes
Synnøve Svabø
2008
Per Sundnes and Hanne Hoftun

Stian Barsnes-Simonsen
2009
Synnøve Svabø
2010 Olav Viksmo-Slettan
Anne Rimmen
2011
Nadia Hasnaoui

2012
2013
Tooji
2014
Margrethe Røed

2015
2016
Elisabeth Andreassen
2017
Marcus & Martinus
2018
Aleksander Walmann and JOWST


Conductors





  • Øivind Bergh (1960–63, 1965–69)


  • Karsten Andersen (1964)


  • Arne Bendiksen (1971)


  • Carsten Klouman (1972–73, 1975, 1977–78)


  • Frode Thingnæs (1974, 1976, 1996) (musical director in 1996)


  • Sigurd Jansen (1979–1984)


  • Terje Fjærn (1985, 1987)


  • Egil Monn-Iversen (1986) (musical director)

  • Arild Stav (1988)

  • Pete Knutsen (1989–1991, 1994)


  • Rolf Løvland (1992–93)


  • Geir Langslet (1995, 1997–98)[1]




Supervisors


List of supervisors of Melodi Grand Prix, better known as MGP-general or GP-general in Norway:




  • Per Sundnes (2008–2012)[2]


  • Vivi Stenberg (2013–2015)[3]


  • Jan Fredrik Karlsen (2016–2017)[4]


  • Stig Karlsen (2018–present)[4]



Live performances photo gallery




See also



  • Melodi Grand Prix


  • Norway in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest – Junior version of the Eurovision Song Contest.


  • Norway in the Eurovision Young Dancers – A competition organised by the EBU for younger dancers aged between 16 and 21.


  • Norway in the Eurovision Young Musicians – A competition organised by the EBU for musicians aged 18 years and younger.



References





  1. ^ http://andtheconductoris.eu/


  2. ^ GP-general Per Sundnes slutter i NRK


  3. ^ – Skulle veldig gjerne hatt en seier i beltet før jeg gir meg


  4. ^ ab Gir seg som MGP-general




External links



  • Melodi Grand Prix


  • Points to and from Norway eurovisioncovers.co.uk












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