Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 1990

Last updated

Eurovision Song Contest 1990
CountryFlag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands
National selection
Selection processNationaal Songfestival 1990
Selection date(s)Semi-finals
16 February 1990
23 February 1990
Final
10 March 1990
Selected entrant Maywood
Selected song"Ik wil alles met je delen"
Selected songwriter(s)Alie de Vries
Finals performance
Final result15th, 25 points
Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄198919901992►

The Netherlands was represented by Maywood, with the song "Ik wil alles met je delen", at the 1990 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Zagreb on 5 May.

Contents

Before Eurovision

Nationaal Songfestival 1990

Competing entries

Competing entries
ArtistSongComposer(s)
Angelina van Dijk"Later"Coen Baes, Sietze Jansen
Aurora"De mooiste dag"Edward Reekers, Edwin Schimscheimer
Cha-Cha"Oh wat een heerlijke tijd"Elbert Kok
The Company"Zonder liedje"Marcel Schimscheimer, Ruud Sommer, Cees Stolk
Erik Mesie"Liefde"Fons Merkies, Cyriel van Kappel
Georgie Davis "Eenmaal" John Ewbank
Gina"Liever alleen"Maarten Peeters
Gordon "Gini"Peter van Asten, Karel Alberts
Harold Verwoerdt"Blijf maar bij mij"Maarten Peeters
Helen Carmine"Morgen"Kees Smit
Jeans"Freedom, Freiheit, liberté"Piet Souer
John Vis"Ben je gek"Edward Reekers
Jolanda de Wit"Je bent het echt"Clemens van Ven, Margriet de Graaf
Marc Benz"Geef mij een kans"Gertjan Hessing, Elmer Veerhoff, Aart Mol, Erwin van Prehn, Cees Bergman
Maywood "Ik wil alles met je delen"Alie May
Rose Glisten"Niet zonder jou"Maarten Peeters
Shan"Anne"Peter van Asten, Piet Souer
Shift"Helemaal"Herman Pieter de Boer, Hans van Eijk, Ronald Schilperoort
Simple and Pure"Einde van de regentijd"Peter de Wijn, Peter Schön
Tony Neef"Alles"Hans Vermeulen, Hans Jansen

Semi-finals

The first semi-final took place on 16 February 1990. Ten songs competed and five songs, chosen by an expert jury, qualified for the final. [1]

Semi-final 1 – 16 February 1990
DrawArtistSongResult
1Cha-Cha"Oh wat een heerlijke tijd"Advanced
2Rose Glisten"Niet zonder jou"Eliminated
3 Gordon "Gini"Advanced
4 Maywood "Ik wil alles met je delen"Advanced
5Angelina van Dijk"Later"Eliminated
6Shan"Anne"Eliminated
7Jeans"Freedom, Freiheit, liberté"Advanced
8Harold Verwoerdt"Blijf maar bij mij"Eliminated
9Helen Carmine"Morgen"Eliminated
10Marc Benz"Geef mij een kans"Advanced

The second semi-final took place on 23 February 1990. Ten songs competed and five songs, chosen by an expert jury, qualified for the final. [1]

Semi-final 2 – 23 February 1990
DrawArtistSongResult
1The Company"Zonder liedje"Advanced
2 Georgie Davis "Eenmaal"Advanced
3Simple and Pure"Einde van de regentijd"Advanced
4Jolanda de Wit"Je bent het echt"Eliminated
5Erik Mesie"Liefde"Eliminated
6Aurora"De mooiste dag"Eliminated
7John Vis"Ben je gek"Eliminated
8Gina"Liever alleen"Advanced
9Tony Neef"Alles"Eliminated
10Shift"Helemaal"Advanced

Final

The final took place on 10 March 1990 at the Congresgebouw in The Hague, hosted by Paula Patricio. Ten songs competed, and the winner was chosen by juries in the twelve Dutch provinces, who awarded 10 points to their favourite song down to 1 point to the least-liked. Maywood won by a 7-point margin, having been ranked first by four of the juries, two more than any other competing song. [2]

Final – 10 March 1990
DrawArtistSongPointsPlace
1The Company"Zonder liedje"952
2Cha-Cha"Oh wat een heerlijke tijd"468
3 Gordon "Gini"459
4Simple and Pure"Einde van de regentijd"606
5 Georgie Davis "Eenmaal"4410
6Jeans"Freedom, Freiheit, liberté"645
7Gina"Liever alleen"567
8Marc Benz"Geef mij een kans"694
9 Maywood "Ik wil alles met je delen"1021
10Shift"Helemaal"793
Detailed Regional Jury Votes
DrawSong
Drenthe
Overijssel
Zeeland
Utrecht
Limburg
South Holland
North Holland
North Brabant
Friesland
Flevoland
Groningen
Gelderland
Total score
1"Zonder liedje"7889991061084795
2"Oh wat een heerlijke tijd"13658124361646
3"Gini"514335132105345
4"Einde van de regentijd"67377365653260
5"Eenmaal"36521841117544
6"Freedom, Freiheit, liberté"941104257828464
7"Liever alleen"89912432449156
8"Geef mij een kans"2224101078592869
9"Ik wil alles met je delen"1010786799971010102
10"Helemaal"4510656810736979

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Maywood performed 5th in the running order, following Turkey and preceding Luxembourg. At the close of voting "Ik wil alles met je delen" had received 25 points from 10 countries, placing the Netherlands 15th of the 22 entries. [3] The Dutch jury awarded its 12 points to France. [4]

The Dutch conductor at the contest was Harry van Hoof.

Voting

Related Research Articles

Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest

The Netherlands has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 61 times since making its debut as one of the seven countries at the first contest in 1956. The country has missed only four contests, twice because the dates coincided with Remembrance of the Dead and twice because of being relegated due to poor results the previous year. The Netherlands hosted the contest in Hilversum (1958), Amsterdam (1970), twice in The Hague and Rotterdam.

