Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019 was the seventeenth edition of the annual Junior Eurovision Song Contest, organised by Telewizja Polska (TVP) and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). It was held on 24 November 2019, at the Gliwice Arena in Gliwice, Poland, following the country's victory at the 2018 contest in Minsk, Belarus, with the song "Anyone I Want to Be", performed by Roksana Węgiel. It was the first time Poland had hosted the contest, as well as the first Eurovision event to be held in the country since the Eurovision Young Dancers 2013.

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019
Share the Joy
Dates
Final24 November 2019
Host
VenueGliwice Arena, Gliwice-Silesia, Poland
Presenter(s)
Directed by
  • Marcin Migalski
  • Tomasz Motyl
Executive supervisorJon Ola Sand
Executive producerLeszek Ratajczak
Host broadcasterTelewizja Polska (TVP)
Websitejunioreurovision.tv/event/gliwice-silesia
Participants
Number of entries19
Debuting countriesNone
Returning countries Spain
Non-returning countries Azerbaijan
 Israel
Participation map
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         Participating countries     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2019
Vote
Voting systemThe professional jury of each country awards a set of 12, 10, 8-1 points to 10 songs. Viewers around the world vote for 3-5 songs, and their votes are distributed proportionally. The votes of the jury and the audience make up 50% of all votes.
Winning song Poland
"Superhero"

Nineteen countries participated in the contest, with Spain taking part for the first time since 2006,[1] while Azerbaijan and Israel did not return to the contest after having participated in 2018.

Poland's Viki Gabor with the song "Superhero" was the winner of the contest, making Poland the first country to win the Junior Eurovision Song Contest two years in a row and the first country to win on home soil. Kazakhstan placed second, their best result. Returning country Spain placed third. The Netherlands and France completed the top five. Wales also earned their best result, 18th.

Location

Gliwice Arena in Gliwice, venue of 2019 Junior Eurovision.

The 2019 contest took place in Poland for the first time, following the country's victory at the 2018 edition with the song "Anyone I Want to Be", performed by Roksana Węgiel. It was the sixth time that the contest had been hosted by the previous year's winning country. The contest took place in Gliwice Arena, a sport and entertainment hall with a capacity of 17,178 in the main arena. It is considered one of the largest entertainment and sports halls in Poland.

Bidding phase and host city selection

Location of the host city (blue), shortlisted cities (green) and other bidding cities (red)

Prior to Poland's confirmation two other countries had announced their intentions to host the event. These bids were from Armenia and Kazakhstan.[2] Had the Kazakh proposal been accepted, it would've marked the first time an associate member was chosen to host an EBU flagship event.[3] Kazakh broadcaster Khabar Agency said they would have moved the contest to October due to possible adverse weather conditions in the country's capital Astana, which was proposed as the host city. However, for this to happen, the general rules of the competition would have to be changed, because as in the adult competition, the competition cannot be held in a non-full member state of the EBU, even if the country in question is an effective participant of the contest.[4]

After Poland's victory in the 2018 contest, the director-general of Polish broadcaster Telewizja Polska (TVP), Jacek Kurski, stated that the country would apply to host the event in 2019,[5] and on 10 December 2018, it was confirmed by the EBU that Poland would host the 2019 contest.[6]

Immediately following the final, Kurski stated that Warsaw would not host as it does not have a suitable venue to host an event of this size, marking the first time since the 2014 contest that the event is not hosted in the host country's capital.[7] On 18 January 2019, in an interview for TVP Info, Director-General of the EBU Noel Curran stated that the contest would be held in Kraków,[8] however the same day TVP issued a statement that the city had not yet been chosen.[9] In February 2019 it was revealed that three cities remained in the race: Gliwice, Szczecin and Toruń, and that all of the bids were approved by the EBU, meaning that the final decision regarding the host was exclusively up to the host broadcaster.[10][11] On 6 March 2019, during a press conference held by TVP and the EBU, it was confirmed that the contest would be held in Gliwice in cooperation with the Silesian Voivodeship.[12]

