Kvalifikacija za Millstreet

Kvalifikacija za Millstreet 1993
Dates
Final date 3 April 1993
Host
Venue RTV SLO Studio 1, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Presenter(s) Tajda Lekše
Conductor Petar Ugrin
Mojmir Sepe (during the end credits)
Director Peter Juratovec
Executive supervisor Frank Naef
Executive producer Edo Brzin
Host broadcaster Slovenia RTV SLO
Interval act Songs from the existing repertoire of each of the competing artists:
Bosnia and Herzegovina Fazla "Kiša ruši grad"
Croatia Put "Mom zavičaju"
Estonia Janika Sillamaa "I Live For Your Love"
Hungary Andrea Szulák "Don't Wanna Stop My Clock"
Romania Dida Drăgan "Blestem (The Curse)"
Slovenia 1X Band "Novo jutro"
Slovakia Elán "Od Tatier k Dunaju"
Participants
Number of entries 7
Vote
Voting system Each country awarded 12, 10, 8-5 points to each song
Winning song  Slovenia
"Tih deževen dan"
Kvalifikacija za Millstreet
1993

Kvalifikacija za Millstreet (English: Qualification for Millstreet; French: Qualification pour Millstreet) was the preselection for the Eurovision Song Contest 1993. Seven countries took part, none of which had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest before, although songs from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Slovenia had represented Yugoslavia in past contests. Three qualified for the annual Eurovision in Millstreet, Ireland. It was held on 3 April 1993 at the RTV SLO Broadcasting Centre in Ljubljana, Slovenia.

After the seven competing songs were presented and the juries made their final results, the seven competing artists performed once again on stage, performing songs from their existing repertoire: Bosnia and Herzegovina's Fazla performed "Kiša ruši grad"; Put, who represented Croatia, performed "Mom zavičaju"; Estonia's Janika Sillamaa performed "I Live For Your Love"; Hungary's Andrea Szulák performed "Don't Wanna Stop My Clock"; Dida Drăgan for Romania sang "Blestem (The Curse)"; Slovenia's 1X Band performed "Novo jutro"; and Slovakia's Elán performed "Od Tatier k Dunaju".

From the seven competing countries, the former Yugoslav nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Slovenia qualified for Eurovision 1993, which was held on 15 May 1993 in Millstreet, Ireland. Because of the new relegation system that had been introduced to Eurovision, all seven countries would be eligible to take part in the 1994 contest.

Individual entries

Each country chooses its entry for the contest through its own selection process. Some countries select their entry through an internal selection, where the network chooses both the song and artist, while others hold national finals where the public can choose the song, the artist, or both. The following articles detail the process through which the entries for each country were chosen:

Conductors

Each performance had a conductor who maestro the orchestra.[1] The conductors listed conducted both performances for the indicated countries.

Results

Draw Country Language Artist Song English Translation Place Points
1  Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnian Fazla "Sva bol svijeta" All the pain in the world 2 52
2  Croatia Croatian, English Put "Don't Ever Cry" - 3 51
3  Estonia Estonian Janika Sillamaa "Muretut meelt ja südametuld" Sorrowless mind and flames of heart 5 47
4  Hungary Hungarian Andrea Szulák "Árva reggel" Lonesome morning 6 44
5  Romania Romanian Dida Drăgan "Nu pleca" Don't go away 7 38
6  Slovenia Slovene 1X Band "Tih deževen dan" A quiet rainy day 1 54
7  Slovakia Slovak Elán "Amnestia na neveru" Amnesty to infidelity 4 50

Score sheet

Jury Results
Bosnia and Herzegovina 52 5 8 10 10 7 12
Croatia 51 10 6 12 7 8 8
Estonia 47 6 8 8 6 12 7
Hungary 44 7 6 12 8 6 5
Romania 38 5 12 5 5 5 6
Slovenia 54 8 7 10 7 12 10
Slovakia 50 12 10 7 6 5 10

International broadcasts and voting

Voting and jury members

Each country sent a single juror, who was actually present at the contest venue. They announced their votes as the camera was trained on them.

  1.  Bosnia and Herzegovina – Ismeta Dervoz-Krvavac
    (Yugoslav representative in the 1976 Contest)
  2.  Croatia – Ksenija Urličić
  3.  Estonia – Yuri Makarov
  4.  Hungary – Péter Wolf
  5.  Romania – Aurora Andronache
  6.  Slovenia – Mojmir Sepe
  7.  Slovakia – Stanislav Bartovič

Commentators

See also

References

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