Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest 1979

Greece and Ellinikí Radiofonía Tileórasi (ERT) chose to host a national selection with the winner being chosen by an "expert" jury. Elpida was chosen with "Sokrati" (re-titled "Socrates" for the TV broadcast) and placed 8th at Eurovision.

Eurovision Song Contest 1979
Country Greece
National selection
Selection processNational final
Selection date(s)5 February 1979
Selected entrantElpida
Selected song"Sokrati"
Selected songwriter(s)
  • Doros Georgiadis
  • Sotia Tsotou
Finals performance
Final result8th, 69 points
Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1978 1979 1980►

Before Eurovision

National final

The national final took place on 5 February 1979 at the Municipal Theater in Piraeus and was hosted by Vasilis Tsivilikas. The winning song was chosen by a jury of 65 people who awarded each song a mark out of 10.

Final – 5 February 1979
DrawArtistSongPointsPlace
1Kostas Hatzis"Na'han oli i anthropi mia agapi opos ki ego"3793
2Bessy Argyraki"Athena (mana mou)"3225
3Sofia Zaninou"Stin arhi"2716
4Christie Stasinopoulou"Dose mou enan sticho"4622
5Elpida"Sokrati"5281
6Paola Komini, Maria Filosofou, Fotini Filosofou, Dimitris Kontoyiannis and Stefanos Dekerian"Dio se mia ombrella"3494

At Eurovision

"Sokrati" was performed seventh on the night (following Monaco's Laurent Vaguener with "Notre vie c'est la musique" and preceding Switzerland's Peter, Sue and Marc and Pfuri, Gorps & Kniri with "Trödler Und Co"). At the close of voting, it had received 69 points, placing 8th in a field of 19.[1]

Elpida was accompanied on stage by Lia Vissi (who will later represent Cyprus in the Eurovision Song Contest 1985), Polina (who was to represent Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest 1986, but Greece withdrew), Yiannis Samsiaris and Stelios Goulielmos, all four of them being backing vocalists.[2]

It was succeeded as Greek representative at the 1980 Contest by Anna Vissi & The Epikouri with "Autostop".

Voting

References

  1. "Final of Jerusalem 1979". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  2. "Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest 1979" (in Greek). musiccorner.gr. 24 March 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  3. "Results of the Final of Jerusalem 1979". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.