Key:    Host venue    Shortlisted

City Venue Notes Ref.
Gdańsk Ergo Arena The venue was reportedly booked during the planned start of the preparations. [13][14]
Gliwice Gliwice Arena Candidacy supported by the MP for the city of Gliwice, Jarosław Gonciarz, who made an official call to TVP to select Gliwice as the host city. [13][15]
Katowice Spodek The venue can hold around 11,500 spectators, although in practice this number is limited to between 8 and 10 thousand due to stage set-up obscuring the view. [13]
International Congress Centre Consists of multiple halls, with the capacity ranging from 100 to 10,000. [16][17]
Kraków Tauron Arena Kraków The largest and most modern entertainment and sports venue in Poland with a capacity of up to 22,000 spectators. Hosted the 2014 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship tournament. [13][18]
Łódź Atlas Arena [13]
Szczecin Netto Arena Candidacy supported by the Szczecin Agency of Arts. [13][19]
Toruń Arena Toruń [13]

Participating countries

On 18 July 2019, 19 countries were confirmed to be participating in the contest.[20] Spain returned to the contest, marking their first appearance since 2006.[21] Azerbaijan and Israel both withdrew after returning to the contest for a one-off appearance in 2018.

Prior to the event, a digital compilation album featuring all the songs from the 2019 contest was put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by Universal Music Group on 8 November 2019.[22]

Participants of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019[20][23]
Country Broadcaster Artist Song Language Songwriter(s)
 Albania RTSH Isea Çili "Mikja ime fëmijëri" Albanian
  • Saimir Çili
  • Jorgo Papingji
 Armenia AMPTV Karina Ignatyan "Colours of Your Dream" Armenian, English
 Australia ABC Jordan Anthony "We Will Rise" English
  • Jordan Anthony
  • MSquared
 Belarus BTRC Liza Misnikova "Pepelny (Ashen)" (Пепельный) Russian, English
 France France Télévisions Carla "Bim bam toi" French[lower-alpha 1]
 Georgia GPB Giorgi Rostiashvili "We Need Love" Georgian, English David Evgenidze
 Ireland TG4 Anna Kearney "Banshee" Irish
 Italy RAI Marta Viola "La voce della terra" Italian, English
  • Emilio di Stefano
  • Franco Fasano
  • Marco Iardella
  • Fabrizio Palaferri
 Kazakhstan KA Yerzhan Maxim "Armanyńnan qalma" (Арманыңнан қалма) Kazakh, English
  • Timur Balymbetov
  • Aldabergenov Daniyar
  • Khamit Shangaliyev
 Malta PBS Eliana Gomez Blanco "We Are More" English, Maltese
 Netherlands AVROTROS Matheu "Dans met jou" Dutch, English
  • Willem Laseroms
  • Jermain van der Bogt
 North Macedonia MRT Mila Moskov "Fire" Macedonian, English
  • Magdalena Cvetkoska
  • Lazar Cvetkoski
 Poland TVP Viki Gabor "Superhero" Polish, English[lower-alpha 2]
 Portugal RTP Joana Almeida "Vem comigo (Come with Me)" Portuguese, English João Pedro Coimbra
 Russia VGTRK/NTV Tatyana Mezhentseva and Denberel Oorzhak "A Time for Us" Russian, English Dmitry Northman
 Serbia RTS Darija Vračević "Podigni glas (Raise Your Voice)" (Подигни глас) Serbian, English
 Spain RTVE Melani García "Marte" Spanish
  • Manu Chalud
  • Pablo Mora
 Ukraine UA:PBC Sophia Ivanko "The Spirit of Music" Ukrainian, English
 Wales S4C Erin Mai "Calon yn curo (Heart Beating)" Welsh

Format

Visual design

The stage of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019

The theme for the contest, Share the Joy, was revealed on 13 May 2019 during a press conference prior to the Eurovision Song Contest 2019 in Tel Aviv, Israel. The press conference included Gert Kark (Project Manager), Konrad Smuga (Creative Director), Marta Piekarska (Project Coordinator) and Roksana Węgiel, the winner of the 2018 contest.[24] The logo features a brightly coloured kite to symbolize "freedom, light and shared joyous moments." The creative concept represents "how working together makes us better, stronger and can bring joy and happiness as we celebrate the beautiful things in life."[24]

