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Eurovision Song Contest 2000
Participating broadcasterDanmarks Radio (DR)
Country Denmark
National selection
Selection processDansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000
Selection date(s)19 February 2000
Selected artist(s)Olsen Brothers
Selected song"Fly on the Wings of Love"
Selected songwriter(s)Jørgen Olsen
Finals performance
Final result1st, 195 points
Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1999 2000 2001►

Denmark was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 2000 with the song "Fly on the Wings of Love", written by Jørgen Olsen, and performed by the Olsen Brothers. The Danish participating broadcaster, Danmarks Radio (DR), organised the national final Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000 in order to select its entry for the contest. Ten songs competed in a televised show where "Smuk som et stjerneskud" performed by the Olsen Brothers was the winner as decided upon through two rounds of jury voting and public voting. The song was later translated from Danish to English for Eurovision and was titled "Fly on the Wings of Love". The entry eventually won the contest.

Denmark competed in the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 13 May 2000. Performing during the show in position 14, Denmark placed first out of the 24 participating countries, winning the contest with 195 points. This was Denmark's second win in the Eurovision Song Contest; their first victory was in 1963.

Background

Prior to the 2000 contest, Danmarks Radio (DR) had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Denmark twenty-nine times since its first entry in 1957.[1] It had won the contest, to this point, on one occasion: in 1963 with the song "Dansevise" performed by Grethe and Jørgen Ingmann.

As part of its duties as participating broadcaster, DR organises the selection of its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest and broadcasts the event in the country. The broadcaster organised the Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000 national final in order to select its entry for the 2000 contest; the broadcaster has selected all of their Eurovision entries through Dansk Melodi Grand Prix.

Before Eurovision

Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000

Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000 was the 31st edition of Dansk Melodi Grand Prix, the music competition organised by DR to select its entries for the Eurovision Song Contest. The event was held on 19 February 2000 at the Cirkusbygningen in Copenhagen, hosted by Natasja Crone Back and Michael Carøe and televised on DR1.[2] The national final was watched by 1.356 million viewers in Denmark, making it the most popular show of the week in the country.[3]

Format

Ten songs competed in one show where the winner was determined over two rounds of voting. In the first round, the top five songs based on the combination of votes from a public televote and a seven-member jury panel qualified to the superfinal. In the superfinal, the winner was determined again by the votes of the jury and public.[4]

The seven-member jury panel was composed of:[4][5]

Competing entries

DR received 100 entries from composers invited for the competition. A selection committee selected ten songs from the entries submitted to the broadcaster, while the artists of the selected entries were chosen by DR in consultation with their composers.[4] The competing songs were announced on 13 December 1999 with their artists being announced on 14 January 2000.[6][7] Among the artists were Gry Johansen who represented Denmark in 1983, and Fenders which represented Denmark in 1987 as part of Bandjo.[8]

Artist Song Songwriter(s)
Aida "Mayday, Mayday" Iben Plesner, Ivar Lind Greiner
Charlotte Vigel "Hva' så med mig" Rasmus Schwenger
Fenders "Lov mig at du bli'r her" Kristian Løhde, Jørn Hansen
Gry Johansen "Sig du vil ha' mig" Gry Johansen, Per Meilstrup
Johnny Jørgensen "Den drømmende by" Hans Henrik Koltze, Morten Kærså
Lotte Lisby "Julian" Jan Lysdahl, Jan Klausen
Ole Skovhøj "Stjernen der viser vej" Jan Parber, Jes Kerstein
Olsen Brothers "Smuk som et stjerneskud" Jørgen Olsen
Sanne Gottlieb "Uden dig" Lise Cabble, Mette Mathiesen
Trine Gadeberg "Lykkefugl" Helge Engelbrecht

Final

The final took place on 19 February 2000. In the first round of voting the top five advanced to the superfinal based on the votes of a public televote (4/5) and a seven-member jury (1/5). In the superfinal, the winner, "Smuk som et stjerneskud" performed by the Olsen Brothers, was selected by the public and jury vote.[8] The jury voting results along with the voting results of each of Denmark's four regions in the superfinal were converted to points which were each distributed as follows: 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 points.[9]