Maywood (duo) Dutch pop band

Maywood was a Dutch singing duo consisting of sisters Aaltje ("Alie") and Doetje ("Edith") de Vries. They each took on a stage name for the project: Alie, a blonde, became "Alice May" and the dark-haired Edith became "Caren Wood".

The Netherlands were present at the Eurovision Song Contest 2005, held in Kyiv, Ukraine. To select their entry, Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS), the Dutch broadcaster, decided to continue with their format of a televised national selection, consisting of four semi-finals and a final.

Belgium was represented by Lisa del Bo with the song "Liefde is een kaartspel" at the 1996 Eurovision Song Contest.

The Netherlands was represented by Esther Hart, with the song '"One More Night", at the 2003 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Riga, Latvia on 24 May. 32 songs took part in the Dutch preselection, which consisted of four semi-finals in February, followed by the final on 1 March.

The Netherlands was represented by duo Maxine and Franklin Brown, with the song "De eerste keer", at the 1996 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Oslo on 18 May.

The Netherlands was represented by Justine Pelmelay, with the song "Blijf zoals je bent", at the 1989 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Lausanne, Switzerland on 13 May. Pelmelay was the winner of the Dutch national final for the contest, held on 10 March.

Belgium was represented by Dutch singer Stella Maessen, with the song "Si tu aimes ma musique", at the 1982 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Harrogate, England on 24 April.

The Netherlands was represented by Maribelle, with the song "Ik hou van jou", at the 1984 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Luxembourg City on 5 May. Maribelle was the winner of the Dutch national final for the contest, held on 14 March. She had previously missed out narrowly in the Dutch selections of 1981.

The Netherlands was represented by Bill van Dijk, with the song "Jij en ik", at the 1982 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Harrogate, England on 24 April. The song and performer were chosen independently of each other at the Dutch national final on 24 February.

The Netherlands was represented by Teddy Scholten, with the song "Een beetje", at the 1959 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 11 March in Cannes, France. Song and singer were chosen independently of each other at the Dutch national final, held on 17 February. Scholten went on to win the 1959 contest for the Netherlands, the first time a country had scored two Eurovision victories. The 1957 contest winner Corry Brokken failed in her bid to represent the Netherlands for a fourth consecutive year, while future Dutch representative Greetje Kauffeld was also among those taking part.

Denmark was represented by Lonnie Devantier, with the song "Hallo Hallo", at the 1990 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 5 May in Zagreb. "Hallo Hallo" was chosen as the Danish entry at the Dansk Melodi Grand Prix on 24 March.

Norway was represented by Ketil Stokkan, with the song "Brandenburger Tor", at the 1990 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 5 May in Zagreb. "Brandenburger Tor" was chosen as the Norwegian entry at the Melodi Grand Prix on 24 March. Stokkan had previously represented Norway in 1986.

Norway was represented by Karoline Krüger, with the song "For vår jord", at the 1988 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 30 April in Dublin. "For vår jord" was chosen as the Norwegian entry at the Melodi Grand Prix on 26 March.

Finland was represented by Nina Åström, with the song '"A Little Bit", at the 2000 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 13 May in Stockholm. Finland returned to the Eurovision final after being forced to sit out the 1999 contest due to relegation after a poor result in 1998. "A Little Bit" was chosen as the Finnish entry at the national final on 12 February.

Finland was represented by Laila Kinnunen, with the song "Valoa ikkunassa", at the 1961 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 18 March in Cannes, France. Finland was one of three countries making their Eurovision debut in 1961 and "Valoa ikkunassa" was chosen as the first Finnish entry at the national final organised by broadcaster Yle and held on 12 February.

The Netherlands participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2011 in Düsseldorf, Germany. Selecting their song through the national final Nationaal Songfestival 2011, organised by Dutch broadcaster TROS. In July 2010 TROS announced that they had internally selected the male trio 3JS to represent Netherlands in at the Contest in Germany.

The Netherlands selected their Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014 entry through Junior Songfestival, a national selection consisting of eight songs. The competing songs were broken down into two semi-finals taking place on 13 and 20 September 2014. The winner was announced to be Julia van Bergen with her song "Around" on 27 September 2014. The expert jury consisted of Xander de Buisonjé, Niels Geusebroek, and Yvonne Coldeweijer.

The Netherlands participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015 with the song "Walk Along" written by Anouk Teeuwe and Tobias Karlsson. The song was performed by Trijntje Oosterhuis, who was selected by the Dutch broadcaster AVROTROS in November 2014 to represent the Netherlands at the 2015 contest in Vienna, Austria. "Walk Along" was written by 2013 Contest entrant Anouk who also first revealed that Oosterhuis had been selected to represent the Netherlands while being interviewed for the Dutch talkshow College Tour. Following confirmation from the Dutch broadcaster that Trijntje Oosterhuis had been selected to represent the Netherlands, the song "Walk Along" was revealed to public in December 2014. In the first of the Eurovision semi-finals, the Netherlands failed to qualify to the final, placing fourteenth out of the 16 participating countries with 33 points.

Iceland was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1990 by Stjórnin with the song "Eitt lag enn". Stjórnin was the winner of the Icelandic national final, Söngvakeppni Sjónvarpsins 1990, organised by Icelandic broadcaster Ríkisútvarpið (RÚV).

References

  1. 1 2 National Finals database 1990 Semis
  2. ESC National Finals database 1990
  3. "Final of Zagreb 1990". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 17 April 2021. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  4. ESC History - Netherlands 1990
  5. 1 2 "Results of the Final of Zagreb 1990". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 17 April 2021. Retrieved 17 April 2021.