The trophy was designed by Kjell Engman of the Swedish glass company Kosta Boda, using the same design as was first introduced in the 2017 contest.[25] The main trophy is a glass microphone with colored lines inside the upper part, which symbolize the flow of sound.[26]

Postcards

Each postcard took place in a different location in Poland. They all began with a short clip of the upcoming performer looking through a telescope at their postcard's location. A group of people performing an activity in said location was then shown. This activity was also included as a hashtag at the bottom of the screen. At completion of the activity, the upcoming performer is shown moving a digital kite (the logo of the contest) decorated with their country's flag, signalling the commencement of their performance.[27]

Presenters

On 22 August 2019, it was announced that Ida Nowakowska, Aleksander Sikora and the previous year's winner Roksana Węgiel would host the 2019 contest.[28] Węgiel is the first former winner to host an edition of the contest as well as the fifth person under the age of 16 to do so. Nowakowska is a Polish-American digital influencer, while Sikora is a breakfast television host.

Additionally, on 24 September 2019, journalists and TV hosts Agata Konarska and Mateusz Szymkowiak were confirmed as the hosts for the Opening Ceremony, which took place on 18 November in Silesian Theatre in Katowice, the capital city of the host region of Silesia.[29] Konarska previously hosted the Eurovision Young Dancers 2005 in Warsaw.

Contest overview

Viki Gabor with the winner's trophy.

The event took place on 24 November 2019 at 16:00 CET. Nineteen countries participated, with the running order published on 18 November 2019.[30] All the countries competing were eligible to vote with the jury vote, as well as participating and non-participating countries under an aggregated international online vote, eligible to vote.[31] Poland won with 278 points, also winning the online vote. Kazakhstan came second with 227 points and won the jury vote, with Spain, the Netherlands and France completing the top five. Ukraine, Portugal, Albania, Wales and Malta occupied the bottom five positions.

The opening of the show featured the traditional flag parade, accompanied by theme music created by Polish DJ Gromee, who represented the country in the Eurovision Song Contest 2018.[32] During the interval, Roksana Węgiel performed her winning song "Anyone I Want to Be". All participants then joined on stage for a rendition of the common song, "Share the Joy", which was followed by a dance routine by host Ida Nowakowska inspired by the competition's slogan.

R/O Country Artist Song Points Place
1  Australia Jordan Anthony "We Will Rise" 121 8
2  France Carla "Bim bam toi" 169 5
3  Russia Tatyana Mezhentseva and Denberel Oorzhak "A Time for Us" 72 13
4  North Macedonia Mila Moskov "Fire" 150 6
5  Spain Melani García "Marte" 212 3
6  Georgia Giorgi Rostiashvili "We Need Love" 69 14
7  Belarus Liza Misnikova "Pepelny (Ashen)" 92 11
8  Malta Eliana Gomez Blanco "We Are More" 29 19
9  Wales Erin Mai "Calon yn curo (Heart Beating)" 35 18
10  Kazakhstan Yerzhan Maxim "Armanyńnan qalma" 227 2
11  Poland Viki Gabor "Superhero" 278 1
12  Ireland Anna Kearney "Banshee" 73 12
13  Ukraine Sophia Ivanko "The Spirit of Music" 59 15
14  Netherlands Matheu "Dans met jou" 186 4
15  Armenia Karina Ignatyan "Colours of Your Dream" 115 9
16  Portugal Joana Almeida "Vem comigo (Come with Me)" 43 16
17  Italy Marta Viola "La voce della terra" 129 7
18  Albania Isea Çili "Mikja ime fëmijëri" 36 17
19  Serbia Darija Vračević "Podigni glas (Raise Your Voice)" 109 10

Spokespersons

The following people announced the jury 12 points for their respective country:[33]

