1995 MTV Europe Music Awards

The 1995 MTV Europe Music Awards took place at the Le Zénith in Paris, France and were hosted by Jean-Paul Gaultier.

1995 MTV Europe Music Awards
Date23 November 1995
LocationLe Zénith, Paris, France
Hosted byJean-Paul Gaultier
Television/radio coverage
NetworkMTV Networks International (Europe)
Produced bySara Martin [1]

The French nuclear testing in the South Pacific got the most attention at the ceremony. Jon Bon Jovi during his speech for winning the award for Best Rock said: "The only enemy is ignorance. Peace, people. Let's get rid of all this nuclear testing."[2] and Bono said: "What a city, what a night, what a crowd, what a bomb, what a mistake, what a wanker you have for a President" referring to nuclear testing and then-French President Jacques Chirac. Greenpeace, the environmental group that has staged creative and controversial protests around the testing site at Mururoa Atoll, took the Free Your Mind award for its campaign against the underground nuclear blasts.[3] "Stop abusing the earth," urged Madonna in a videotaped segment before the designer agnès b. picked up the award for Greenpeace.

The awards are also notable for the portfolio given to approximately 200 attendees, Outbreak of Violets, which is an extremely rare work by comics writer Alan Moore. Written by Moore and drawn by 24 different European artists, the work is a sequence of 24 postcards and has never been reprinted. It is believed to be Moore’s rarest work and described by collectors as his Holy Grail.

Nominations

Winners are in bold text.

Best Song Best Director

The Cranberries — "Zombie"

Michel Gondry (Massive Attack with Tracey Thorn — "Protection")

Best Female Best Male

Björk

Michael Jackson

Best Group Breakthrough Artist

U2

Dog Eat Dog

Best Dance Best Rock

East 17

Bon Jovi

Best Live Act

Take That

Free Your Mind
Greenpeace

Performances

Appearances

See also

References

  1. "MTV Europe Music Awards 1995 (1995) - IMDb".
  2. ThinkExist.com Quotations. "Jon Bon Jovi quotes". Thinkexist.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-17. Retrieved 2012-07-25.
  3. "Nuclear testing in the Pacific - nuclear-free New Zealand | NZHistory, New Zealand history online". Nzhistory.net.nz. Retrieved 2012-07-25.
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