Final – 19 February 2000
Draw Artist Song Result
1 Olsen Brothers "Smuk som et stjerneskud" Advanced
2 Trine Gadeberg "Lykkefugl" Advanced
3 Charlotte Vigel "Hva' så med mig" Eliminated
4 Johnny Jørgensen "Den drømmende by" Eliminated
5 Lotte Lisby "Julian" Eliminated
6 Fenders "Lov mig at du bli'r her" Eliminated
7 Aida "Mayday, Mayday" Advanced
8 Gry Johansen "Sig du vil ha' mig" Eliminated
9 Ole Skovhøj "Stjernen der viser vej" Advanced
10 Sanne Gottlieb "Uden dig" Advanced
Superfinal – 19 February 2000
Draw Artist Song Jury Televoting Regions Total Place
Jutland
Funen
Zealand and Islands
Capital Region
1 Olsen Brothers "Smuk som et stjerneskud" 10 12 12 12 12 58 1
2 Trine Gadeberg "Lykkefugl" 6 4 4 4 4 22 5
3 Aida "Mayday, Mayday" 4 10 6 10 8 38 4
4 Ole Skovhøj "Stjernen der viser vej" 12 8 10 6 6 42 2
5 Sanne Gottlieb "Uden dig" 8 6 8 8 10 40 3

At Eurovision

According to Eurovision rules, all nations with the exceptions of the bottom six countries in the 1999 contest competed in the final on 13 May 2000.[10] An allocation draw was held which determined the running order and Denmark was set to perform in position 14, following the entry from Spain and before the entry from Germany. At the contest, the Olsen Brothers performed the English version of "Smuk som et stjerneskud", titled "Fly on the Wings of Love".[11] Denmark won the contest placing first with a score of 195 points.[12] This was Denmark's second victory in the Eurovision Song Contest; their first victory was in 1963.

The show was broadcast on DR1 with commentary by Keld Heick. DR appointed Michael Teschl, who represented Denmark in 1999, as its spokesperson to announce the Danish votes during the show. The contest was watched by a total of 1.4 million viewers in Denmark.[13]

Voting

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

Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest

In 2005, "Fly on the Wings of Love" was one of fourteen songs chosen by Eurovision fans and an EBU reference group to participate in the Congratulations anniversary competition. Although it was the only Danish entry featured, Denmark were central to the special, as it was hosted at Forum Copenhagen by the Danish national broadcaster. Numerous Danish acts appeared both during the show and in the clip montages (which all received notably louder applause from the Danish crowd than the other acts). The special was broadcast live on DR with Nicolai Molbech providing Danish-language commentary.

"Fly on the Wings of Love" appeared eighth in the running order, following "Waterloo" by ABBA and preceding "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" by France Gall. Like the majority of entries that night, the performance was mostly by a group of dancers alongside footage of the Olsen Brothers' Eurovision performance, with the duo themselves appearing to lip-sync along with the final verse (they would later re-appear to perform a Eurovision-themed version of their song "Walk Right Back" alongside Linda Martin, Eimear Quinn, Charlie McGettigan, and Jakob Sveistrup, who were appearing as backing singers; the Brothers performed the original version during the opening of the 2001 contest). At the end of the first round, "Fly on the Wings of Love" was not one of the five entries announced as proceeding to the second round. It was later revealed that the song finished sixth with 111 points, thereby making it the closest non-qualifier to reaching the second round.[15] In both the first and second round, in spite of having the opportunity to vote for their own entry, Denmark awarded twelve points to neighboring Sweden and ABBA's "Waterloo," which wound up winning. They awarded their own entry ten points, although fellow Nordic nation Iceland gave it their twelve points.[16]

Voting

Points awarded to "Fly on the Wings of Love" (Round 1)[15]
Score Country
12 points  Iceland
10 points
8 points
7 points
6 points
5 points  Austria
4 points  Slovenia
3 points
2 points
1 point

References

  1. ^ "Denmark Country Profile". EBU. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  2. ^ "Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000. 1 del". dr.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  3. ^ "Ugens TV-tal".
  4. ^ a b c "Eurovisionens Melodi Grand Prix". hesselholdt.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  5. ^ "Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000. 2 del". dr.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  6. ^ Madsen, Søren Anker (3 December 1999). "Comeback for rejehoppet". berlingske.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  7. ^ Jungersen, Steffen (14 January 2000). "Melodi Grand Prix tilbage til sin gamle storhed". bt.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  8. ^ a b "DANISH NATIONAL FINAL 2000".
  9. ^ "Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 2000". 4lyrics. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  10. ^ "Rules of the 45th Eurovision Song Contest, 2000" (PDF). European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  11. ^ "Denmark 2000". The Eurovision Database. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  12. ^ "Final of Stockholm 2000". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  13. ^ "Ugens TV-tal". tvm.gallup.dk.
  14. ^ a b "Results of the Final of Stockholm 2000". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  15. ^ a b "Congratulations: Results from the voting (Round 1)" (PDF). Eurovision Song Contest. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 May 2006. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  16. ^ "Congratulations: Results from the voting (Round 2)" (PDF). Eurovision Song Contest. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 May 2006. Retrieved 27 March 2021.