  1.  Australia  Szymon
  2.  France  Karolina
  3.  Russia  Alisa Khilko and Khryusha
  4.  North Macedonia  Magdalena
  5.  Spain  Violeta Leal
  6.  Georgia  Anastasia Garsevanishvili
  7.  Belarus  Emilia Niewinskaja
  8.  Malta  Paula
  9.  Wales  Cadi Morgan
  10.  Kazakhstan  Aruzhan Khafiz
  11.  Poland  Marianna Józefina Piątkowska
  12.  Ireland  Leo Kearney
  13.  Ukraine  Darina Krasnovetska
  14.  Netherlands  Anne Buhre
  15.  Armenia  Erik Antonyan
  16.  Portugal  Zofia
  17.  Italy  Maria Iside Fiore
  18.  Albania  Efi Gjika
  19.  Serbia  Bojana Radovanović

Detailed voting results

Split results
Place Combined Jury Online Vote
Country Points Country Points Country Points
1  Poland 278  Kazakhstan 148  Poland 166
2  Kazakhstan 227  Poland 112  Spain 104
3  Spain 212  Spain 108  France 84
4  Netherlands 186  Netherlands 105  Netherlands 81
5  France 169  North Macedonia 100  Kazakhstan 79
6  North Macedonia 150  France 85  Italy 64
7  Italy 129  Australia 82  Serbia 63
8  Australia 121  Armenia 70  Russia 57
9  Armenia 115  Italy 65  North Macedonia 50
10  Serbia 109  Serbia 46  Belarus 48
11  Belarus 92  Belarus 44  Armenia 45
12  Ireland 73  Ireland 39  Portugal 43
13  Russia 72  Georgia 37  Australia 39
14  Georgia 69  Ukraine 28  Ireland 34
15  Ukraine 59  Russia 15  Georgia 32
16  Portugal 43  Wales 9  Ukraine 31
17  Albania 36  Albania 7  Albania 29
18  Wales 35  Malta 2  Malta 27
19  Malta 29  Portugal 0  Wales 26
Detailed voting results[34]
Voting procedure used:
  100% jury vote
  100% online vote
Total score
Jury vote score
Online vote score
Jury vote
Australia
France
Russia
North Macedonia
Spain
Georgia
Belarus
Malta
Wales
Kazakhstan
Poland
Ireland
Ukraine
Netherlands
Armenia
Portugal
Italy
Albania
Serbia
Contestants
Australia 121 82 39 1218488101106527
France 169 85 84 101566102151017858
Russia 72 15 57 3102
North Macedonia 150 100 50 417210512271077310472
Spain 212 108 104 181074778865812125
Georgia 69 37 32 53185834
Belarus 92 44 48 6363271610
Malta 29 2 27 11
Wales 35 9 26 36
Kazakhstan 227 148 79 7285812127121221212467812
Poland 278 112 166 1017124101061248853210
Ireland 73 39 34 46235103231
Ukraine 59 28 31 386713
Netherlands 186 105 81 12124410556621212510
Armenia 115 70 45 85106773253446
Portugal 43 0 43
Italy 129 65 64 2728623141254216
Albania 36 7 29 52
Serbia 109 46 63 6312411443134

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points received from each country's professional juries.

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
7  Kazakhstan Belarus,  Georgia,  Netherlands,  Poland,  Serbia,  Ukraine,  Wales
4  Netherlands Armenia,  Australia,  France,  Portugal
2  Poland Kazakhstan,  Spain
 Spain Albania,  Italy
1  Australia Russia
 Italy Ireland
 North Macedonia Malta
 Serbia North Macedonia

Online voting

Online voting results[35]
Contestant Votes Points
 Poland ~567,895 166
 Spain ~355,789 104
 France ~287,368 84
 Netherlands ~277,105 81
 Kazakhstan ~270,263 79
 Italy ~218,947 64
 Serbia ~216,000 63
 Russia ~195,000 57
 North Macedonia ~171,053 50
 Belarus ~164,211 48
 Armenia ~153,947 45
 Portugal ~147,105 43
 Australia ~133,000 39
 Ireland ~116,421 34
 Georgia ~109,474 32
 Ukraine ~106,053 31
 Albania ~99,211 29
 Malta ~92,368 27
 Wales ~88,947 26
Total ~3,770,000

Other countries

For a country to be eligible for potential participation in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, it needs to be an active member of the EBU.[36] It is currently unknown whether the EBU issued invitations of participation to all 56 active members like they do for the Eurovision Song Contest.

Active EBU members

  •  Bulgaria  On 11 September 2018, Bulgarian National Television (BNT) announced that at the time being they were not planning a return to the 2019 contest.[37] On 6 January 2019, BNT reiterated that they did not have plans to return to the contest in 2019 via their official Eurovision Twitter account.[38] It was later revealed on 8 June 2019 that BNT had amassed massive debts, and were declared bankrupt.[39] Bulgaria did not appear on the final list of participants published on 18 July 2019.
  •  Czech Republic  On 10 June 2019, it was revealed that Česká televize (ČT) had not made a full decision about participation, but were not expecting to be a participant, stating that their focus was on the Eurovision Song Contest 2020.[40]
  •  Montenegro  On 2 June 2019, Radio Televizija Crne Gore (RTCG) confirmed that they would not return to the contest in 2019 due to budget issues.[41]
  •  Scotland  On 29 June 2019, BBC Alba confirmed that they would not debut in 2019 due to their participation in the Eurovision Choir that year, however they confirmed that talks had taken place that could enable participation in 2020.[42]
  •  Slovakia  According to Eurovision blog Eurofestivales, press spokesperson Erika Rusnáková for Slovak broadcaster Radio and Television of Slovakia (RTVS) stated that they were evaluating and supervising the possibility of debuting in the contest.[43] However, on 10 June 2019, RTVS confirmed that they would not debut in the 2019 contest.[44]
  •  Slovenia  On 3 June 2019, Radiotelevizija Slovenija (RTV Slovenija) confirmed that they would not participate in the 2019 contest due to the cost of participation.[45]

Broadcasts

Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries
Country Broadcaster(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Albania RTSH Andri Xhahu
 Armenia Armenia 1 Avet Barseghyan and Mane Grigoryan
 Australia ABC Me Pip Rasmussen, Ava Madon and Drew Parker
 Belarus Belarus 1, Belarus 24 Evgeny Perlin [46]
 France France 2 Stéphane Bern and Sandy Héribert [47]
 Georgia 1TV Demetre Ergemlidze and Tamar Edilashvili [48]
 Ireland TG4 Sinéad Ní Uallacháin
 Italy Rai Gulp Mario Acampa and Alexia Rizzardi [49][50]
 Kazakhstan Khabar Agency Kaldybek Zhaisanbai and Mahabbat Esen
 Malta PBS No commentary
 Netherlands NPO Zapp Buddy Vedder [51][52]
 North Macedonia MRT 1 Eli Tanaskovska
 Poland TVP1, TVP Polonia, TVP ABC Artur Orzech [53]
 Portugal Live: RTP1, RTP Internacional
Delayed: RTP Internacional Ásia, RTP África
Nuno Galopim [54][55]
 Russia Carousel Anton Zorkin [56][57]
NTV Vadim Takmenev and Lera Kudryavtseva
 Serbia RTS2 Tijana Lukić [58]
 Spain La 1, TVE Internacional Tony Aguilar, Julia Varela and Víctor Escudero [59]
 Ukraine UA:First, UA:Kultura, UA:PBC regional channels Timur Miroshnychenko [60]
 Wales S4C Welsh: Trystan Ellis-Morris, English: Stifyn Parri [61]
Broadcasters and commentators in non-participating countries
Country Broadcaster(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Israel KAN Un­known [62]
 Lithuania TVP Wilno Artur Orzech [63]
 United Kingdom Fun Kids Ewan Spence [64]

See also

Notes

  1. Contains one repeated phrase in English
  2. American Sign Language was also used during the live televised performance

References

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  4. Granger, Anthony (13 May 2017). "What happens if Australia wins the Eurovision Song Contest?". eurovoix.com. Eurovoix. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
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